Kokomo Fence MacHine Co. v. Kitselman

189 U.S. 8, 23 S. Ct. 521, 47 L. Ed. 689, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1321
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 23, 1903
Docket148
StatusPublished
Cited by96 cases

This text of 189 U.S. 8 (Kokomo Fence MacHine Co. v. Kitselman) 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
Kokomo Fence MacHine Co. v. Kitselman, 189 U.S. 8, 23 S. Ct. 521, 47 L. Ed. 689, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1321 (1903).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Fuller,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The Circuit Court was of opinion that neither of complainants’ patents was a pioneer invention ; that they were all merely improvements on the prior art, and to be construed in that light; that complainants could not be treated on. the basis that they or their assignors were the first to make a portable machine for weaving wire fencing fabric in the field, which claim had been distinctly made by complainants, rejected by the Patent Office, and the claim thereupon withdrawn. In its judgment, complainants and defendant contended as to infringement on an equal field, the presumption of the validity of complainants’ patents being met by the presumption of the validity of the patent to Whitney. And, taking up complainants’ patents seriatim, the Circuit Court held that the differences between their machines and defendant’s machine were not *10 mere colorable invasions by the latter, and that the identity of means and of operation essential to infringement were lacking.

The Circuit Court of Appeals concurred with the Circuit Court that the case turned upon the question whether the patents sued on embodied a pioneer invention; that if complainants’ invention was not of a primary character, a substantial departure from the machines of the prior art, defendant’s machine was so sufficiently differentiated that the claim of infringement could not be maintained; while, on the other hand, if complainants’ patents “ were the first to give to the world a workable, portable machine for weaving wire fences in the field — a machine distinctly creating a new product — and aptly embody in their specifications and claims the mechanical arrangements that bring about such a result, the decree below is erroneous.”

The opinion was preceded by an extended statement of facts, which gave the specifications of the Davisson patent of December Í, 1883, and certain of the accompanying figures, together with the second and third claims, alleged to be infringed ; also “the pertinent drawings and specifications of the Kitselman patent,” and the claims alleged to be infringed, which were as follows:

“1. In a wire-fabric machine, a series of sectional twisters, each of which comprises a central section for carrying a warp-wire, and having rotary movement imparted thereto, and the shifting sections for carrying the weft-wire, and receiving rotary motion from the central section to form the twist, substantially" as and for the purpose herein described.
“ 2. In a wire-fabric machine, the combination of a series of sectional twisters geared together for simultaneous rotation, and each comprising a central portion movable only on its axis and side portions capable of a compound movement — that of rotation on their axes — and of a shifting longitudinal movement,' substantially as described, for the purpose set forth.”
“ 9. In a wire-fabric machine, the series of sectional twisters,• comprising the central and side sections, the central section of each twister being geared to the twister adjacent thereto for simultaneous operation, substantially as described, for the purpose set. forth.
*11 . “ 10. In a wire-fabric machine,, the combination of a series of twisters geared directly together for simultaneous operation, and each comprising a central section and the side section, each side section carrying a spool or reel for the wire, substantially as described, for the purpose set forth.
“ 11. In a wire-fabric machine, a series of twisters connected for simultaneous operation, and each consisting of a central section and the side section, in combination with the spools carried by the side sections, the central section of each twister being provided with a longitudinal opening for the passage therethrough of the warp-wire, substantially as described.”
“15. In a wire-fabric machine, the combination of a series of rotary twisters geared directly together for simultaneous operation, each twister having a central section capable of rotary movement only, and two side sections which are capable of a shifting movement independently of the central section in opposite directions simultaneously;' whereby the said shifting sections of one twister are adjusted to register with the central sections of twisters on opposite sides o'f the same, substantially as described, for the purpose set forth.”
“ 20. In a wire-fabric machine, a series of sectional twisters, each - comprising ■ a central section, the central sections being geared together to be simultaneously rotated on their axes, and the shifting side sections adapted to align with the central sections to be rotated therewith, substantially as described, for the purpose set forth.”

The drawings and specifications of the Connor and Pope patents were not set out because unnecessary in the view taken of the case. Both these patents were issued subsequently to the Kitselman patent.

The drawings and specifications of the patent to Whitney of December 21, 1895, were then given.

The statement further set forth “ the essential drawings and specifications of letters patent No. 10,713, granted John Ne-smith, April 1, 1851, and referred to in the opinion as most adequately representing one brand) of the prior art,” namely, as stated by the court, loom machines by which wire netting was made in the factory, and then transferred to the field ; and *12 also Figure 2 of the drawings of the Middaugh and Wilcox patent of December 23, 1884, that patent being regarded as “ the best example of the second branch of the prior art,” field machines which constructed the fence in situ.

The statement is given in full, with eleven pages of drawings in the report of the case, 108 Fed. Rep. 632.

The Kitselman and Pope patents described portable machines. The Davisson and Connor patents described stationary machines. The Kitselman and Pope patents were intended to be operated by hand and the Davisson and Connor patents were intended to be operated by power. But the essentials of the mechanism were not dependent upon the. circumstance of their being embodied in either a stationary or a portable machine, or in a power or a hand machine. Complainants’ leading expert testified that “ the essentials of the invention described in the several claims here in suit are not dependent on their use in a stationary or portable machine, or in a power or hand machine, or upon their capacity to weave a fabric into which slats may or may not be used, or upon their capacity to weave a fabric of any special size of mesh.”

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Bluebook (online)
189 U.S. 8, 23 S. Ct. 521, 47 L. Ed. 689, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kokomo-fence-machine-co-v-kitselman-scotus-1903.