Putnam v. Yerrington

20 F. Cas. 92, 2 Ban. & A. 237, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1847
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 28, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 20 F. Cas. 92 (Putnam v. Yerrington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Putnam v. Yerrington, 20 F. Cas. 92, 2 Ban. & A. 237, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1847 (circtdnj 1876).

Opinion

NIXON, District Judge.

The bill is filed in this case for the alleged infringement of reissued letters patent No. 1,606, for a new [93]*93and useful improvement in bottle-stopper fastenings. The original patent was issued to the complainant March 15, 1S59, for the term of fourteen years. This being duly surrendered, he obtained the reissue on the 19th of January, 18(54. for the residue of the term, which was further extended by the commissioner of patents for seven years from March 15, 1S73. The defendant, in his answer, and afterward by stipulation, admits the infringement of the four claims of the said reissue, but insists that the said patent is invalid for two reasons: First, because the complainant was not the original and first inventor; and second, because the reissue is not for the same invention as that shown and described in the original patent.

In considering these defences it will be necessary to find out, as precisely as we can, what the complainant claims in his reissue, and then to compare the invention, as thus ascertained, (1) with such others as the defendant has exhibited to prove that the complainant has been anticipated, and (2) with the specifications and claim of his original patent.

The patentee’s invention has reference to improvements in fastenings for bottle corks and stoppers. In the body of the specifications to his reissue he states that the nature of his invention consists in forming the fastener of .wire, bent in such a manner that if the pressure upon the cork is sufficient to bend the wire fastener, it will retain the cork more firmly, ¿nd the cork requires to "be pushed in before the fastener can be pushed aside, thus causing the pressure to render the fastening more secure, instead of more liable to failure. He also forms joints for securing the fastener and forming a hinge upon which it may be turned aside, by bending the ends of the wires at right angles, or nearly so, to the sides of the fastener, and uses a wire for attaching the fastener to the bottle in which the eyes are formed for receiving the ends of the fastener, and on which the fastener swings, .thus producing by one piece of wire a much-more simple, effective, and cheap attachment than any before made. His manner of using the fastening is thus described: “The bottle is placed under the fountain, and its neck encircled at the top by the tube that conveys the saturated water or other liquid into the -bottle, the cork being placed in the tube above the side pipe that admits ilie fluid into the bottle. By turning a stop-cock the bottle becomes filled with the liquid, and by means of the piston above the cork, the cork is forced into the neck of the bottle, the fastening being turned aside. When the bottle is full, and the cork. inserted, the pipe is elevated, the piston still holding the cork. The fastener, is then forced over the end of the cork, in which position it is held from being pressed out by the expansion of the gas.” He then calls attention to the fact that if -the pressure of the gas in the bottle is sufficient to bend or spring the wire fastener upward, the. U-shapcd part will assume an inclined form with the bend the highest, and the cork being swelled up in said bend so that the wire is embedded, the cork cannot escape by acting under this incline and shoving the fastener to the left; neither can the fastener escape to the right because of the inclination itself. Hence, it is sometimes necessary to force in the cork before the fastener can be released, etc. ,

Disclaiming, then, a fastener of sheet metal with a U-shaped opening to pass the plunger, he proceeds to state his four claims, as follows: “1. Forming the fastener, at that part that comes over the cork, of a piece of wire of a TJ form, with the ends returned and connected to the bottle, in order that the pressure on the cork or stopper may cause the fastener to hold more securely, as specified. 2. I claim a wire fastener for a cork oi stopper, in which the ends of the wire are bent nearly at right angles to form the joint or hinge on which the fastener is turned, substantially as specified. 8. I claim forming the eyes for the reception of the fastener, by means of a wire bent as set forth. 4. I claim a wire fastener for the stoppers of bottles, fitted so that it can be pressed aside from over the stopper, as set forth, in combination with band or fastening attaching the same to the neck of the bottle, as specified.”

If the question before the court was whether the plaintiff’s reissue was an infringement of the Allender patent of July 24, 1855, it would be of very easy solution. But the latter is now open to the public by lapse of time, and the real inquiry, therefore, is whether there is any patentable improvement in the alleged Putnam invention which had not been anticipated by other inventors. Has Putnam added anything to the previously-known mechanisms and contrivances for securing the stoppers in bottles containing aerated liquids which furnishes some new and useful results? The mere change of material used in the construction of the fastener, of course, is not invention; it is only the exercise of mechanical judgment. The substitution of wire for tin, for instance, hardly adds enough to the domain of knowledge to raise the person to the dignity of an inventor who first thought of making such a change.

The supreme court, in the recent case of Smith v. Nichols, 21 Wall. [88 U. S.) 112, has stated all that need be said upon this point. It was there held that, “a mere carrying forward, or new or more extended application of the original thoitght, a change only in form, proportions, or degree, the substitution of equivalents doing substantially the same thing in the same way, by substantially the same means, with better effects, is not such invention as will sustain a patent.” It is the invention of what is new, and not the arrival at comparative superiority or greater excellence in that which was already known, which the law protects as exclusive property, and which it secures by patent.

[94]*94Bearing tliis fact in mind, lias any new result been produced by the substitution of wire for tin wbicli entitles the complainant to be reckoned the inventor of a patentable improvement V If any, it is found in the first claim of the reissue. It is there stated and claimed to follow from the use of the wire, that the stronger the pressure upon the cork •or stopper the more securely will the fastener hold. This result arises because the wire, unlike the tin, presents a very small surface to the cork, and because the increased pressure from within the bottle forces up the cork around the wire, enveloping it, or causing it to become embedded in the cork. It must be regarded as an important and valuable addition to the efficacy of the Allender invention, if the allegation of the complainant contained in the specifications of his reissue be true, that the notch in the metal strap of the Allender fastener “allows the cork to project at this point, and, by springing up the metal on the sides of the notch from an inclined plane against which the pressure acts, to force the fastener aside and relieve the cork.” The ■complainant, then, by the substitution of an equivalent, claims to have accomplished a new and beneficial and better result; and while it may be true, as was so strongly urged by the counsel for the defendant,that Putnam infringed the Allender patent in putting his improvement into practical and working form, nevertheless, it does not follow — now that the former belongs to the public — that it may be so used by the public as to include the complainant's improvement.

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Bluebook (online)
20 F. Cas. 92, 2 Ban. & A. 237, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/putnam-v-yerrington-circtdnj-1876.