Howard v. Detroit Stove Works

150 U.S. 164, 14 S. Ct. 68, 37 L. Ed. 1039, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2370
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 13, 1893
Docket64
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 150 U.S. 164 (Howard v. Detroit Stove Works) 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
Howard v. Detroit Stove Works, 150 U.S. 164, 14 S. Ct. 68, 37 L. Ed. 1039, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2370 (1893).

Opinion

Me. Justice Jackson

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought by appellants’ testator, Philo D. Beckwith, against the appellee for the alleged infringement of three letters patent, viz.: No. 123,142, issued January 30,1872; No. 135,621, issued February 11, 1873-; and No. 206,074, issued July 16, 1878, all for improvements in heating stoves. The defences set up and interposed were that the patents were all void for want of novelty and patentable invention. Pending the suit the patentee died, and the Cause was revived and proceeded in the name of his executors. The court below dismissed the bill and complainants appeal to this court to reverse that decree.

The first patent, issued January 30, 1872, relates to an improvement in stoves, wherein an exposed fire-pot section, cylindrical in shape and tapering downwardly, is fitted into ■ the upper end of a hollow ash-pit section. This fire-pot has formed on the inner side of its lower end an annular flange' on which the grate- rests. The theory of the patent is that this flange, which may be cast on, or made separate from, the fire-pot and riveted or otherwise fastened to it, is made of such a width that it will collect upon it a bank of ashes, which will have the effect of preventing undue expansion of the fire-pot at the point of junction with the ash-pit. Or, in other words, the collection of ashes on the flange will prevent such an expansion of the lower end of the fire-pot as would cause it to leave its seat on the ash-pit and expose an open joint at this point. The inventor stated in his application that he had found that the expansion of the fire-pot is so great without the flange that the stove proves a failure; but with the flange *166 cast on it at the point designated above, the joint will remain tight during the lifetime'of the stoye.' The novelty involved in the patent consists entirely of the tapering cast-iron, fire-pot with the annular flange or shelf formed on its inside lower end at the point where it joins the ash-pit, and upon which flange the grate rests. The single claim-is “the tapering cast-iron section B with the flange or shelf o framed- on it, as -described and shown.”

It was claimed by the appellee that this feature of the invention was so common in actual stove construction at the time the patent was issued as to be deemed obvious, and that prior patents, attaining the same results, had been granted which practically covered the same' design or. contrivance included in this particular patent. In support of this contention -it was shown that a patent had been issued to Benjamin Brownell, on September 18, 1868, for a soft coal hot-air furnace, in which it appears from' the' drawings set out in the record that a tapering fire-pot is one of the elements of his invention, although it is not described in the specification. The drawings also indicate, and it was established by expert testimony, that this tapering fire-pot had a flange on the inside lower end, upon which the grate rests. ■ At the trial a model of the Brownell patent was introduced in which it was shown that the model differed from the patent drawings in having the projecting flange at the lower end of the fire-pot formed on the ash-pit, instead of on the fire-pot.

The appellee further showed that a patent was issued to A. Atwood, May 14, 1850, No. 7356, which has a flange projecting under the lower edge of the fire-pot as wide as the outer rim of the grate. This flange is upon the ash-pit and hot upon the fire-pot. A patent issued to Bush & Richards, No. 171,129, November 19,-1867, shows a constrhction like the Atwood, patent, except that the fire-pot is tapering.

It therefore appears in these three patents offered by the appellee in-support of its contention that the invention of the appellants had been anticipated, that they contain a clear and accurate representation of the contrivance of the Beckwith patent; that even if the flange was formed on the ash-pit *167 instead of on the fire-pot, it was the equivalent thereof, because it performed the same function in the same way; and that the only function of the flange would be to collect a ring’or bank of ashes at the base of the fire-pot when the stove was in use.

If there is any material difference between the patent under consideration and those just discussed, it is found in the width of the flange. The appellants lay particular stress upon the fact that the width of the flange in the Beckwith patent — which was to serve the primary purpose of permitting a bank of ashes to form upon it which would have the effect of preventing the lower part of the fire-box from becoming unduly heated — is greater than shown in the previous patents; but neither in the specification nor claim of the patent does the patentee indicate what shall be the width of this flange. The description of the invention is vague and indefinite, and is not sufficient to enable those skilled in the art to construct it without experiment so as to attain the desired result. The width of the flange is a mere matter of degree, and if at the time of the invention the proper width of the flange to accomplish the purpose desired was known, then the paténtee made no invention. If the proper width was not known at that time, it should have been described in the patent; but as the-patent is silent on this point, except that the drawings indicate that the width of the outside rim of the grate is the proper width for the flange, it can hardly be said under such .circumstances that the vague and indefinite description of the ■width of the flange elevates it to the dignity of invention, for it has been shown that the stoves covered by ihe'p'atents just discussed also had each a flange which performed the same function, although not specifically claimed in the patents. We think it is obviously apparent, that the patent of appellants’ testator has not only been anticipated, but that it is wanting in all of the elements of patentable novelty.

The next patent to be considered is No. 135,631, issued February 11, 1873. This patent is for improvements in wood stoves, and consists of the construction, combination, and afrangements of the various- cooperating devices comprising the parts of the stoves by joining them together with short *168 bolts or rivets, adapted to lugs'or flanges, instead of long rods which, when, exposed to the fire, are liable to be burned off several times during the life of the stove. The claims are four in number, but the. third is not claimed to be .infringed. The general form of the fire-pot is the same as in the former pátent, including the internal flange, which, it is alleged, now performs a triple function, viz.: collecting ashes, as before; supporting the grate, as before, and securing the aslupit to the-fire-pot by means of bolts or rivets passing through holes in the flange. The three claims in controversy are as follows:

“ 1. The section A (ash-pit) and section B (fire-box) constructed and secured together by means of bolts or rivets, and the internal flange b, substantially as described.

“2. The sheet-metal section C,.(body of the stove,) fitted into the fire-pot section B, and secured thereto by means of bolts or rivets, substantially as described.

“ 4. The top-plate or section Gr, secured to the section E, by means of lugs and bolts, or rivets, as set forth.”

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Bluebook (online)
150 U.S. 164, 14 S. Ct. 68, 37 L. Ed. 1039, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-detroit-stove-works-scotus-1893.