Railway Register Manuf'g Co. v. Broadway & Seventh Ave. R.

26 F. 522, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 1968
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedFebruary 5, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 F. 522 (Railway Register Manuf'g Co. v. Broadway & Seventh Ave. R.) 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
Railway Register Manuf'g Co. v. Broadway & Seventh Ave. R., 26 F. 522, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 1968 (circtsdny 1886).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

These causes have been once before heard and decided. 22 Fed. Rep. 656. They have been opened for further proof, [523]*523and now board again. They are brought upon patents for inventions Nos. 265,145, granted to Newman A. Ransom, assignor to the orator, for a fare register and recorder, for alleged infringement of claims 12 to 1.7; and 260,526, dated July 4, 1882, granted to John B. Benton, assignor to the orator, for a fare-register, for alleged infringement of all its claims.

Ransom made application for a patent on this fare register and recorder, with 31 claims, July 12, 1879. These claims were all rejected but one, on references to prior patents and publications. The specification was amended with 11 new claims, the fifth, sixth, and seventh of which covered means described in the specification for sot-ting partial or trip registering wheels back to zero, a detent or holder for locking a zero-gathering and window-covering plate from forward rotation, and a combination, with a partial or trip register, of a turning plate for setting it to zero, and mechanism for indicating the number of times it was set at zei'O. The first four oi these claims were rejected on a reference to a prior patent, the fifth, sixth, and seventh were found to interfere with a pending application of Benton, and further action was suspended to await the result of the interference. Thereupon Ransom filed a disclaimer of those things which have been mentioned as covered by the fifth, sixth, and seventh claims, specifying them particularly, and stating that he did not claim them in that application, as such subjects-matfer were described and claimed in another pending application filed by him August 30, 1879, and designated as division B, which was filed, specifying and claiming those things on that day. The remainder of the original application was continued as division A, which resulted in patent No. 226,626, dated April 20, 1880, having five claims, the first of which was for a combination, in a fare-register, of a trip-register capable of being reset at zero; a total register moving forward concurrently with the trip-register; and mechanism, independent of the total register, for indicating the number of times the trip-register was reset, and the number of fares registered between the times of resetting; and the other four of which were the last four of the eleven remaining after the rejection of the first four, and the transfer of the subjects of the fifth, sixth, and seventh to division B. This patent had on its face a disclaimer of the things transferred to division B, specifying them as made the subjects-matter of that application. An interference was declared between division B and Benton’s application, July 15, 1880, on which priority of invention was awarded to Benton, November 13,1880. Reuben M. Rose made application for a patent for a fare register and recorder, February 12, 1881. Ransom amended the specification of division B, March 23,1881. Patent No. 244,314 was granted to Rose, dated July 12, 1881. The claims of the Ransom patent now in controversy are for various combinations of a trip-register, independent resetter, graduated paper dial, yielding backing for the dial, marker, yielding marking arm, alarm, [524]*524actuators, and mechanism, whereby the dial will show the aggregate number of fares, and were made by amendment to division B, September 27, 1881, having never been made before. The patent was granted September 26, 1882. The defendant’s machines, so far as ..they may infringe these claims, were made under the Rose patent. Question is now made as to the validity of these five claims, and it is different from any question considered in the cases before. The specific devices which were made parts of the subjects-matter transferred to division B do not enter into any of the combinations of these claims. Neither is the combination which was a part of chose sub-jeets-matter the same as or similar to either of these combinations. The trip-register was an element of that combination, and is an element of three of these. It is also an element in the combination of the first claim'of patent No. 226,626 issued upon division A. All the elements of the combinations of these five claims enter into the structure of the machine which was the subject of the original application, and these combinations were párts of the invention covered by that application. They were not transferred to division B, and did not arise upon, nor belong with, the subjects-matter of that division. What was not transferred to division B remained in division A. These combinations arose upon and-belonged with the things which so remained. They were not separable from the things which remained in the old application; the things which went to division B were separable from them, and did not take them into that division. When the patent No. 226,626 was granted upon division A, what was left of that division not covered by the claims of that patent was in the same situation as if division B had never been separated from division A. There was nothing transferred at that time from division A to division B.- The former went to issue as an application by itself. The application of Bose was not made until» between nine and ten months after that patent was granted, and about-three months after the interference between division B and Benton’s application had. been decided in favor of Benton; and it was made over a month before the specifications of division B were amended after the decision on the interference, and more than seven months before the claims under .consideration were made. Ransom had no claims pending at that time. The field of invention outside of the claims of Ransom’s patent was apparently as open to Rose as to Ransom, except so far as Ransom’s application might show that Rose was not the first inventor. Rose’s patent and the infringement are entirely outside of division B as it stood at that time. If Rose’s patent is for anything outside of the specifications of division A, he is, as to that, so far as these cases show, the original and first inventor of that, and his patent is valid to that extent, so far as ap- ' pears, and a good justification for so much of the infringement of the ■ orator’s patent if theré is such infringement of that. This patent is hot valid against the patent of Rose unless Ransom could have a valid [525]*525patent for these combinations, as shown in division A, not covered by the claims of that patent, and have it upon the application in division B.

The question whether he could or not is not like that as to inventions of distinct parts of machines described in applications for inventions of other parts, and not claimed. Battin v. Taggert, 17 How. 74; Graham v. McCormick, 11 Fed. Rep. 859; Vermont, Farm Mach. Co. v. Marble, 19 Fed. Rep. 907. It is a question as to an integral part of an imention described and made the subject of claims in other forms. The applicant said, in the amendment after Bose’s application :

“ This division is aimed to cover certain new combinations not claimed in my said patent of April 20, 1880, nor omitted therefrom by inadvertence, accident, or mistake. ”

The elements of the combinations were covered by claims in other forms, and those claims were parts of the same invention that would include the combinations. When these claims were made on division B, the patent-office suggested that the proper course would be to apply for a reissue of the patent granted on division A. The want of inadvertence, accident, or mistake was set up as an answer to that suggestion because it would leave no ground for a reissue.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. 522, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 1968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/railway-register-manufg-co-v-broadway-seventh-ave-r-circtsdny-1886.