Gordon v. Warder

150 U.S. 47, 14 S. Ct. 32, 37 L. Ed. 992, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2347
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 30, 1893
DocketNos. 34, 35, 36, and 37
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 150 U.S. 47 (Gordon v. Warder) 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
Gordon v. Warder, 150 U.S. 47, 14 S. Ct. 32, 37 L. Ed. 992, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2347 (1893).

Opinion

*48 Mr. Justice Shiras

delivered the opinion of the court.

These are appeals from decrees of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of Ohio, dismissing the bill of complaint.in each of the four cases. The questions in controversy are the same in all of the cases, and can be considered and determined in one opinion.

The bills of complaint, as originally filed, averred infringements by the defendants of three different patents, respectively dated May 12, 1868, June 16, 1874, and October 26, 1875, ■granted to James F. Gordon, and held and owned by the several complainants; but, before final hearing, the complainants withdrew those portions of the bills that pertained to the two latter patents, and the decrees only dealt with the alleged infringement of the letters patent dated May 12, 1868.

The invention of James F. Gordon related to an improvement in that class of harvesters by which the grain, as it is cut, is bound by the operation of the machine. It was not claimed by Gordon that he was the first to devise a grain binder as part of a harvester; such devices were well known in the art. A pradtical difficulty in the operation of such machines was found in the fact that, in different fields of grain, and often in the same field, the-grain stalks were of different lengths. Hence, if the binding apparatus occupied'a fixed and unchangeable position with respect to the bundle or gavel of grain when brought to the operation of the binder, the binding wire or cord would be passed round the bundle without reference to the length of the stalks, and thus it would happen that- the cord that would pass.--around, the middle of a- bundle of long stalks' would, in case the stalks were short, pass round the bundle near the head of the stalks. A sheaf formed by the passage of the cord round the bundle at any place, except the middle of. the stalks, will be apt to fall apart, and the operation of binding thus become unsuccessful.

Gordon claimed to have surmounted this difficulty by contriving a binding apparatus that should be movable at the will *49 of the operator, and adjustable to suit the varying lengths of the grain, and thus operate to pass the binding cord always round the middle of the stalks.

Having, in the specification forming part of his letters patent, described the difficulty to be overcome and the method devised by him to* do so, the inventor made eleven several, claims to different parts and combinations of parts in his machine. In this litigation, however, the complainants have restricted their case, as against these defendants, to an alleged infringement of the first claim made by Gordon.

This claim is for a binding arm, capable of adjustment in the direction of the length of the grain, in combination with an automatic twisting device, substantially .as and for the purposes described.” The specification discloses that the binding arm and the twistjng device are to remain in juxtaposition with each other, and are adjustable, with respect to the grain to be bound, by a movement horizontally along a shaft, so as always to apply the binding wire to the centre of the sheaf. This longitudinal movement is regulated by a lever, which is applied by the driver or operator, and winch enables him to-change the position of the binding arm and twister so as to operate on the middle of the bundle of grain.

The view that we take of these cases relieves us from going at length into the history of mechanical binding devices, and from minutely considering the nature of Gordon’s first claim. We content ourselves with saying that, upon the evidence laid before us, we are satisfied that Gordon was the' first inventor . of a mechanical binder and twister adjustable, at the will of the operator, to affect the binding by passing the cord or wire round the middle of the bundle, where this adjustability was reached by mounting the binder and twister upon a frame which was movable upon a shaft in a longitudinal direction. We are willing to adopt, as a fair definition of Gordon’s claim, that given by complainant’s counsel in his brief: The invention of Gordon consisted in this : In so arranging the binding arm and twister, or its equivalent, that while they continuously act with each other, for the purpose of placing the band around’the grain and uniting the .ends of the band, the driver *50 can instantaneously change their position with reference to the grain-delivering mechanism of the harvester, so as to lay the band in the centre of the bundle, without stopping the machine or dismounting from his seat.”

We do not regard the patent of Watson, Renwick and Watson, dated May 13,1851, as an anticipation of Gordon, although the specification in that case did contain a paragraph stating that it might be advantageous, in some cases, to make the binder adjustable in respect to the cutting apparatus. No means were there provided, or method pointed out, whereby such a desirable result could be obtained. Nor do we find, in the other patents put in evidence by the defendants, any such anticipation of the Gordon claim as above defined, as to invalidate the grant made to Gordon on May 12, 1868, though such a state or condition of the art was brought about, by these earlier patents, as to require us to restrict the scope of the Gordon patent closely to the devices and methods claimed by him.

It was claimed on behalf of the defendants, and apparently conceded by the court below, that in the Gordon machine the rake, which gathers and moves the grain to the place where the bundle is to be b'ound, is a part of the binding mechanism; that without the action of the rake, as an adjunct of the binding apparatus, no successful operation could be effected. But Gordon, while describing the rake and its mode of operation, does not claim the rake as a part of his combination. His invention assumes that some instrumentality must be used to bring the grain within the grasp of the binder, but his claim can and must be restricted to the devices applied by him to render the binder and twister adjustable, at the will of the driver, to the varying lengths of the stalks to he bound. It was further contended, on behalf of the defendants, that the Gordon invention is exemplified by a machine into which harvesting or cutting devices and binding devices are incorporated as integral parts, and in which some of the parts belong equally to the harvesting mechanism and to the binding mechanism. The object of this contention was to afford a ground on which to distinguish the defendants’ machine, which *51 is claimed to consist of an aggregation of two distinct and independent organisms, to wit, a complete harvesting machine and a complete binding machine.

It is doubtless true that several of Gordon’s claims do apparently involve a claim of parts of the harvesting machine ■in combination with the binding apparatus, thus constituting an organic whole. But, as we have seen, the complainants have withdrawn from our consideration all of the claims except the first, and that is restricted, as above stated, to ■ the special devices therein described.

We do not attach much importance to the defendants’, contention that Gordon’s invention was not a practical success.

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Bluebook (online)
150 U.S. 47, 14 S. Ct. 32, 37 L. Ed. 992, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-warder-scotus-1893.