Miller & Peters Manuf'g Co. v. Du Brul

17 F. Cas. 366, 2 Ban. & A. 618

This text of 17 F. Cas. 366 (Miller & Peters Manuf'g Co. v. Du Brul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller & Peters Manuf'g Co. v. Du Brul, 17 F. Cas. 366, 2 Ban. & A. 618 (circtsdoh 1877).

Opinion

SWAYNE, Circuit Justice.

This is a suit brought on reissued letters patent for improvement in cigar-molds, granted F. C. Miller, September 28th, 1875, as a reissue of letters patent originally granted same, October 13th, 1874. The bill charges the infringement of the first and second claims, which are as follows: “1. The series of cups, e, which are constructed with flanges e' and attached to a suitable backing, substantially as and for the purposes specified. 2. The movable half-mold, composed of a series of cups, e, which are constructed with the flanges e' and attached to a backing, in combination with the stationary half-mold, having a corresponding series of sockets, d', substantially as and for the purpose specified.”

The defences relied, ón are: 1. That the reissue is broader than the original, and not for the same invention. 2. Want of novelty. 3. Want of patentable invention. As to the validity of the reissue, it- is delegated, by the act of congress upon the subject, to the commissioner of patents, carefully to examine the question whether the patentee is entitled to a reissue, and to decide according to the result of that examination. The presumption of law is, according to the authorities, that the commissioner has done his duty thoroughly, faithfully, and properly, and has arrived at a conclusion in accordance with his action. The question is not open for re-examination, except on the ground of fraud. Battin v. Taggert, 17 How. [58 U. S.] 84; Rubber Co. v. Goodyear, 9 Wall. [76 U. S.] 796; Seymour v. Osborne, 11 Wall. [78 U. S.] 516, and other eases. The presumption is, that everything is correct and valid touching the reissue. I have found nothing in this case sufficient to open up the question for re-examination. I need not remark further on the subject.

On looking through the patents which have been introduced on the part of the defendant, and examining the models which show the invention, we find nothing that exactly anticipates said invention. In this connection it is proper to read a part of the specification: “The plungers or cups of the upper or movable half-mold are formed separately, and subsequently secured to the backing, while in the sockets in the lower or stationary half-mold, in order to obtain a perfect register between the cups and the sockets, heretofore the cups have been made of the same width, or nearly so, .from top to bottom — that is to say, the width at the top at a particular point would be the same, or nearly so, as the width at the bottom at this same point, and the face of the backing to which they are attached, checked their further entrance into the sockets, by bringing up against the top of the socket-board By reason of this construction of the cups, it was exceedingly difficult to secure the backing to it without injuring the cups or the surfaces of the sockets by forcing the cups too far into the socket, and, in case the cups were secured by gluing, either their backing would glue onto the top of the socket-board, or else it had to be withdrawn before the cups had been previously secured. To avoid these difficulties is the object of the first part of my invention, which consists in providing the plungers or cups with laterally projecting flanges, by means of which they are supported on the top of the socket-piece while in the sockets, so that the backing may be brought down upon them with any requisite force to secure them without danger of injuring the molds proper, and which also serve to form a space between their backing and the socket-board, so that, in gluing, the backing may be held clamped to the cups for any length of time necessary to make a permanent and reliable connection.”

Then, after referring to another feature not here in controversy, the patentee pro-eeeds in describing this invention: “The cups e are made singly and separate from the backboard a, for the reason that it is very difficult and very expensive to make them of one piece, and at the same time [368]*368make the whole set or series fit accurately to the corresponding female sockets underneath, while, hy making them singly, I make them cheaply, and then, by laying them one by one into the female sockets d', and while in such position, gluing or otherwise uniting the backboard a to them, I secure a fitting and correspondence of the two sets of sockets or cups that is absolutely unattainable in any other manner. Not only this, but if one of the cups e be accidentally broken, I can at once and in an inexpensive manner, •replace; while if the cups were in one piece, and then one of the cups were to be broken, the whole series would become practically worthless. In furtherance of this object, I make each cup e with flanges or shoulders e', which gives each cup the broadest possible base to stand on, yet leaves space be- . tween the cups for the attainment of the nice adjustment, with reference to the socket d', which I have spoken of. The grain of the wood of these cups runs, by preference, in the direction of their length, and transversely of the length of backboard a. When the shoulders e' fit down upon the socket-board d, as shown in Fig. 2, the spaces between the faces of the sockets d' and cups e are circular in cross-section, and fitted to give the proper cylindrical shape to the cigars. Further, the flanges e' e' on the cups enable me to make the molds properly rounded in cross-section, without altering the depth of either the male or female cups, by simply making the male cups with .thinner or thicker edges, as the case may require.”

In the flanges attached to each upper cup, at the bottom of the upper cup, required to be separate and distinct from the others, and the flanges required to be distinct from the backing-board, and attached to it in the manner described, I find what I do not in any other case. There is no description in any patent of exactly the same thing. There is to be found in no mold which has been produced by the defendant, exactly the same thing. In several instances, there has been a very near approach to the alleged invention of the plaintiff, but in no instance has the mark been quite hit. It is neither claimed nor proved that any mold was ever made or used exactly as described in the complainant’s patent The variations in several instances are exceedingly small, but they are sufficiently marked to leave a distinction between them and the requirements and description of the complainant’s invention, as set forth in his patent.

The case turns entirely on the complainant’s flanges. For the reasons which I give, I have come to the conclusion that his invention belongs to him, as inventor, and that it has the requisite novelty. So far, 1 think, his case stands on firm ground. Then comes up the question of patentability. I have no hesitation in saying that upon the argument it seemed to me that there was no sufficient novelty and merit. Single cui)s, attached to a backing, having been invented before, it seemed to me, that the point beyond this prior invention, which the complainant has reached, was not sufficient to sustain a patent. In this aspect of the case I thought there was no novelty. It is proved, that small as these flanges are, inconsequent as they seem, little bearing as they have upon the question, there is some merit, some utility. If that be so, that, united with the novelty which has been found to exist, and which is established in the proof, small as that merit is, it entitled the complainant to a patent, in the judgment of the commissioner of patents, in the judgment of the patent office, and it entitles him to the judgment of this court upon that point.

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17 F. Cas. 366, 2 Ban. & A. 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-peters-manufg-co-v-du-brul-circtsdoh-1877.