Evarts v. Ford

8 F. Cas. 892, 6 Fish. Pat. Cas. 587, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1726
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois
DecidedNovember 26, 1873
DocketCase No. 4,574
StatusPublished

This text of 8 F. Cas. 892 (Evarts v. Ford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evarts v. Ford, 8 F. Cas. 892, 6 Fish. Pat. Cas. 587, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1726 (circtndil 1873).

Opinion

BLODGETT, District Judge.

This suit is brought to recover damages for an alleged infringement of a patent for an improvement in shingle-machines, issued to H.' H. Evarts, dated October 1, 1854, and extended for a term .of seven years from October 1, 18(58.

The title to the patent is admitted to be in the complainants;- and it is admitted that the defendant has manufactured shingle-machines since the extension of the patent, which complainants claim infringe their patent With these admissions, the only questions made upon the argument of the case are: First. Is the complainants’ patent void for want of novelty ? Second. Is the machine made by the defendant substantially embraced in the patent (issued to the complainant Evarts) ?

The claims in the patent are as follows:

“1. Placing the blocks to be sawed into shingles in a rotating carriage, which is combined with the inclined tables p, p (or a single table), with saws O, O (or a single saw), in such a manner that the blocks will be carried continuously forward and be automatically operated upon to convert them into shingles, substantially as herein set forth.”

This claim includes and covers, then, this rotating carriage, with -the saws which are shown, and the inclined tables, the function of which is to give the slant or pitch to the blocks, so as to saw alternately butts and .points.

[894]*894• The second claim is:

“2. I also claim the arrangement of the weighted levers H, H, the fastening teeth i, i, and the inclined planes 1, 1, with each other, and with the inclined tables p, p, and the •outer series of teeth in the ledge r, substantially as herein set forth.”

These two claims refer, it would seem, •clearly to the elements contained in the rotating carriage, and to nothing else.

“3. I also claim presenting the sides of the •fibers of the wood to the action of the saws in the sawing of shingles or equivalent arti•cles, for the purpose of giving them smoother surfaces than can be produced by the usual mode of sawing, substantially as herein set forth.”

It would seem, from the evidence in the -case, that úp to the, time that the patentee •commenced his experiments, nearly or quite •all the shingles used in this country were ■made by the process of riving and shaving; mnd although several inventors had devised machines for sawing shingles, none of them ihad been able to produce • sawed shingles which were acceptable in the -market, • or which could be-made to supersede the shaved shingles in use. The leading characteristic •of the complainants’ machine consists in presenting the side of the fiber of the block to be cut into shingles to the saw, instead of •the end.

After a series of experiments involving this principle, Mr. Evarts made and put in use a machine substantially like that now made by :the defendant, and which is popularly known to the trade-as-the “Evarts Hand-Machine,” •of which Exhibit C is a model. Upon this machine he took out no patent, unless it he, as it is now contended, covered by his patent of October 1, 1854.

After making this machine and introducing 'it to the public, and also introducing its products into the market to a considerable extent, Mr. Evarts made what he deemed his perfected machine, upon which he obtained the patent set forth in the bill.

It is evident from his conduct, and the -specification of his patent and the claims, that Mr. Evarts considered all he had accomplished up to this point as mere experiments.

He says in his specification:

“The first general feature of my invention •consists in a rotating carriage, arranged in connection with tables inclined in opposite •directions, and with circular saws, in such a manner that the bolts of wood placed in said •carriage will, one after the other, be continu-ally operated upon, cutting the thick end of the shingle first from one end of a bolt, and the thick end of the next in succession from the opposite end of said bolt, and thus alternate until the bolt is sawed down as thin as it • can be safely operated upon.
“The second feature of my invention consists in presenting the side of a bolt of wood ■to the saws, instead -of the end thereof, for ••the purpose of producing thereby shingles with much smoother surfaces than can be produced by advancing the end of the bolt to the saw in the usual manner.”

In his experiments, Mr. Evarts first fastened the shingle-bolt to a long lever or beam, vibrating upon its center like a walking beam, so that the bolt could be brought down in contact with a vertical circular saw, so as to present the side of the bolt to a saw. By this experiment, he satisfied himself that he could produce smooth-sawed shingles by that method of sawing. He then produced the hand-machine. He also met with serious difficulty by the kinking, buckling, or sagging of his saw, and to overcome these difficulties ne imj proved the saw, so that its center was strengthened by a reinforcing plate, and the saw-plate beveled toward the outer edge, whereby it was made stronger, and its buckling, kinking, and sagging prevented.

He finally produced the rotating machine, which he patented, evidently deeming that the crowning embodiment of his invention.

The evidence shows that, while making these experiments, Mr. Evarts was embarrassed by want of means, and that he was in fact obliged to dispose of a large interest in his patentto get the-means with-which tó construct his first machine, and demonstrate its utility, by the manufacture of shingles, and placing them upon the market in competition with shaved shingles. 1 ■'

After obtaining his patent, Mr. Evarts continued to manufacture machines and shingles until side-sawn shingles have nearly or quite superseded the shaved shingles in the market; but what seems remarkable in the history of the invention is the fact,- well established by the evidence in this case, that the hand-machine — the second step apparently of the inventor toward his perfected and patented machine — is the machine which is most in use, and probably of the most practical utility at this time in the manufacture of shingles.

This- machine the defendant makes and sells ; and while he, in effect, admits that Mr. Evarts was the inventor, he denies that he has so secured his invention by his letters patent as to have the exclusive right of manufacture. And the question to be decided in this case is, whether this hand-machine is covered by the patent; in other words, after" constructing the machine, in which he fastened the shingle-block vertically to the end of a lever, and brought it down in contact with a circular saw, which revolved vertically, and became satisfied that the side-cut with a circular saw would produce a shingle nearly, if not quite, as smooth as a shaved shingle, Mr. Evarts then set about devising a more compact and easily-managed machine for the purpose of applying the principle of side-cutting; and his first effort in tnat direction was this machine, which is now manufactured by the defendant, and upon which, as a specific machine, he never obtained a patent.

The first and second claims of the patent [895]*895-have special reference to the rotating ma•chine, and if the defendant’s machine is ■found at all in the patent, it must be in the 'third claim, which is as follows:-

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. Cas. 892, 6 Fish. Pat. Cas. 587, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evarts-v-ford-circtndil-1873.