Potts v. Creager

155 U.S. 597, 15 S. Ct. 194, 39 L. Ed. 275, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2109
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 7, 1895
Docket94
StatusPublished
Cited by324 cases

This text of 155 U.S. 597 (Potts v. Creager) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potts v. Creager, 155 U.S. 597, 15 S. Ct. 194, 39 L. Ed. 275, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2109 (1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

Beds of clay are composed of different strata; and the first step necessary to be taken,in the manufáóture of such clay is a thorough mixing of the strata, and the reduction of the *601 clay to a suitable condition. Otherwise, the product will contain laminations, will shrink unevenly and check in burning, scale or peel off in use, and be less valuable than products made of clays which are first thoroughly mixed and tempered, and reduced to a homogeneous mass before being manufactured into the product. Prior to the Potts inventions various methods seem to have been employed to secure this result. The clay had been sometimes spaded up in the autumn, subjected to the action of the frost during the winter, and then to the operation of the old-fashioned grinding pit. A mud-wheel had also been- used. The “ soak pit ” was another means used to accomplish the same result — the clay being deposited in a pit of water and allowed to remain until the soaking process had reduced it to the desired condition. These methods were slow and expensive. Both grinding machines and crushing rolls had been adopted in comparatively recent years. Their action was simply to crush the clay, the different strata being pressed together and made more compact, and the clay discharged from the rolls in cakes or sheets, a condition that made the tempering very difficult, as the clay thus treated would not readily receive or absorb the water.

The object of the Potts inventions was not to crush the clay, as had been previously done, but to disintegrate and pulverize it, leaving it in a loose condition, fitted to absorb the water readily. Their machines consisted substantially of a cylinder moving at a high speed, having longitudinal bars fixed in its periphery with sharp projecting corners, and a fixed abutment in close proximity thereto — in the first patent a swinging plate — in the second a smooth cylinder — and a positive feeding device by which the clay was forced between the main cylinder and the abutment. The longitudinal bars thus operated to strike the mass of clay quick, sharp blows in rapid succession, and cut or shred small portions therefrom, which were deposited beneath the machine, thoroughly mixed in their different strata, and with rough, torn, or ruptured edges — a condition best adapted to receive or absorb water, and be easily and thoroughly tempered.

The only feature of the first patent material to be considered *602 is the cylinder described in the sixth claim as a cylinder “ having a series- of longitudinal grooves, of the scraping bars c, adjustably secured in said grooves, for the purpose specified.”

This cylinder is alleged to have been anticipated in devices shown in eight prior patents, each of which will be briefly mentioned.

1. A patent of 1865, to Robert Butterworth, for an improvement in machines for grinding apples, exhibits a cylinder with cutting knives or blades on its periphery. These knives have serrated or toothed edges, which form chisel-shaped cutting projections, and are provided with means for adjustment so as to protrude more- or less beyond the periphery of the cylinder. When the cylinder is rotated, the apples are cut or ground by the knives between the cylinder and a plate somewhat similar to the swinging plate of the first Potts patent, provided with springs adapted to throw the plate back, whenever any stones or hard foreign substances have passed through the machine. While these knives are set upon the periphery of the cylinder in much the same way as the scraping bars of the Potts patents, it is really the only point of resemblance between the two devices. The Butter-worth patent could not possibly have been used as a clay disintegrator without changes which would- involve more or less invention.

2. A patent granted in 1880, to one Ennis, exhibits a machine for preparing paper pulp, and consists of á revolving cylinder armed with longitudinal knives, and a stationary plate also armed with knives, mounted beneath it in close proximity thereto. Rags fed between the revolving and stationary knives are thus cut in pieces. The reasons given why the Butterworth patent does not anticipate the Potts inventions apply with equal force to this.

3. A patent granted in 1866 to one Frost exhibits another grinding cylinder for paper engines, and consists of a skeleton cylinder armed with sharp cutting blades, secured adjust-ably, so as to be moved out from the axis of the cylinder, as they wear. The cylinder is manifestly inapplicable to the disintegration of clay, and nothing besides the cylinder is shown.

*603 4. A patent to one Yan Name, granted in 1884, shows a roller for grinding mills, provided with blades arranged in longitudinal grooves around the surface parallel with the axis. These blades are made of hardened steel, and of soft iron, hardened paper or wood, placed alternately with the steei blades. The surface of the roller is practically smooth, except that in use, the soft material will wear more rapidly than the hard. This results in maintaining a corrugated roller until the strips are worn out. It can be of no possible service to the defendant in this connection.'

5. The patent issued in 1869 to one Peabody for a cottonseed huller also exhibits a rotary cylinder armed with knives set in grooves, each having a chisel-shaped cutting edge, and adjustable for the purpose of increasing or diminishing the cut. It is evidently .not adapted to the working of clay.

6. The same remark may be made of the patént to May-field of 1871 for a grinding mill, such as are adapted for general use among farmers. It also consists of a cylinder provided with knives or plane bits set in longitudinal grooves. These knives are also adjustable.

7. A patent'to J. W. Smith, granted in 1881, is for an apparatus for preparing wheat for grinding, in which a cylinder is employed' similar to that of the Mayfield patent, with a series of plane bits projecting from the periphery. These plane bits are adjustably bolted by screws J’and slots within the cylinder, while their cutting edges protrude from slots outwardly from the rim of the cylinder. They do not differ in principle from the knives of Peabody and Mayfield.

8. A patent to one Rudy granted in 1875 for an improvement in clay pulverizers is the only one which is used in connection with the preparation or manufacture of clay, and consists of a pulverizing roller in combination with separate concave springs, or an elastic bed for supporting the clay while the roller revolves therein, after which it falls through a sieve and descends to a second cylinder, and then to a third. The patent does not describe distinctly how the rollers are made, but they would seem to be fluted, and cast in a series of sections. The process employed seems to have been rather *604 a grinding than a disintegrating process, and it would seem that such a machine would be inoperative except perhaps where the clay was dry and of light consistency. The cylinder evidently operates upon a wholly different principle from that of the Potts patents.

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Bluebook (online)
155 U.S. 597, 15 S. Ct. 194, 39 L. Ed. 275, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potts-v-creager-scotus-1895.