Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co. v. Gardiner

10 F. Cas. 735, 3 Cliff. 408

This text of 10 F. Cas. 735 (Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co. v. Gardiner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island 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. Gardiner, 10 F. Cas. 735, 3 Cliff. 408 (circtdri 1871).

Opinion

CLIFFORD, Circuit Justice.

Most of the questions involved in the pleadings in this case were presented in the case of the Dental Vulcanite Co. v. Wetherbee [Case No. 3,810], and were at that time carefully examined and decided. Leave,, however, to-reargue those questions was granted to the respondent at the hearing in this case; but the court is still of the opinion that all of the questions presented in the former case were correctly decided on the evidence then exhibited, and refers to the opinion given on that occasion for the reasons upon which that conclusion rests. Some points are made by the present respondent, and some new evidence is introduced on the issue of novelty, which renders it necessary to re-examine the case in those particulars. •

He contends that the complainants are not a manufacturing corporation within the meaning of the state statute, because their rubber plates are made to order, and because they are not made by the company. Due consideration was given to that objection on the former occasion, and therefore It will be sufficient to refer to that part of the opinion as reported in the second volume of Clifford’s reports. Nothing new is presented in that part of the argument.

Objections of more importance are taken to the validity of the patent, which will be separately considered. They are as follows: That the alleged invention is not new £»id was not patentable. That the original pat-entee, John A. Cummings, was not the original and first inventor of the improvement.

Construed as the patent was by the court in the former case, it is hardly denied that the described improvement was patentable; but the argument now is, that the letters patent do not cover the process for making “the , plate for holding artificial teeth, or teeth and gums”; that it covers “nothing but the use of hard rubber in making plates for artificial teeth,” which, it is insisted, is •not patentable, as the qualities of the material were known to all the world, and that the suggestion that it could be applied to such a purpose was not a discovery or invention within the meaning of the patent law. Had the claim of the patent been such as is supposed in the proposition, there would perhaps be some foundation for the argument; but the proposition is founded on a mistaken view of what is claimed by the patentee in the second reissue.

The claim of the patent is “the plate of hard rubber or vulcanite, or its equivalent, for holding artificial teeth, or teeth and gums, substantially as described.” As designated in the patent, the invention is a new and useful improvement in artificial gums; but it is described in the beginning of the specification as a new and useful improvement in plates for artificial teeth, which, perhaps, is the better general description.

Taken literally, the claim is for the product as manufactured; but when the introductory words are considered in connection with the words “substantially as described,” it is clear that it includes not only the plate of hard rubber for holding artificial teeth, or [737]*737teeth and gums, hut the process or mode by which they, are constructed. Unsupported, as the theory of the respondent is, by any phrase or word contained 'in the claim or specification, it does not seem to require any argument to refute it except to say that the meaning of letters patent, like other grants or written instruments, must be ascertained by the language employed, as applied to the subject matter. Much aid may be derived in construing the claim of a patent by referring to the descriptive part of the specification, and reference may also be made, if need be, to the drawings and patent-office model; but neither the correspondence between ‘the commissioner and the applicant nor the proceedings in the patent-office are aamissible to enlarge, diminish, or vary the language of the claim.

Evidence to prove the state of the art is admissible, and expert testimony to aid in expounding and defining technical words and phrases may be received, but in all other respects the rules for the construction of letters patent are the same as those applied in construing other grants and written instruments. Patents for ihventions are to receive a liberal interpretation, and are, if practicable, to be so construed as to uphold and not to destroy the right of the inventors. Turrill v. Michigan S. & N. R. Co., 1 Wall. [68 U. S.] 491; Ames v. Howard [Case No. 326]. Reference in this case must be made to the descriptive part of the specification as well as to the claim, and when that is done it becomes apparent that the views of the respondent cannot be sustained.

Special reference is made by the inventor, in the first place, to the objections and inconveniences observable in the old mode of attaching artificial teeth to a metallic plate, and fitting the same to the roof of the mouth. They were, as stated in the specification, that the metal was expensive, and that the plate being hard and unyielding was apt to injure the mouth, and that its tendency was to impede mastication and obstruct articulation. He then describes the hard rubber which he uses for that purpose, characterizing it as an elastic material, possessing and retaining, when used for that purpose, sufficient rigidity for the purpose of mastication, and yet being pliable enough to yield a little to the motion of the mouth.

His invention, as he states, consists in forming the plate, to which the teeth or teeth and gums are attached, of hard rubber or vulcanite; but he proceeds at once to give a description of the manner of making the hard rubber plates, from which it appears that impressions are taken of the mouth or that part of it which the plate is to fit, of wax or plaster, in the same manner as is usually practised in the construction of gold plates for artificial teeth. Superadded to that is also a description of the means employed in setting and securing the teeth, as also of the kinds of teeth which may be employed. They are provided with pins projecting in such a manner that the rubber will close around them and hold them securely in position! Minute description is also given of the manner in which they are set in place and adjusted to the proper distance and fulness; and when completed, the statement is that the plaster mould, with the teeth set as described, is carefully filled with soft rubber, and the same is made secure in its position by placing another plaster mould over it, and while in that condition it is 1: “ited and baked in an oven, or in some other suitable way.

Other analogous considerations might be deduced from the description of the invention as given in the specification, to negative the theory of the respondent as to the construction of the patent; but it does not seem to be necessary to pursue the subject, as those already referred to are amply sufficient to show that the views of the respondent find no substantial support from the language employed in any part of the specification.

Want of novelty is the next objection taken by the respondent to the right of the complainant to a decree, and he has introduced some new proofs under that issue in the pleadings, but they do not appear to be of a character to require any extended examination. He admits in his answer that letters patent were granted to the original patentee, as alleged in the bill of complaint, and the court adheres to the opinion that the letters patent having been introduced in evidence by the complainants afford a prima facie presumption that the patentee was the original and first inventor of what is therein described as his' invention. Agawam Woolen Co. v. Jordan, 7 Wall. [74 U. S.] 596; Blanchard v.

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10 F. Cas. 735, 3 Cliff. 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodyear-dental-vulcanite-co-v-gardiner-circtdri-1871.