Perry v. Starrett

19 F. Cas. 295, 3 Ban. & A. 485, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 2032
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedOctober 17, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 F. Cas. 295 (Perry v. Starrett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. Starrett, 19 F. Cas. 295, 3 Ban. & A. 485, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 2032 (circtsdny 1878).

Opinion

WHEELER, District Judge.

This bill is brought for an alleged infringement of design patent No. 7,456, issued May 26th, 1S74, for a design for stoves called the “Argand.”

The defences are: want of novelty in the invention patented; that the patent is void because it claims too much; and denial of infringement.

The statute provides, among other things, that any person who by his own industry, genius, efforts and expense, has invented and produced any new and original design for a manufacture, or ornament to be cast on any article of manufacture, the same not having been known or used by others before his invention or production thereof, or patented, or described in any printed publication, may obtain a patent therefor. Act 1870, § 71 [16 St at. 209]; Rev. St. § 4929.

This patent was issued under this statute, and has five claims. The first is for the form and outline of the parts for a design for a stove; the second, for the ornamentation for a design for a stove; the third, for any one of the plates having the form and outline for a design, all as described and represented; the fourth, for the ornamentation, as a design, for any one of the plates; and the fifth, for the form and outline and ornamentation for a stove, each as represented. The first, second and fifth are the only ones upon which a decree is sought.

It might be questionable whether the first claim could stand for the parts of a design separately, as a design, from its nature, is an entirety, if it is anything. But, however that may be, it is insisted for the orators that the claim is in effect for the form and outline of a design for a stove. The parts together would constitute the whole, and [296]*296perhaps it is the same as if the mentioning the parts had been left out. Then it would be for the form and outline of the design. These claims, with the first thus considered, stand as claims for the form and outline and ornamentation, as separate designs, and for them together as one design.

As the novelty of the invention is in issue, it is necessary to ascertain what designs of this sort were in use before it, for it must be new with reference to all others known or used before.

There is controversy as to whether one kind of stoves, as it embodies a design for the form of a stove or the ornaments, was in existence before or not. This controversy is with reference to the Smith stoves, so called, said to have been like defendant’s Exhibit 15i, which, itself, had not then been made, and none like it that had been are shown. Mr. Smith, the inventor of that stove, applied for a patent for his design after the one in suit had been granted, and a question of interference between him and these pat-entees was raised in the patent office, and decided by the examiner of interferences. In making that decision it was found that Smith was the first inventor of the design he sought a patent for.

It is argued for the defendant, that this finding is conclusive here. But. by the provisions of the statute, it would not be conclusive upon the validity of the Smith patent even, so far as question upon it might arise in court. Rev. St. § 4014. The patent of the orators was not there in controversy. The question to be determined was whether a patent should be issued to Smith. The finding was incidental to that question. And, however it might be as between the orators and Smith, it was not any finding between the parties to this suit. The defendant was not a party there and could not be bound, and such estoppels must be mutual to be operative. If both parties are not bound, neither is.

That a stove of substantially the same construction as Exhibit 15i vras in existence before, appears upon the evidence beyond any fair doubt That it had the same ornamentation does not satisfactorily appear. The shape of the shell was probably substantially the same. There may have been slight differences, and may not. The stoves called the “American,” and the “LightHouse,” and the “Oriental” were in existence before.

The ornamentation of the Smith stoves, which were in existence before, is not shown to have been at all like that of the orator's stove, the Argand. Assuming the shape of those Smith stoves to have been like that of Exhibit 15i, they had not as a whole, the form and outline of the Argand. There are some features of them and of the Argand that are considerably alike. Their legs, ash-pit sections, and lower mica sections, with their rear extensions, and their upper mica sections, except as to the rear extension of that of the Argand, are in shape quite similar. The rest of them are very different from each other. The bases of the LightHouse and the Argand, the reservoir sections of the American and the Argand, the tops and urns of the Light-House, the Oriental, and the Argand are all somewhat alike.

Upon these similarities it is argued for the defendant that the patentees have only taken those parts of the other designs and put them together, in mere aggregation, to produce their design, and that in so taking them and putting them together they did not accomplish anything patentable. It is quite clear that any one who should take pages or leaves from several books and put them together into a new book, or take parts of several musical compositions and put them together into a composition by themselves, would not be entitled to a copyright for these productions. Reed v. Carusi (D. Maryland, 1845) [Case No. 11,642). And if all the patentees did was to take the legs of the Smith stove, the base of the Light-House, the ash-pit and mica sections of the Smith stove, the reservoir and top of the American, and the urn of the Oriental, and join them together, it is also clear that they did nothing entitling themselves to a patent. Binns v. Woodruff [Id. 1,424); Wooster v. Crane [Id. 18,036). Or, if they did no more than to join them together, with such adaptations to each other as would be made by the exercise of the ordinary skill of workmen in that trade, probably they did not But the evidence shows that they did much more than either. Although the legs of the Argand and of the Smith stove are cyma reversa in general form, those of the Argand are quite different from the others in proportion and style. The base of the Argand is not exactly like that of the Light-House. The curves of its ash-pit section are different from those of that section of the Smith stove. The lower mica section of the Smith stove is convex below and concave above in outward form, while that of the Argand is slightly convex throughout The lines and curves of the mica section of the Argand are different from those of the Smith stove, and in the Argand the rear extension, to include the exit-pipe, is carried upward on that section, while in the Smith stove it is not. And the top and the urn of the Ar-gand differ somewhat from those of either the Light-House or the Oriental.

All these parts were made symmetrical of themselves and in respect to each other, and connected together with appropriate devices, and formed into a harmonious whole, in a manner that could not be done without inventive genius and creative skill. The result was different from anything used or known before.

In Gorham Co. v. White, 14 Wall. [81 U. S.) 511, it was held that, to constitute in[297]*297fringement of a design patent, the. designs must be so similar as to appear to ordinary -observers to be the same, and that they need not be so near alike as to appear to be the same to experts.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. Cas. 295, 3 Ban. & A. 485, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 2032, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-starrett-circtsdny-1878.