McCreary v. Pennsylvania Canal Co.

141 U.S. 459, 12 S. Ct. 40, 35 L. Ed. 817, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2535
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 9, 1891
Docket54
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 141 U.S. 459 (McCreary v. Pennsylvania Canal Co.) 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
McCreary v. Pennsylvania Canal Co., 141 U.S. 459, 12 S. Ct. 40, 35 L. Ed. 817, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2535 (1891).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown,

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

About three months prior to the patent in suit, and on April 16, 1872, another patent, numbered 125,684, was issued to Elijah and John McCreary, for “an improvement in steering devices for canal boats,” etc., which covered a similar coupling together of boats, barges and scows by means of a vertical groove forméd in the overhanging stern guard or bumper of the forward boat, which groove was entered by the cutwater of the rear boat, a chain being used for connecting the boats, which chain was so connected with a train of gear-wheels placed in the rear boat as to enable both boats to be steered by means of a windlass. The first claim of this patent was as follows:

“ 1. Two boats or barges, A and B, fitted together by means of a projecting cutwater fitting into a.notch in an overhanging guard, as described, and coupled and steered by means of a *462 cnain or rope, having its.ends fastened to the forward-boat and passing around pulleys,". . . 'substantially as herein set forth.”'

The second claim was immaterial.

In patent, numbered 329,844 the.patentee stated that his-improvement upon the prior patent consisted “in substituting for the projecting cutwater and notch, described in said patent for centring the boats together, and forming a universal joint, a chain attached at both ends to one boat, and at its centre to a central point on the adjacent end of the other boat,” etc.

One of the main difficulties in the assessment of damages in .this case arises from the fact that the two patents, the first one of which-is not included in this bill, describe a system of coupling together two boats by means of. chains and a centring device much the same -r- differing from each other only in two particulars: First, in the earlier patent, the two boats are connected together by the cutwater.of the rear boat fitting a groove in the overhanging guard of the forward boat; while in the later patent, there is substituted for this a chain attached by both ends to the forward boat, and at its centre to a central' point oh the adjacent end of the rear boat. Second, in the later patent, the centre of the chain is wound around a horizontal windlass, while in the earlier it is wound around a separate wheel geared to.the windlass below the deck — a difference which it was not insisted was material. In this connection, the. master found thatthe combination of the patent in suit and that of .the prior patent are practically identical in function and result, and are identical in constitution, save only as to .one particular element, the ‘centring’ device. As, therefore, the combination of the patent in suit is one, the sole invention and novelty of which consisted of á single element, the profit which complainant is entitled to recover from the defendant in this case is that which he may have shown to have accrued to •it from the use of substantially that new element in substan- ’ tially the combination in which he has described and claimed it.” Exception, was taken to- this finding, upon the ground that the finding contained an “ erroneous construction of law, *463 if it means that the complainant is not entitled to recover the entire profits which have accrued to the defendant from the use of boats containing the invention described and claimed in the patent in suit because of anything shown or described, but not claimed, in said prior patent of the complainant numbered 125,684.” Plaintiff claimed, and offered evidence tending to show, that defendant had made a large sum in “ savings ” by the transportation of coal in its infringing double boats in place of single boats, and asked that defendant should be held accountable to him for these savings (less the cost of applying the couplings to the double boats) as its profits from the use of this improvement.

The master found, however,, in this connection, that complainant was not entitled, upon the proofs, to recover from the defendant as its profits from the use of his “improvement” the entire savings in freight accruing from the shipping of coal in the infringing coupled boats in place of single boats, but was restricted to such as were attributable solely to the improvement.

There is no doubt of the general principle that, in estimating the profits the defendant has made by the use of the plaintiff’s device, where such device is a mere improvement upon what was known before, and was open to the defendant to use, the plaintiff is limited to such profits as have arisen from the use of the improvement over what the defendant might have made by the use of that or other'devices without such improvements. This is a familiar doctrine announced by this court in a number of cases. Seymour v. McCormick, 16 How. 480; Mowry v. Whitney, 14 Wall. 620; Littlefield v. Perry, 21 Wall. 205; Elizabeth v. Pavement Co., 97 U. S. 126; Garretson v. Clark, 111 U. S. 120.

The important question in this connection'is, whether, in considering what was already known, and open to the defendant to' use, we are to include the device shown in patent numbered 125,684, issued to Elijah and John McCreary about three months before the patent in suit. There were other methods of connecting vessels in train, such as were disclosed in the British patent to Taylor of 1846 ; the British patent to Bourne *464 of 1857 ; the patent to McCreary of I860, constructed and put into use upon a coupled boat called “ The Experiment; ” the British patent, to Bartholomew of 1862; and the American patent to Stackpole of 1866: but none of these seem to have been adapted to defendant’s use with any advantage over single boats, because, as the master found, “ their construction was such that a rudder could not be applied to the forward boat.” ■ He found, further, that “ these prior boats were' in other respects inferior to the machines .of complainant’s patent, but their fatal.defect for defendant’s purposes was this inability, to apply a rudder to the forward boat, which was therefore unmanageable when separated from its mate.”

There is nothing, however, to show that the device described in the patent of. April 16, 1872, to the McCrearys, was not an operative device, and if it were open to the defendant to use, the plaintiff, in this action, would be limited in his recovery to the profits which the defendant made by the use of the, improvement described in the' second patent, over the device shown in the earlier' patent. This improvement, as before stated, consisted principally in substituting for the projecting Cutwater and .notch,.described in the earlier patent, a chain attached at both ends to one b.oat, and at its centre to. a central point upon the adjacent end of the other boat. No attempt was made to distinguish or separate the profits arising from this improvement, the testimony being directed only to showing the profits defendant made by the-use of coupled boats in the place of single boats.

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Bluebook (online)
141 U.S. 459, 12 S. Ct. 40, 35 L. Ed. 817, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccreary-v-pennsylvania-canal-co-scotus-1891.