Palmer v. Gatling Gun Co.

8 F. 513, 19 Blatchf. 392, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2376

This text of 8 F. 513 (Palmer v. Gatling Gun Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palmer v. Gatling Gun Co., 8 F. 513, 19 Blatchf. 392, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2376 (circtdct 1881).

Opinion

ShipmaN, D. J.

This is a bill in equity, founded upon the alleged infringement of letters patent' issued to the plaintiff December 2, 1862, for an improved repeating or machine gun. The first and sixth claims of the patent are said to have been infringed, and are as fol lows:

(1) Presenting and thrusting the cartridges into the rear of the revolving barrel or series of such barrels in one point in its circuit, confining and discharging them at-another point in such circuit, arid'removing the shells or cases in another part of such circuit, in the manner substantially as set forth. (6) The clearing hooks, 11, arranged and operated as described in connection, with the revolving barrels, G-, or their equivalents.

The defendant’s gun is made under letters patent to Richard J. Gatling, of May 9, 1865. The difference in the construction of the two guns is tersely and correctly explained by Mr. Edward H. Knight, one of the defendant’s experts, as follows:

“The Palmer gun consists of a series of revolving barrels with one set of loading, firing, and extracting mechanisms operating upon each of the barrels in turn, the motion of the barrels being intermitted while these various operations are performed. If may, therefore, for practical purposes, be called one gun with four barrels. It has the advantage over a gun with one barrel in allowing the various operating mechanisms for loading, firing, and extracting, to operate upon the barrels consecutively as they pause for that purpose, during their circuit of revolution. The Gatling gun may be considered as having as many gun mechanisms as barrels, being a system of a number of independent guns revolving together on a common axis. Each gun has its own barrel, loading, and shell-extracting devices, as well as its own firing pin. Each gun is so far independent that'it may be made inoperative by the extraction of the loading plunger and firing pin without affecting the action of the other guns. The loading and firing can only take place while the revolution is proceeding, as these actions depend upon the contact of the revolving parts with certain stationary cams on the inside of the hollow stationary breech casing. Each loading apparatus and firing pin and ejector belongs to its own barrel, with which it is in constant alignment. Each operation of loading, firing, and ejecting covers a certain part of the circle of revolution, being completed as to each barrel by one circuit. One circuit delivers a volley of balls equal in number to that of the barrels.”

It was testified on the part of the defendant, without contradiction, that a search into the state of the art through the United States and [515]*515British patents, and other foreign patents accessible at the United States patent-office — ■

“Did not develop the existence, prior to Gatling’s patent of 1862, of any gun having a continuously revolving barrel, nor of any gun which could be loaded while the barrels wore in revolution, or fired while the barrels were in revolution, or the shells removed while the barrels were in revolution. And prior to the Palmer patent mentioned, and aside from Richard .1. Gatling’s invention, this search did not develop the existence of any gun with revolving barrels having a device for presenting cartridges to the barrels, consisting of a combination of a carrier case, for the cartridges, with a grooved rotating cylinder, such as is shown in tho Gatling gun, nor the existence of a thrusting-in device, consisting of a longitudinarily moving plunger revolving at the same time with a cylinder carrying the plunger, nor the existence of a confining device, consisting of the combination of revolving barrels with a longitudinally moving plunger, at the same time revolving with the cylinder which carries such plunger, nor the existence of a discharging device consisting of a longitudinarily moving firing pin at the same time revolving synchronously with tho barrel, to which it is appurtenant, nor the existence of an extracting device consisting of a longitudinarily moving hook revolving synchronously with the barrel to which it is appurtenant.”

The gun made under the patent to Ricbard J. Gatling, of November 4, 1862, was, in general terms, like the gun of 1865, except that cartridge eases or cartridge chambers were fed against the rear of the revolving barrels, and tbe powder was discharged in the ear bridge chamber without being inserted into any other barrel, so that prior to the plaintiff’s invention a machine gun was in use so con-, structod that the cartridges were presented and thrust against the rear of a revolving barrel during one part of its circuit, were confined and discharged during another part of the circuit, and were removed at another part of the circuit.

It was claimed by the plaintiff, and was admitted by Mr. Knight to be true, that prior to the Palmer patent there was no machine gun which contained a device for thrusting the cartridge or charge into the rear end of a continuous rovolving barrel as distinguished from a chamber to be brought in line with the barrels. It was insisted by the defendant that the operation of the loading, firing, and clearing mechanism, and the mechanism, are the same whether a continuous or a chambered barrel is used.

Tbe Gatling gun of 1.865 discarded cartridge chambers, and thrust the copper cartridge into the rear of the barrel.

It is not claimed by the counsel for the plaintiff that tho respective devices in tho Gatling gun for loading, confining, and discharging the cartridges are equivalents for the loading and firing mechanism of the [516]*516Palmer gun. It is obvious that the two guns are constructed upon a different system; but it is claimed that the thrusting a cartridge into the rear of a barrel without joints, as distinguished from a ^chamber or a barrel having joints, was an important advance in the .art, and constituted the essence of Palmer’s invention; and if that principle or mode of operation is used by the defendant, there is an infringement of the first claim of the patent, even though the particular devices in the two guns for accomplishing this mode of operation differ so much that one device or series of devices is radically unlike the other. If the claim was of such broad character it would not be sustained. O’Reilly v. Morse, 15 How. 62; Matthews v. Schoenberger, 18 O. G. 14, 651.

An examination of the specification and claim shows that the latter did not undertake to cover so wide a field. The claim literally read is for a result; but that is not its meaning. It is for the combination of devices, substantially as described, for effecting the specified result. It being borne in mind that revolving guns were old, and that revolving guns which were loaded, discharged, and cleaned at different parts of their circuit antedated the Palmer, the claim is for a combination of three sub-combinations, one for loading cartridges into the rear of the barrel of a revolving gun at one point in its circuit, another for confining and firing such cartridges at another point, and the third for extracting the shells of the cartridges at another part of the circuit.

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Related

O'Reilly v. Morse
56 U.S. 62 (Supreme Court, 1854)

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. 513, 19 Blatchf. 392, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-gatling-gun-co-circtdct-1881.