McCormick v. Seymour

15 F. Cas. 1329, 3 Blatchf. 209
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York
DecidedOctober 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 15 F. Cas. 1329 (McCormick v. Seymour) 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
McCormick v. Seymour, 15 F. Cas. 1329, 3 Blatchf. 209 (circtndny 1854).

Opinion

NELSON, Circuit Justice

(charging jury!. The patent upon which this action is founded, was issued to the plaintiff on the 31st of January, 1845, for an improvement in reaping machines. The history of the improvements made by the plaintiff in reaping machines, has been developed by the evidence in the progress of the trial. It seems that his experiments began as early as 1830 or 1831, and continued from year to year, down to 1834,. when he first obtained a patent for his machine. This machine, however, was not a successful one, and but comparatively few were either manufactured or sold. It was fouud by the farmers who tried them, that they would not work successfully or profitably; and this seems to have been the fate of the experiments made with the machines down to 3 S45, when a second patent was taJken out for improvements upon the first one. And even then, although the machine, as thus improved, was regarded by the farming interest as more valuable than the original one, yet in consequence of the difficulties in raking the cut grain from the platform, the machine did not go into genera.! or successful operation until after the arrangement of the seat for the raker upon it, which was patented in 1S47. Then the machine became eminently successful, and has since gone into very general use. According to the evidence on this trial, only seven machines of the construction as patented in 1834 were sold, down to 1842. Some twenty-nine were sold for the harvest of 1843. the patentee warranting the successful operation of the machine. Some' fifty were sold for the harvest of 1844, and from one hundred to two hundred for the harvest of 1S45.

The inventors of improvements upon reaping machines labor under disadvantages and embarrassments that are not common to in-ventora generally: and this for the reason that experiments with, and trials of reaping machines, can be made only during harvest time. When the harvest is over, the opportunity for experiment and trial has passed away, and the inventor is obliged to wait until the succeeding harvest in the next year, to test any improvements that may have been suggested. Not so with other inventors. They can test their improvements or discoveries from day to day continuously, until they have perfected them. This suggestion [1331]*1331no doubt accounts for tbe series of years occupied by tbe plaintiff in .seeking to perfect bis improvements on tbe reaping machine.

Tbe improvements which were patented in 1845, and which are claimed by tbe plaintiff to have perfected bis machine of 1S34, so far as it respects cutting tbe grain and laying it on tbe platform, are two, tbe divider, and the re-arrangement of tbe reel-post. Now, it is said that neither of these improvements, assuming that tbe plaintiff was tbe author of them, is of a description entitling it to be regarded as tbe subject of a patent under our patent law — in other words, that there is nothing of invention to be found in these improvements, nothing of intellect, or of mind, or of thought, that is new or useful — and that therefore they are not the subjects of protection under the law. We desire to call your attention for a few moments to this branch of the case, because the objection just alluded to has been made one of the strong grounds of objection to the right of the plaintiff to recover, and has been elaborately discussed by the learned counsel for the defendants. This case has, as you have learned, been heretofore before this court: and we shall, for brevity, refer to the remarks submitted by us to a former jury upon this branch of the case. The 6th section of the patent act of July 4, 1S36, provides, in substance, that any person having discovered or invented any new or useful art, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement on any art, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, not known or used by others before his discovery or invention, and not, at the time of his application for a patent, in public use or on sale with his consent, may make application to the commissioner of patents, and shall be entitled to a patent. An improvement upon a machine, to constitute it an invention, within the meaning of the law, must be new, not known or in use before; and it must also be useful. In other words, and in perhaps clearer terms, the person claiming the improvement, must have found out himself, and created and constructed, an improvement which had not before been found out or produced by any person, and which is beneficial to the public. There must be novelty in the arrangement of the improved machinery — novelty created by the mind of the person claiming to be the inventor; and, in connection with that species of novelty, there must be utility. This novelty, worked out by the mind of the inventor, connected with utility, constitutes the essence of a patentable subject under the law.

It is exceedingly difficult to draw a line between what may be regarded by tbe eye as a small improvement or invention, and one of magnitude. Oftentimes, improvements and discoveries the most important in their consequences, and in their beneficial effects on the business interests of the community, are among the simplest ideas of the mind. Again, you will find inrprovements of less magnitude in their consequences and in their beneficial effects, indicating a most laborious and complex exertion of the mind of the inventor. As an illustration of this subject, and one from which you may be enabled to arrive at a proper view of this branch of the case, we refer to an improvement that has been tried in a court of law, and sustained. We allude to the case of Russell v. Cowley, 1 Webst. Pat Cas. 467, where it was held to be a patentable improvement, to weld iron tubes by means of grooved rollers without a mandrel, such tubes having previously been welded by grooved rollers upon a mandrel. Now, to the eye, the change in the instance referred to was exceedingly simple. Previouslyto the improve-, ment, the two edges of the iron cylinder which was to form the tube, were brought together and heated, and then the cylinder was drawn through rollers having a circular aperture smaller than the exterior circumference to be given to the tube, the cylinder being all the while supported on the inside Dy a mandrel. The edges were thus welded as effectually as by the hammer and anvil, and more accurately. But the mandrel was an embarrassment, because it had to be used in the bore of each tube while it was being drawn through the aperture in the rollers. And the idea occurred to the patentee. (White-house), tnat the edges could be welded as well in the absence of a mandrel as with it. He, therefore, conceived the idea of throwing away the mandrel, and welding the tube without it, and succeeded, thereby getting rid of the trouble of inserting it in welding every tube. This was held to be a patentable discovery. The getting rid of the mandrel from the bore of the tube, in the operation of welding, it, was so useful an idea, thát it was held to constitute a patentable subject under the English law, which is no broader than our own statute, and, indeed, scarcely' as broad.

If you should come to the conclusion that the improvements by the plaintiff in the divider. and in the arrangement of the reel-post, are properly the subjects of a patent, then it is slid by the learned counsel for the defendants, that there was nothing new in them, that they were before discovered and used, and that the plaintiff has simply appropriated the ideas and skill of others in the arrangement of these improvements, anu is therefore not entitled to be regarded as their inventor or discoverer.

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 1329, 3 Blatchf. 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccormick-v-seymour-circtndny-1854.