Morse Arms Manufacturing Co. v. United States

27 Ct. Cl. 363, 1892 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 55, 1800 WL 2004
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJune 20, 1892
DocketNo. 14340
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Ct. Cl. 363 (Morse Arms Manufacturing Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morse Arms Manufacturing Co. v. United States, 27 Ct. Cl. 363, 1892 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 55, 1800 WL 2004 (cc 1892).

Opinion

Davis, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

In 1855 George W. Morse filed in the Patent Office a caveat which he entitled a “Description of improvements in breech-loading guns and cartridges for the same, for either cannon or small arms.” Speaking of the gun, he said that the barrel should be so constructed that the gun could be opened and closed at the breech by a movable breech piece “ which does not necessarily fit tight into the bore of the breech of the gun, but only to remain firmly in its place when the gun is in proper position for firing.” He proposed in this caveat that what he named “the cartridge or breech pin (if it should be made to enter the gun) should be so constructed of metal or combination of other materials behind the powder that by the explosion of the powder it will expand and perfectly fill the bore of the gun behind as the minie ball fills the cavity of the gun by the [380]*380enlargement of tbe afterpart of tlie same by the explosion of the powder.” He proposed that cartridges haying a leaden case should be provided for his gun, the cartridges to be in any form consistent with the principle which he thus claimed, “although it [the cartridge] or the breech pin may enter the gun loose, yet the effect of the explosion will be to render the gun perfectly tight behind the powder.”

This caveat was followed by application for letters patent upon a gun and cartridge. In the Patent Office tlie application was separated, and two patents were issued in the year 1856, the one, (No. 15995), upon the gun, the other, (15996), upon the cartridge. The first of these patents was extended by act of Congress and expired November 29,1879; the second (No. 15996) expired October 28,1870. This action was begun April 12,1884. The statute of limitations, therefore, runs against and bars any possible claim under this second patent.

The case turns primarily upon claim 1 in patent 15995, which reads as follows:

“1. Inserting the rim N, or its equivalent, without contact, into the chamber O, substantially in the manner and for the purpose described, contact being obtained through the medium of a cartridge case.”

This claim is thus construed by one of the counsel for the plaintiff:

“The claimant asserts that George W. Morse, the grantee of letters patent numbered 15995, was the lawful patentee of a device for sealing a breech joint of a breech-loading gun, purposely made open, by the expansion of a yielding metallic cartridge case, purposely made to fit loosely in its chamber.”

Another of plaintiff’s counsel states the scope of this patent in argument substantially as follows:

“Morse discovered a method or art by which a breechblock, so constructed as to be free in operation under all circumstances, shall be automatically sealed at the moment when the use of the gun imperatively requires a close connection between the breechblock and the gun barrel.”

Upon either statement the claim is for a broad device which shall practically cover subsequent inventions for sealing loose-jointed breech-loading military firearms by an expanding metallic cartridge.

In view of this contention it becomes necessary to examine [381]*381the state of the art in the year 1856, when this patent was issued.

The first form of firearm was the breechloader; but as the imperfect fitting of the breech mechanism permitted the rearward escape of gas and flame, the muzzle-loader was adopted and continued in use until the close of the last war; meantime, and for many years, inventors had been searching for an efficient gas check capable of useful application to a military breech-loading musket. At first all efforts were directed to the manufacture of a mechanism which by the close fit of its parts should attain the desired result. Many devices of this kind were invented. None (so far as appears) had much practical value, unless possibly in light sporting arms. The reason is plain. The carefully adjusted breech mechanism was apt to become inexact (and might become dangerous) through wear, rust, or dirt. An absolutely mechanically correct adjustment of the parts was in theory possible, but in practice the slightest injury to the gun, the least rust or the presence of sand or earth, rendered it inefficient.

Long before 1856 inventors had recognized the necessity of a comparatively loose mechanism in the breechblock, combined with a sufficient gas check through the expansive cartridge, if practical efficiency in this class of firearms were ever to be attained. Several patents are referred to in the findings of fact which show the endeavor of small-arms inventors in this century. A citation or two, by way of illustration, may not be amiss.

In 1835 the Society for the Encouragement of National Industry in France issued a bulletin headed “Mechanical arts— firearms,” being a report made by Baron Séguier. This report is set forth in the findings, and from it we make only the following excerpts. Alluding to the loss of gas, which offered (it was said) “ that double inconvenience of diminishing the range and blacking the fingers,” the report proceeds (we quote from translation):

“Mr. Lefaucheux, desiring to satisfy in all respects the many sportsmen who honored him with their confidence, put himself again to the task, without despairing of success; so, to surmount a last obstacle, he was happily led to apply to the guns the closing principle of hydraulic presses; we speak of [382]*382that punched-up leather whose edges rub against the sides of a vase with all the greater force as the liquid which it contains is the more compressed and has a greater tendency to escape.
“You understand, gentlemen, that in adopting this principle of closure for guns, as there is no question of preventing an escape of liquid but of burning gas, it was proper to modify the material of the stopper, therefore it is not a cap of leather, but a bottom of thin brass with which Mr. Lefaucheux caps his cartridges. The flexible edges of this hat, having the form of a large capsule, dilates at the moment of explosion, and rubs tightly against the sides of the barrel with such exactness that the slightest escape of gas becomes impossible. # * * We look upon it as one of the most useful improvements applied for a long time to breech-loading sporting arms.
“ This, according to our opinion, is a true service rendered to the entire art of gun-making. By its use the least exact breech closures are safe from the escape of gas, and henceforth it will not be the exactitude, but alone the strength of the closure which shall render the problem of the manufacture of arms with broken breech difficult to solve.”

Nearly twenty years before this (in 1816) Pauly had taken out his English patent for what he termed “ apparatus and arrangements for discharging firearms by means of condensed air, also cartridges applicable thereto.” His description, which is long, contained the following paragraph:

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27 Ct. Cl. 363, 1892 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 55, 1800 WL 2004, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morse-arms-manufacturing-co-v-united-states-cc-1892.