Kirby v. Beardsley

14 F. Cas. 654, 5 Blatchf. 438, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 265, 1867 U.S. App. LEXIS 765
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York
DecidedSeptember 14, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 F. Cas. 654 (Kirby v. Beardsley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirby v. Beardsley, 14 F. Cas. 654, 5 Blatchf. 438, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 265, 1867 U.S. App. LEXIS 765 (circtndny 1867).

Opinion

SHIPMAN, District Judge.

On the 15th of November, 1859, a patent was granted to AVilliam A. Kirby, for certain new and useful “improvements in combined harvesting machines.” This patent was subsequently, and before the 9th of July, 1S61, assigned to the plaintiffs in this suit, and. on the last named date, they received a reissue of the same, on an amended specification.

Upon this reissued patent the present bill for an injunction and an account is founded. As the original patent was referred to in the answer, and put in evidence, it may be well to refer to its contents here, in connection with the reissue, as it throws some light on the true construction of the latter. It will be seen, by a comparison of the two specifications, that they differ in their description of the utility of the invention, and in the form of the claim. There are two claims in the original, but, as the second one is left out of the reissue, the first only will be referred to here. That claim, as stated in original, was as follows: “What I claim as new, and desire to secure by letters patent, is, the particular arrangement and location of the raker’s seat, in the angle formed between the finger bar and the side of the platform, as set forth.” In the reissue, this claim is thrown into the following form: “In combination with a cutting apparatus and a platform having a side delivery, and both placed in rear of a line drawn through the front of the main wheel, the raker’s seat located at the side of the platform, and arranged so that the raker sits behind the main frame and facing the falling grain, substantially as and for the purpose described.”

By a comparison of the claim as originally stated, with the drawings, or with the stereoscopic exhibits, Nos. 9 and 10, of a machine built under the patent, this arrangement and location of the raker’s seat, which was asserted to be the ■ invention sought to be protected by the patent, will be clearly seen. The main frame, to which the cutting apparatus was attached, and from which it projected to the right, at right angles to the path of the machine, was supported by one large wide-rimmed driving-wheel. This wheel was placed ’ towards the extreme left of the' main frame, and the driver’s seat was placed directly over it. The edge of the delivery side of the platform was a straight line, extending backwards, at an angle of about eighty degrees, to the finger-bar. The line of the finger-bar, extending to the left, from the point where the edge of the side delivery of the platform joined it, formed, therefore, an angle of about one hundred and ten degrees. To the rear of, at a greater elevation, and facing the apex of this angle, .the raker’s seat was located. The original patent claims this “arrangement” and location of the seat in this angle, (or facing this angle). But no vital force can be given to this term, “arrangement,” beyond that of indicating the relative position of the seat with reference to the other parts of the machine. It was secured to the solid and weightier parts of the frame by ordinary and well known mechanical means. The whole novelty was in the particular location of the seat. From the seat so located, as the original specification alleges, the raker could reach forward, disentangle the uncut grain, when its disordered condition required it, and draw it to the cutters, to be severed. When the uncut grain was erect, so that the reel would bring it properly to the cutters, the raker could, from this location of his seat, sweep the platform of the cut grain, [657]*657and leave it in. a windrow behind the machine, and out of its return path on the next round. The balancing of the machine, and the bracing of the raker in his seat by placing his feet in the stirrups, are also referred to as advantages gained. But it is not important to dwell on these latter features here. As already stated, the novelty consisted in the location of the raker’s seat, and was well described in the first claim of the original specification.

What particular difficulty the patentee encountered, which rendered his patent in this form inoperative to secure his rights, by which a reissue became necessary, does not appear very clearly. Whether it was feared that a mere new position of one of the elements of an old combination did not alone furnish tenable ground upon which the patent could stand; or whether the language of the claim, fixing the location of the seat “in the angle formed between the finger-bar and the side of the platform,” was deemed a restriction of the patent within narrower limits than the invention really made; or whether merely a different and apparently more comprehensive mode of stating the invention claimed, was thought more desirable, is not manifest. For some reason, however, a reissue was deemed advisable, and the draughtsman of the specification, after enlarging upon the difficulties to be overcome, and the success with which they were to be surmounted by this new location of the raker’s seat, proceeded to put the claim in the form of a combination, consisting of three members, namely, a cutting apparatus, a side delivery platform, and a raker’s seat. Here he was confronted with a difficulty— probably the same one which deterred the draughtsman of the original from calling it a combination at all — and that was, that the combination was old. In order to remove this difficulty, it was apparent that some element. or elements of novelty must be introduced, in order to support the alleged invention as a new combination. The first two members, the cutting apparatus and the platform. were, therefore, Qualified by the condition, that they were both to be placed in the rear of a line drawn through the front of the main wheel. The last member, the raker’s seat, was to be located at the side of the platform, so that the raker could sit behind the main frame and facing the falling, grain. It is, also, clearly inferable, from the tenth paragraph of the specification, that it was intended to claim, in regard to the location of the raker’s seat, that it should be behind a line drawn through the cutting apparatus. Indeed, this inevitably results from the location of the other parts of the machine.

Now, it is perfectly obvious, that the only features of this combination, as thus stated, which look towards novelty, are those which • relate to a change or supposed change in the location of the members — the first two in rear of a line drawn through the front of the main wheel, and the third at the side of the platform, and behind a line drawn through the cutting apparatus. The form and angle of the raker’s seat, with reference to the way the raker is to sit and face his work, may be laid out of the case. The shape of the seat is not claimed, nor the. angle at which it faces, and the position of the body of the raker on the seat can form no element in, or material qualification of, the combination. The way the raker faces is not a part of the organized mechanism, but a result of it. It may be, and doubtless is, one of the useful objects of the invention, but it forms no part of the invention itself. I do not overlook the fact that the claim states, not only that the raker’s seat is located at the side of the platform, but that it is “arranged so that the raker sits behind the main frame and facing the falling grain.” The relative-position or location of the seat being fixed upon where it is, of course the raker sits behind the main frame. This location being given, whether he sits fácing the falling grain or not, so far as any agency of the machine is concerned, depends upon the form of the seat, and the angle at which it is placed. The fact is, he sometimes faces the standing grain.

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Bluebook (online)
14 F. Cas. 654, 5 Blatchf. 438, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 265, 1867 U.S. App. LEXIS 765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirby-v-beardsley-circtndny-1867.