Farnham v. United States

47 Ct. Cl. 207, 1912 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 115, 1911 WL 1349
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedFebruary 12, 1912
DocketNos. 28964, 30931
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 47 Ct. Cl. 207 (Farnham v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farnham v. United States, 47 Ct. Cl. 207, 1912 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 115, 1911 WL 1349 (cc 1912).

Opinion

Atkinson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This suit was brought to recover from the United States under an implied contract the sum of $1,000,417.56, which is allaged to be the net profits accruing from the use of a patented device granted to plaintiff, covering a period of 10 years from April 16, 1900, to June 30, 1910. The defendants deny the validity of the patent, as well as the existence of an implied contract in fact for the use of the device by the Post Office Department.

The first question to be considered is the validity of the patent granted by the United States Patent Office to plaintiff for a postage-stamp holder,-dated January 4, 1898, and numbered 596656. Application for a patent on this device was [222]*222first filed by plaintiff in the Patent Office March 17, 1896, which application was rejected, and an amended request for the issuance of the same was again filed September 14, 1897. Plaintiff, however, claims that he first discovered the utility of his stamp-holder combination in August, 1894, which claim is attested by two witnesses; but this contention, however, is not material to the issues involved in this suit. The court, in determining the validity of the patent, need only consider the matter of dates in so far as it is necessary to determine the relation of plaintiff’s patent to the prior state of.the art when applied to the several similar patented and unpatented devices which are herein involved.

Considering the subject of what an invention is, Walker on Patents, section 23, says:

“Patents are grantable for things invented, and not for things otherwise produced, even where the production required ability of a high order. Novelty and utility must, indeed, characterize the subject of a patent, but they alone are not enough to make anything patentable; for the statute provides that things to be patented must be invented things, as well as new and useful things.”

Hence, to be patentable, an idea or discovery must not only possess novelty and utility, but it must be the product of inventive faculties as w.ell.

Claim 1 of plaintiff’s patents reads as follows:

“A stamp sheet having one series of narrow, unprinted spaces in the body thereof, a second series of spaces wider than the first, along which said sheet is adapted to be stitched, a third series of spaces wider than the first and second series extending around the edges and centrally of said sheet, substantially as described”; and he lays particular stress upon this claim of his patent, alleging therein both novelty and invention.

A mass of evidence and many exhibits have been introduced to shoAV that the form of stamp sheet claimed in his patent involved inventions because of the fact that by this method or form it ivas possible to economically produce large numbers of the stamp booklets by multiple manufacture. The small margin of profit possible in the sale of stamp books made it essential to the success of the device to [223]*223manufacture them at a minimum of cost. Plaintiff knew this, and his purpose therefore was to secure a patent on such a design of stamp sheet as would achieve this result. His effort, however, to secure acknowledgment of invention in this particular claim by the Patent Office officials met with many rejections, as is shown by the findings.

Whatever particular novelty there is in claim 1 of the patent consists, after five rejections, in adding a third series of spaces to the form of stamp sheet. In his application plaintiff states that “the flaps on the outside and on the inside of the cover F may be dispensed with, if desired, in which case the wide space h in the middle of the sheet of stamps and the flap P' need not be provided.”

It is shown by the proceedings before the examiners of the Patent Office that the claim was allowed only after the introduction of the centrally extending spaces; and yet we find plaintiff alleging in his specifications that the same results can be achieved without these spaces as well as with them.

The Patent Office examiners decided that there was no patentable novelty in claim 1 when the stamp sheet had “ one series of narrow unprinted spaces in the body thereof * * * and another series of wider unprinted spaces (printed in Finding II) need not loe provided. If the third series of spaces wider than the first and second series extending around the edges and centrally of said sheet ”; but in his specifications he states that in the manufacture of his device the wide central space h shown in his sheet of stamps (printed in Finding II) need not be provided. If the third space in his stamp sheet is not essential, then he reverts back to his claim as amended July 18, 1896, as to which the examiner said it “is thought to relate to nothing of patentable novelty differing from the ordinary structure of stamp sheets with their blank margins only in a matter of degree.”

Having failed to get claim 1 of his application through the Patent Office on his claim of a stamp sheet without the third series of spaces, and ivhen the examiners stated in their rejection of this particular claim that “ applicant’s claim can only be read when including the blank margins of [224]*224the ordinary stamp sheet,” therefore plaintiff, in order to secure a different construction from that of the ordinary known' prior art, added “ a third series of spaces,” but renounces it as necessary or advantageous in the development of his device.

His Exhibit No. 21 printed in Finding II does not show the use of this central wide space because he had voluntarily dispensed with it. It is therefore plainly to be seen that the claim of a third space in the stamp sheet was one of expediency, alleged for the purpose of securing the allowance of claim 1 of his application for a patent, which reveals the fact that his allowed patent for a stamp-book holder was more the result of evolution than invention.

As we have already shown, a device to be patentable must not only possess novelty and utility, but it must also be the product of the inventive faculties. It must not merely show skill, but must evince invention. If, however, the mind advances from the known to the unknown by a transition natural to the ordinary instructed intellect, there is no invention. Eeasoning is not invention. (Merwin on Patentability, pp. 18, 19, 22, 38; Beckendorf v. Faber, 92 U. S., 347.) In a patentable device there must be invention, as distinguished from mechanical or technical skill. Invention is the creation of something new — new not as a mere modification of an idea already existing, but an addition to the stock of ideas. (Merwin, p. 10.)

In further considering the patentable novelty of claim 1 of the plaintiff’s patent, we enter the field of prior art of unpatented devices similar to the plaintiff’s alleged discovery.

It is shown by Finding II that the American Bank Note Co. in manufacturing pocket stamp books for the Western Union Telegraph Co. had knowledge of and had printed and used in booklet form the method of constructing multiple book leaf sheets of stamps, having unprinted cutting spaces and binding spaces, practically similar in all essential respects to plaintiff’s alleged discovery and allowed in his patent, as far back as 1883. It is apparent, therefore, that the narrow, unprinted spaces running through the body of the stamp sheet of defendants’ Exhibit E. A. No.

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Related

Kurtz v. Belle Hat Lining Co.
280 F. 277 (Second Circuit, 1922)
Farnham v. United States
56 Ct. Cl. 290 (Court of Claims, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 Ct. Cl. 207, 1912 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 115, 1911 WL 1349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farnham-v-united-states-cc-1912.