Forsyth v. Garlock

142 F. 461, 73 C.C.A. 577, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4129
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedNovember 3, 1905
DocketNo. 589
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 142 F. 461 (Forsyth v. Garlock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forsyth v. Garlock, 142 F. 461, 73 C.C.A. 577, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4129 (1st Cir. 1905).

Opinion

PUTNAM, Circuit Judge.

This is a bill in equity alleging infringement of the only claim in letters patent No. 622,889, issued on April 11, 1899, to James Bennett Forsyth, on an application filed on April 25, 1898, described therein to cover an invention of “a new and useful sheet material for packing, matting, and the like.” The claim is as follows:

“A sheet material made up of a pliable sheet, one or more, of metal, and a sheet, one. or more, of vulcanized rubber, united to the pliable metal sheet substantially as described.”

The Circuit Court dismissed the bill, and the complainant appealed to us. The learned judge in the Circuit Court found, in view of the state of the prior art, and especially of a patent issued to one Daft, to which we will again refer, that the patent in suit, if valid, could not be construed broadly enough to cover the product of the defendants. He also held that the patent is limited to sheet material, and that the infringing product is not sheet material, nor made by merely rolling up sheet material. Some mention is made of the file wrapper; but this is of no consequence, because at every point the application for the patent was overruled by the examiners, and also on appeal until the commissioner was reached, who reversed everything appealed against, and what is thus referred to occurred before the inventor reached him, and was wiped out.

The case is presented to us by the complainant as though the patented material was adapted solely, and intended solely, to and for steam packing; that is, for gaskets or for uses analogous to those to which gaskets are applied. In that view, although the patentee’s material closely represents what had been before known in the arts, yet under the circumstances the new adaptation as a gasket, or for steam packing, sustains the prima facie evidence of invention which arises from the issue of the patent. The case thus comes within Watson v. Stevens, 51 Fed. 757, 2 C. C. A. 500, as applied by us in Davey Pegging Machine Co. v. Isaac Prouty & Co., 107 Fed. 505, 509 et seq., 46 C. C. A. 439. This is emphasized and illustrated by what appears in the patent issued to Albert B. Pratt, No. 665,931, on January 15, 1901, under which the respondents are producing at least one class of their alleged infringing devices. We quote from it at length, as follows:

“It has always been necessary to provide packing of some character between the faces of joints which are necessarily steam-tight. The most usual and ordinary forms of such packing are composed of rubber, metal, or a combination of both. These jqint-closures or packings were first formed exclusively of rubber; but gaskets of this character when continuously subjected to heat disintegrate more or less rapidly and either spread to an extent which will open the joint or become brittle and crack. These results led to the introduction of metal packings; but these, except in complicated and expensive forms, are inefficient and are not available as closures for face-joints, because it is practically impossible to fit these metal packings with sufficient nicety to secure absolutely steam-tight joints, except where the contacting faces are disposed in angular relation. The facts related then led to the production of a combined rubber and metal packing-sheet which comprehended a plurality of thin rubber sheets and an intermediate woven-wire layer. This was a distinct advance, because the wire sheet gave body to the packing and prevented it from stretching, while permitting it to be sufficiently pliable to [463]*463adapt itself to the nature of the joint-faces. Many objections were urged against this form of packing, however, because the surface was exceedingly uneven and after comparatively little use the wires of the intermediate sheet would become exposed. These objections were overcome in great measure by the subsequent employment of a thin metal sheet, to the opposite faces of which the rubber was vulcanized; but the adhesion between the metal and rubber was imperfect, and this combination resulted in the blistering of the rubber and in its gradual separation from the metal core. Prior to my invention, the latest advance in the art, so far as I am aware, was directed to the elimination of this tendency of the rubber to pull away from the sheet metal, and with this end in view the pure rubber sheets were substituted by a compound of rubber and metallic oxids, which latter did actually serve to strengthen the union. Up to this point, however, the sheet-packing is open to many objections, because while the interposition of a metal sheet does overcome many valid objections to the use of the pure rubber, the tendency of the metal and rubber layers to separate practically precluded the employment of these composite packings and the introduction of the metallic oxids into the compound resulted in reviving an objection urged against the original solid rubber packings — to wit, the spreading and cracking of the rubber facings — that is to say, the incorporation of the metallic oxids is injurious to the rubber, and while it causes the latter to adhere more securely to the metal plate it causes the rubber to scale and crack under the continued heat to which these packings are ordinarily subjected.
“The object of my invention, therefore, is to produce a sheet-packing composed of a pliable metal sheet or plate having pure rubber facings or covering-layers which are caused to adhere closely to the plate without the use of metallic oxids and in a manner to preclude the possibility of either the cracking of the rubber or of its separation from the metal when subjected to the action of excessive heat for a considerable period.”

Aside from the references contained herein to metallic oxids, which, so far as the patent in suit is concerned, are not of the substance of the invention, and are merely recommended for the purpose of securing the better adherence of the parts, what was thus said by Pratt clearly states the history of the art as proved in the record. In view of the rules applied in the cases we have cited, the facts as thus explained by him are sufficient to establish utility, novelty, and invention. Moreover, on a proper construction of what we have quoted from his specification, Pratt cannot be held to have assumed to claim an entirely new product, but only an .improvement on what had preceded him in what he calls “the latest advance in the art.” He also thus assumed that what he had invented was only a matter of perfecting in details what preceded him. Certainly we are of the opinion that such was the fact.

Notwithstanding our general statement that invention is shown, we might, perhaps, appear neglectful if we did not make reference to alleged anticipations, other than Pratt’s, which are pressed on us. We can say generally as to them that they relate to arts essentially different from that o'f steam-packing, which art is special, requiring peculiar appliances and peculiar skill, involving difficulties which have been overcome only slowly and step by step, as shown by Pratt. The respondents cite over 40 patents alleged to either anticipate or narrow the art. Our general observation as to these is that the citation of so many patents by a respondent in an infringement suit sometimes tends, as we have several times said, not so much to weaken the complainant’s position as to strengthen it, by showing that the trade had [464]*464long and persistently been seeking in vain for what the complainant finally accomplished.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 F. 461, 73 C.C.A. 577, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forsyth-v-garlock-ca1-1905.