Howe v. Williams

12 F. Cas. 689, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 395
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 F. Cas. 689 (Howe v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howe v. Williams, 12 F. Cas. 689, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 395 (circtdma 1863).

Opinion

CLIFFORD, Circuit Justice.

This is a bill in equity, wherein the complainant alleges that he is the original and first invent- or of a certain new and useful improvement in sewing machines, which was duly secured to him by letters patent, and that the respondent, well knowing the premises, has. without his consent and in violation of his exclusive right, made, used, and vended to others to be used, a large number of sewing machines, embracing substantially his patented improvement. Wherefore the complainant prays for an account, and for an injunction. His bill of complaint, founded on his original letters patent, dated September 10, 1846, was filed on August 9, 1859, and on October 3 following, the respondent filed his answer to the same. As originally granted the complainant’s patent would have expired on September 10,1860, but he obtained an extension of the same for the term of seven years from and after that date, and on November 7, 1800, he filed a supplemental bill of complaint, setting forth the fact of such extension. Having secured such an extension of his patent the complainant afterward surrendered the same, on account of a defective description, and .it was canceled, and on March 19, 18G1, a new patent was duly issued to him on an amended specification, and as he alleges, for the same invention, to continue for the term of twenty-one years from the date of the original patent. Accordingly the complainant, on April 12, 1801, filed a second supplemental bill of complaint, setting forth such surrender and reissue. Respondent filed his answer to the supplemental billsof complaint on June 29,18G1, and, among other things, alleges that since the filing of his answer to the original bill of complaint he has obtained letters patent of the United States for an improvement in sewing machines made and invented by him, which is of great value, and which is used by him in the machines that he sold. His principal defenses to this suit are, first, that the complainant is not the original and first inventor of his supposed improvement; and secondly, that if he is, that he, the respondent, has not infringed the same. Before proceeding, however, to examine the merits of the case, it becomes necessary to consider a preliminary motion submitted by the respondent. He moves the court that an order be passed directing that all proceedings in the cause be stayed, and that the complain[691]*691ant be required to bring an action at law to determine the several matters involved in this suit, or that it be ordered that issues for a jury to settle the same.be framed under the direction of the court, as more fully set forth in the record. Such a motion is sometimes granted, where the patent is recent, and where the ease shows that the originality of the invention is doubtful, or where the merits of the controversy chiefly depend upon contradictory evidence, involving the credibility of witnesses; but where the patent is of long standing, and the inventor has had an exclusive possession under it, the motion is seldom received with any favor. Washburn v. Gould [Case No. 17,214]; Hill v. Thompson, 3 Mer. 622; Collard v. Allison, 4 Mylne & C. 487. Other examples, where such a motion was granted, are also shown an some of the numerous cases cited by the respondent, but it is a sufficient answer to all such decisions, as applied to this case, to say that the motion ought not in general to be granted where it appears that a trial at law and a hearing in equity have already been had, and that both have resulted in favor of the complainant; and the motion is accordingly overruled. Goodyear v. Day [Case No. 5,569]. Returning to the merits of the controversy the most important inquiry is, whether the complainant is the original and first inventor of the improvement described in the specification and claims of his reissued letters patent. Referring to the «•on eluding part of the specification; it will be seen that the claims are eight in number, and it is proper to remark that they are so plainly and explicitly expressed that they can not be regarded as of doubtful construction. They are all, in fact, substantially included in the first of the series, which reads as follows; First. A sewing machine, constructed and operating to form a seam substantially as described. Particular description is also given in the specification, not only of the mode in which the machine operates, but -ilso of the several devices or elements of which it is composed, and those several devices or elements when taken as an organized whole, constitute the invention specified in the first claim of the reissued patent. Those devices as set forth in the specification, are «divided into three classes, and when so classified they constitute a mechanism for manipulating the threads, or an apparatus for stitching, and an apparatus for holding the cloth during that process, and an apparatus •for feeding the cloth operating in the same connection, and all acting in combination to form the seam. Separately considered the mechanism for manipulating the threads consists of an eye-pointed reciprocating nee•dle constructed with a groove so as to protect the threads in the rapid movement through the cloth, and a shuttle -or its equivalent for detaining and interlocking the loops of thread passed through the cloth by the needle, to which must also be added the lifting rod and clipping lever, and the receiving pin, which may be regarded as appliances for controlling the threads, and for making tension on the same, so that each stitch may be drawn tight by the operation of the machine. Certain opposing local surfaces, as described in the specification, constitute the holding apparatus, consisting of the shuttle box, or one side of it, and of a certain metallic plate, whose upper end, as therein described, is attached to the fíame of the machine. Means are also described for adjusting those two local surfaces to the thickness of the material to be sewed,. showing conclusively that they are designed to press upon the cloth or other material, in the operation of the machine, and perform the functions of holding devices. Those opposing surfaces sustain the cloth during the operation of stitching, holding it in position against the thrust and retraction of the needle, but they are so adjusted, or may be, that the pressure and retention are not sufficient to prevent the feeding of the cloth for the purpose of spacing the succeeding stitch, preparatory to another corresponding perforation of the needle. They so operate as to make the pressure upon the cloth near the point of sewing, leaving the other parts of the same comparatively free, and they also serve to guide the cloth so that it may.be fed in a determined plane, and confining the same in the proper locality, so that the stitch may be drawn tight. Briefly described, the feeding apparatus consists of a metallic plate, supplied with projecting teeth, which take hold of the cloth, and are designed to answer somewhat the ordinary purposes of basting, and the plate is also furnished with a row of small holes, drilled, at regular distance from each other, answering the purpose of rack teeth, so that the plate, as the stitch is taken, may be moved forward between the two stationary holding surfaces, by means of a pinion, which enables the operator to regulate the length of the stitches at pleasure.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 F. Cas. 689, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howe-v-williams-circtdma-1863.