Palmer v. John E. Brown Mfg. Co.

92 F. 925, 35 C.C.A. 86, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2208
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMarch 16, 1899
DocketNo. 244
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 92 F. 925 (Palmer v. John E. Brown Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palmer v. John E. Brown Mfg. Co., 92 F. 925, 35 C.C.A. 86, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2208 (1st Cir. 1899).

Opinion

BROWIN', District Judge.

This suit is based upon letters patent No. 308,981, granted December 9, 1884, to Frank L. Palmer, and described as for a machine for sewing or quilting fabrics. The circuit court found this patent invalid, on the ground that what was claimed therein was simply an application to an appropriate use of what was claimed in an earlier patent to Palmer (304,550, dated September 2, 1884), without the development of the inventive faculty in making the application. There is no doubt that Palmer was, in fact, the inventor of the quilting machine described in the patent in suit, and that his invention was of great ingenuity, and of great importance in the art of machine quilting. His machine accomplished work that was formerly done only by hand, and the evidence of invention afforded by the result of its application to the practical art is of high order. He was the first to produce by machinery scroll quilting in lines running freely in any and all directions, — an advance of great importance in the art. We agree with the opinion of the circuit court that Palmer’s patent, No. 185,954 is not anticipatory, since it lacked the “universal movement in any and all directions,” which is the characteristic feature of his patent in suit. Had Palmer been content to taire out only the patent in suit, we think there would be no doubt as to its validity. The difficulty in the present case arises from the patent No. 304,550, granted to Palmer about three months earlier than the patent in suit. This patent is for a “mechanical movement,” described in the specification as “more particularly intended for producing the change in .relative position between an implement or tool (such, for example, as a molding or other cutter or cutting tool, or the needle of a sewing machine) and the article to be operated upon by the implement or tool (Such, for example, as a piece of wood ot other material to be molded or cut, or a piece of fabric to be sewed, quilted, or embroidered).” Claim 7 is as follows:

“The combination, with a rack or track in pattern form and a positively operating engaging device acting thereon and capable of bodily movement relatively thereto, of carriages supporting said device, movable in directions transverse to each other, and one mounted upon the other, whereby provision is afforded for the movement of said engaging device along the rack or track by its engagement therewith, substantially as herein described.”

This “mechanical movement” is employed in the machine of the patent in suit as a part of the claimed combination. Upon Palmer’s original application for a patent for a machine for sewing or quilting fabrics this “mechanical movement” was made the subject of a separate claim. The date of this application was November 23, 1883. The other claims of present importance relate to the combination of this “movement” with the mechanism of a quilting machine, including [927]*927a sewing machine and work holder of a construction permitting them to co-operate with the “movement.” The patent office, however, considered the application to (unbrace two inventions, and upon the requirement or suggestion of the office, the claim for the “movement” was withdrawn from the application of November 2B, 1883, and made the subject of a new application, ñled «June 21, 1884. Upon the later application was issued the earlier patent, No. 304,550, on September 2, 1884. Upon the earlier application was issued the later patent, No. 308,981, now in suit.

The defendant contends that Palmer made but one invention, namely, a “pail em mechanism,” or a feed mechanism which produces a pattern; and that he did not make two inventions, namely, that pattern mechanism, and, in addition, the combination of that pattern mechanism with a sewing machine and its work holder. Jf it is true that both patents are for the same invention, it follows that Palmer, by taking the patent earlier issued, left nothing tvhich could be made; the subject of a second patent. Our inquiry, then, will be: Are the two patents for the same invention? Looking first to the letters patent themselves, and comparing their claims, we are unable to say that the combination claimed in the earlier is identical with that claimed in the later, since the later specifically claims elements not enumerated in the earlier. As the claims are not co-extensive, the fact that a given element is common to both may be of little consequence. Comparing next the functions, we still fail to find identity, since it is the function of one to produce a finished and useful product, while the function of the other stopsi far short of this, and produces merely motion in a predetermined or pattern form. From inspection of the patents alone we are unable to say that the patent office, by granting patent No. 304,550, exhausted its power to grant No. 308,-981. The test of identity afforded by a comparison of the claims of the two patents, however, is not conclusive. We must be satisfied further that there are substantial differences, not merely varying descriptions of one invention, or descriptions of a single invention in different applications to use. As said in Miller v. Manufacturing Co., 151 U. S. 186, 198, 14 Sup. Ct. 310, 315:

“It must distinctly appear that the invention covered l)y the later x>atent was a separate invention, distinctly different and independent from that comprehended in the first patent. It must consist in something more than a mere; distinction of the breadth and scope of the claims of each patent.”

At the date of the application for the patent in suit neither the prior art (represented, so far as appears in evidence, solely by Palmer’s earlier patent, No. 3.85,954, for a machine without the universal movement characteristic of the patents uuder consideration) nor any prior patent disclosed anything suggestive of the combination of the patent in suit. There is no .warrant in the evidence for the claim that the mechanical movement suggested the combination. The “movement” was evolved by Palmer while working in the art of quilting, ajid as a means subordinate to. the purposes of that art. It seems evident that throughout the inventive process which led to the final successful result Palmer’s object was to improve the art of [928]*928machine quilting, and that the movement was conceived as a sub-combination, or as a member of a combination in which a sewing machine was a necessary element. Complainant’s expert, Mr. Park Benjamin, points out — fairly, as we think — the error of the assumption that the invention of the patent in suit was made by adding the sewing machine and work holder to the “movement,” and of the erroneous implication that the “movement” was first in the art. Our view as to the error of this implication disposes also of the suggestion that the earlier application was for letters patent for a mere appropriate use of an independent invention. It would be more just to say that Palmer’s knowledge of the superiority of the designs of the handwork, and of the comparative imperfections, in design and workmanship, of the former machines, led to the desire for a machine that would overcome the limitations of the earlier machines , and the imperfections of their product, and that this desire led to the conception of his sewing machine so reorganized with other elements in a new combination that it could sew lines in any and all directions.

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Bluebook (online)
92 F. 925, 35 C.C.A. 86, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-john-e-brown-mfg-co-ca1-1899.