Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co. v. Davis

102 U.S. 222, 26 L. Ed. 149, 12 Otto 222, 1880 U.S. LEXIS 2029
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 29, 1880
Docket67
StatusPublished
Cited by147 cases

This text of 102 U.S. 222 (Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co. v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co. v. Davis, 102 U.S. 222, 26 L. Ed. 149, 12 Otto 222, 1880 U.S. LEXIS 2029 (1880).

Opinion

*223 Mr. Justice Strong

delivered the opinion of the court.

The. invention described in the Cummings reissue patent is claimed 'in the words following: “ The plate of hard rubber or vulcanite, or its equivalent, for holding artificial.teeth, or teeth and gums, substantially- as described.” The claim cannot be understood without reference to the details given in the specification. In that it is said to consist “ in forming the plate to which the teeth, or teeth and gums, are attached, of hard rubber, or ‘ vulcanite,’ so called, — an elastic material possessing and retaining in use sufficient rigidity for the purpose of mastication, find, at the same time, being pliable enough to. yield a little-to the motions of the mouth.” The mode of “forming ” the plate is then minutely described. The earlier steps of the process need not be particularly noticed. They relate- to the formation of a plaster mould, fitted to the corresponding part of the mouth, with-the artificial teeth adhering; in the mould in exactly the relative position they are to occupy in the hard-rubber plate.' The specification then proceeds as follows: “ The teeth, aré provided with pins projecting therefrom in .such a manner that the rubber which is to constitute the plate will close around them, and by means of them hold' or sécure the' teeth permanently in position. The plaster mould, with the teeth adhering therein, as - just described, is now filled with soft rubber, a.little at.a time, pressed in with, the finger, of in any other convenient way; • and care is to be taken that the rubber is made to completely fit into the cavities and around the protuberances, including' the pins, and is filled in to the thickness or depth desired to form the plate.” “ I then ” (says. the patentee) “ lock the rubber plate in position by shutting the other half of the plaster mould over it, to insure its retaining its exact form while warming, and then heát or bake it in ‘ an oven, or in any other suitable way. The soft rubber or gum so inserted into the mould is- to be compounded with sulphur, rubber, &c., in the inanner-prescribed in the patent of Nelson Goodyear, dated May 6, A.D. 1851, for making "hard rubber, and is to' be subjected to sufficient heat to vulcanize or harden it, substantially as directed in that patent.' It is álso to be colored in imitation of the natural gums, by' mixing it with vermillion, or other suitable coloring matter, while in the soft *224 state. After the plate has 'been heated sufficiently to harden it, or convert it into hard rubber, or ‘ vulcanite,’ so called, the mould is removed, and the plate is polished ready for use.”

Such is the description, both of the material of which the plate is formed and of the method or process by which it is made.

We had occasion in Smith v. Goodyear Denial Vulcanite Company et al. (93 U. S. 486) to construe this patent, and determine what the invention claimed and patented really was. We held it to be “a set of artificial teeth, as a new article of manufacture, consisting of a plate of hard rubber with teeth, or teeth and gums secured thereto in the manner-described in the specification, by embedding the teeth and pins in a vulcanizable compound, so that it shall surround them, while it is in a. soft state, before it is vulcanized,.and so that, when it has been vulcanized-, the teeth are firmly and inseparably secured in the vulcanite, and a tight joint is effected between them, the whole constituting but one piece.” We said, “The invention is a product or manufacture made in a defined- manner. It-is not a product alone, separated from the- process by- which it is created.” The process detailed in the description antecedent to the claim, and referred to thereby, is as much a part of the invention as áre the materials of which th.e, plate or product is composed; Both are necessary elements of it. Hence, to constitute an-infringement of the patent, - both'the material of which the dental plate is made, or its equivalent, and the .process of constructing the' plate, or a process equivalent thereto, must-, be employed. It is, therefore, essential to á correct determination of this case to consider what was the -material made by the patentee an element of his invention, and what can be considered an equivalent therefor.

- It is impossible to read the specification of the original patent, or that of the reissue, upon which this suit is founded, without the conviction that the-patentee had in mind primarily a single substance for his material, and that one of a peculiar character, itself a compound discovered and patented' not long before. Thus, in the original, which was loosely drawn, the invention was said to consist “ in forming the plate and giims, to which the -teeth are attached,,.of rubber, or some other, elastic mate *225 rial, so indurated as to be rigid enough, for the purpose, of mastication, and pliable enough to yield a little to the motions of the mouth, and in one piece, the teeth being. embedded in the elastic material while the said material is in a soft condition, and then .baked, with the gums and plate, so that the teeth; gums, and plate will all be connected, forming, as it were, one piece.” And again, “ the plate and gums are formed of qne piece, and of rubber, ■ or of rubber and the compounds commonly employed therewith, or of gutta-percha, or, in fact, of any elastic substance which can be reduced to a soft .condition, and then vulcanized, or hardened sufficiently to answer the purpose. The rubber or.other material used is first moulded to fit the shape of the mouth, and the gums formed, and while soft and pliable the teeth are embedded in the gums. . . . The teeth, gums, and plate, being thus connected, are then baked until the elastic material becomes sufficiently vulcanized, when the process is completed.” The claim also expressed the same thought. It was “ forming the plate and gums in which the teeth are inserted, in one 'piece, of hard rubber or vulcanite, i.e. an elastic material Which, can be hardened sufficiently for mastication, and retain a portion of its elasticity, so as to yield a little to the motion of the mouth,, as herein set forth, and for the purposes specified.” Though the specification spoke of rubber, or of rubber1 and its compounds commonly employed therewith, or of gutta-percha, or of any elastic substance that can be reduced to a soft condition and then vulcanized, or hardened, sufficiently to answer the purpose, it is evident that only such substances were intended as are either soft in their natural condition, and capable of vulcanization, or if hard naturally, and reduced to a soft state, were then capable of being vulcanized or hardened by baking. The description implies an exclusion of all substances which have not such capabilities. If not,'then gold plates would have been within the patent, if the material only be considered, for gold is elastic when in thin plates. It is capable of being reduced to a soft condition, and it hardens by cooling; but it does, not harden by heat or baking, nor is it1 capable of vulcanization.

If, now, we turn to the specification and claim of the reissued patent (which, of course, cannot be more comprehensive *226

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Bluebook (online)
102 U.S. 222, 26 L. Ed. 149, 12 Otto 222, 1880 U.S. LEXIS 2029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodyear-dental-vulcanite-co-v-davis-scotus-1880.