Keystone Manufacturing Co. v. Adams

151 U.S. 139, 14 S. Ct. 295, 38 L. Ed. 103, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2042
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 8, 1894
Docket156
StatusPublished
Cited by114 cases

This text of 151 U.S. 139 (Keystone Manufacturing Co. v. Adams) 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
Keystone Manufacturing Co. v. Adams, 151 U.S. 139, 14 S. Ct. 295, 38 L. Ed. 103, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2042 (1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shiras,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

Prior to the invention patented in 1812 by Henry A. Adams, a well-known defect in cornshellers consisted in the clogging or choking of the chute through which the ears of corn descended.to the sheller. As the ears would approach the throat of the machine, they were liable to stop and. wedge against each other. This sometimes necessitated the stopping ' of the machine in order to break the clog in the feed or chute, and usually the services of an attendant were required to clear the chute and break the clog by punching the ears with a stick.

The object of the Adams .invention was to remedy this defect, and the device invented is described in the first claim of the patent in the following terms: The combination with a cornsheller of a series of wings, ivheels, or projections, so arranged on a shaft as to revolve in the same direction which the com is running, and so placed relative to the throat as to force into the machine all misplaced or hesitating ears, substantially as specified.” Resorting to the specification, we find the following description of the invention: -

*143 This invention relates to an improvement upon the corn-sheller patented by Augustus Adams, as described in his letters patent No. 54,659, dated May 15, 1S66. In said patented corn-sheller a winged shaft is placed above the openings into the sheller, and is revolved oppositely to the direction of the entering corn, in such a manner that the said wings strike the upper ear, if two ears attempt to enter the throat át once, and throw said upper ear back into position to descend properly; but I have discovered that the ear so thrown back retards the feed, inasmuch as the following ears are likely to override the ear so thrown back, and the difficulty is thus continued.
In the present invention I propose to overcome this objection by forcing all the ears, as they approach the throat, to pass rapidly out of the way into the sheller; and to this end I arrange a shaft above the throat, with a series of wings, wheels, or projections, to revolve in the same direction as the entering corn, so as to force the corn rapidly forward into the sheller, whmb is capable of shelling all the corn that can be forced through the throat. By this means I avoid any chance of clogging the feed under ordinary circumstances.”

That the patented device is useful and successfully overcomes the choking or clogging that interfered with the operation of cornshellers as previously constructed, is clearly, made out in the case. The evidence is positive as to this point, and also-to the effect that the application of the invention dispensed with the extra attendant, whose duty it was to remove the clog by using a stick or fork, and increased the ordinary capacity of the machines. It is also made to appear that the invention has gone into general use.

While it is true that the mere fact that a device has gone into general use, and has displaced other devices which had previously been employed for analogous uses, does not establish, in all cases, that the later device involves invention within the meaning of the patent laws, yet such fact is always of importance, and is entitled to weight, when the question is whether the machine exhibits patentable invention. Smith v. Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co., 93 U. S. 486, 495.

We, therefore, agree with'the court below that the change *144 .was a substantial and- meritorious one, and one which- was well worthy of a patent, by reason of the improvement which it produced in'the operative effect of the cornsheller.”

We also concur in the reasoning and conclusion of the court below' respecting • the novelty of the invention. While it is true that the device patented by ’Augustus Adams, the father of the present patentee, in May, 1866, was intended to effect the same purpose, and used likewise a revolving shaft with ■wings or protuberances, yet the mode of operation was entirely different. .The theory of the earlier machine was to ‘prevent the clogging of the ears of corn in the throat of the shelter by driving back some of the ears, and thus keeping them from entering the shelter simultaneously. But it seems ■ that this interrupted the continuous flow of the ears into the shelter, and retarded the operation of shelling.

Another patent alleged as an anticipation was that granted to Augustus Aiams, August 6, 1861, No. 1861, and which is asserted to contain a rotating shaft with little wheels fastened thereon, having teeth or prickers on their faces. This shaft, however, is located underneath the chute, down which the ears of corn descend, and the evidence shows that this device did not operate so as to prevent clogging. On the contrary, the clogging of the feed in this machine required the attention of one man all the time. This was the defect which the same patentee, Augustus Adams, sought to obviate by the device patented by him in 1866.

It must be admitted that both of these patents granted to Augustus Adams, one in 1861, the -other in 1866, describe ’ mechanical contrivances closely resembling the invention in question, patented by II. A. Adams, October 15, 1872. There is present in all three macmnes a rotating shaft with spurs or wings, and the purpose sought to be effected is the same.

• But, as we have seen, when the test of practical success is applied, the conclusion is favorable to the last patent.

Where the patented invention consists of an improvement of machines previously existing, it is not always easy to point out what it is that distinguishes a new and successful machine from an old and ineffectual one. But when, in a class of *145 machines so widely used as those in. question, it is made to appear that at last, after repeated and ..futile attempts, a/ machine has been contrived which accomplishes the Result desired, and when the Patent Office has granted a patent to the successful .inventor, the courts should not .be ready, to adopt a narrow or astute construction, fatal to the grant.

The question of infringement is readily disposed of. The defendant, the Keystone Manufacturing^ Company, manufactures and sells machines made under..certain patents granted-to Harvey Packer, .and it is claimed that .because, in these machines, the ears of corn do not drop.down a chute to the point where they pass into the throat of the,shelter,, but are brought directly to the shelling, devices.by carriers, such difference in the mode of bringing the corn to.be operated on by.the shelling devices distinguishes, the machines. ..But w.e agree with the court below, that there is nothing in the H. A., Adams patent which, restricts his device to cornshellers where the. ears, are fed into'a. chute, through which they drop to the •throat of,the shelter. It is.equally well adapted.to be used in.that form, of machine,where.the chute is dispensed with, and where the ears of co.rn are' brought by other means to the throat.of the machine. What \ye have to compare-is.the.

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Bluebook (online)
151 U.S. 139, 14 S. Ct. 295, 38 L. Ed. 103, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2042, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keystone-manufacturing-co-v-adams-scotus-1894.