International Tooth Crown Co. v. Gaylord

140 U.S. 55, 11 S. Ct. 716, 35 L. Ed. 347, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2433
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 27, 1891
Docket294
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 140 U.S. 55 (International Tooth Crown Co. v. Gaylord) 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
International Tooth Crown Co. v. Gaylord, 140 U.S. 55, 11 S. Ct. 716, 35 L. Ed. 347, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2433 (1891).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of. the court.

Prior to the invention of Dr. Richmond, the only method of supplying an artificial for a natural crown, in case the tooth had decayed or broken off, was by what is called a peg tooth. This was made by drilling the nerve canal larger; then a porcelain tooth with a hole in it was ground to fit the root, and the two were connected together by a wooden or metallic pin or dowel made to fit the hole in the porcelain as well as the hole in the tooth. The operation', however, was very unsatisfactory. It was found to be impossible to fit the artificial and the natural tooth so closely together that particles of food and saliva would not work in between them, fouling the mouth and ultimately causing the decay of the root or such a swelling of the wood as would split the root in the act of mastication, or such an enlargement of the cavity as would cause the wooden pin to drop out, resulting in either case in the loss of the tooth. It was the object of Dr. Richmond to supersede-this method of crowning teeth by a more perfect, cleanly and durable device*

It is substantially-conceded in this case, and was found by the- court below, that his patent No. 277,941 describes an invention of great utility in the practice of dentistry, which has been largely adopted by the profession throughout the country, for building upon- the roots of decayed teeth artificial crowns, which are claimed to be as strong and as well adapted to the purposes. of mastication as natural teeth, and to imitate them *59 so perfectly in. appearance that it is impossible to distinguish; them except by a critical examination.

Gold or other metallic caps were not wholly unknown before-the invention of Dr. Richmond. One such, known as the Morrison operation, wras described in the Missouri Dental Journal of May, 1879. Another is explained in the patent of November 4, 1873, to John B. Beers, who seems to have been the first to make use of a screw or pivot to attach the cap to the root of the tooth. In both of these cement or porcelain, enamel was used to fill the cap and secure the necessary adhe-. sion to the root. Two or three other similar devices are shown; but none of them seem to have been attended by any-practical success, and neither of them exhibits the combination of the Richmond patent. Indeed, if was scarcely claimed that his. invention had been anticipated, and, as infringement of all his. claims was admitted, the whole defence practically turned upon the question.of abandonment.

The facts bearing upon this defence are substantially as follows: Dr. Richmond began his experiments in fitting a gold collar to the neck of a tooth as early as 1875 or 1876 in San Francisco, and he states himself that he performed the operation described in his principal patent in the mouth of one Kalloch on Christmas of 1876, and, so far as he knew, the operation was entirely successful, and the tooth still remained in the mouth of his patient. . He further states in his examination 'that he practised this operation extensively in San Francisco, Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, New York and New London, and demonstrated it to five hundred dentists'in private practice and in public clinics. In their general characteristics these operations, as he states them in his testimony, were the same as were described in his patent, although there appear to have been certain differences in detail. Sometimes the tooth was backed with gold and sometimes with platina;, sometimes the crowns were made entirely of platina, except the solder and porcelain. The operation v?as performed by. making a band surrounding the root, with a porcelain front, a pin extending into the root, and the whole cemented on the" root in one piece. The band was made with a piece of gold- *60 plate material soldered together to form a solid ring; this was fitted around the end of the root. The porcelain tooth was then ground upon this band to correspond with the adjoining tooth. The tooth was then waxed into its position; the band was then removed, and the porcelain waxed into its position on the band; the pin was then inserted into the wax forming the crown, the porcelain, pin and band being held together with wax. It was then invested, as it is called, with marble dust and.plaster. The wax was then removed, and that portion of it which was filled with wax before was filled with gold, forming one solid crown.

It is but just to the plaintiff to state in this connection that Richmond appears to have had a quarrel with the treasurer of the plaintiff company in 1883, very soon after the patent was issued to the Richmond Tooth Crown Company as assignee of the inventor; and that he was called as a witness by the defendants, and apparently testified under a strong bias against the plaintiff; but his evidence regarding the extent of his operations is fortified by a large number of letters from dontisis in different parts of the country, written in 1878 and 1879, certifying in strong language to the value of his invention. Indeed, the evidence is that he instructed Dr. Gaylord, one of the defendants in this suit, in the art of making and applying this tooth crown as early as 1879, performing two operations in Dr. Gaylord’s mouth and one in that of a patient, and receiving pay for the same. .As the application for the patent Avas not made until December 1, 1882, more than two years after all these operations were conducted, the evidence of abandonment is overwhelming, if it be once admitted that the operation Avas -identical with that described in the patent, or different from it only in an immaterial particular.

The reply to all this testimony is, that the tooth croAvns made prior to the year 1880 were defective, because they were made with an incomplete metallic floor to the ferrule, and for that reason the metal cap or thimble Avas more or less leaky. There is considerable evidence upon this point, Dr. Gaylord swearing that the operation taught to him was exactly like that Avhich Avas described in the patent, while the plaintiff’s *61 witnesses lay. great stress upon the point that the cap was-' .imperfect by reason of the incomplete covering to the root, although in some cases the- hole or aperture is admitted to ■have been microscopic. Among the earliest exhibits put in ¡evidence is that -known .-as Searles, No. 1, which was a tooth ' Which had been' treated by the defendant Gaylord in 1879, according to the Richmond .process as then practised, and which.remained in good condition until 1885, when it fell out, the root having becoine loose. The exhibit as originally ■ put ip evidence showed the root, surmounted by a crown. This Exhibit Searles, No. 1, is claimed to be identical with the patent it} having a floor extending completely across the ferrule, and united therewith in front as- wéll as in the rear. With regard tothis, however, the plaintiffs expert testifies that he,had examined it with a magnifying-glass and with a microscope, and did not find that there was a closed cap. “ There is a platina floor, but it is not closed! Therefore-the-tooth cannot show the perfected invention of Richmond, for it does not show any hermetically closed metallic cap, and without this the said perfected invention is not found.” The same witness on redirect testifies further^with regard to this hole by saying: “ I have examined Searles, No. 1, carefully under a powerful magnifying glass.

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Bluebook (online)
140 U.S. 55, 11 S. Ct. 716, 35 L. Ed. 347, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-tooth-crown-co-v-gaylord-scotus-1891.