Rogers v. Sargent

20 F. Cas. 1126, 7 Blatchf. 507, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1703

This text of 20 F. Cas. 1126 (Rogers v. Sargent) 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
Rogers v. Sargent, 20 F. Cas. 1126, 7 Blatchf. 507, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1703 (circtsdny 1870).

Opinion

BLATCHFORD, District Judge.

The specification of the reissued patent states the invention to be an “improved wire staple, for connecting blind slats to the rods which [1127]*1127guide and govern their positions.” It says: “The nature of my invention consists in the production of a vendible article, of a new and highly convenient and useful shape. I propose to form the staples by which the slats of window-blinds are attached to the rods which move and control them, of such a shape, that, while they can be readily inserted into the wood, they cannot easily be withdrawn — of such a shape, also, that they can be readily and rapidly made by machinery, so that they can be produced in great quantities, and kept for sale in the market as an article of merchandise.” The specification states, that the staples are prepared by being bent into the shape of the letter U; that they are, ordinarily, from three-eighths to five-eighths bf an inch in length, with an opening between the two branches of about three-sixteenths of an inch; and that they are usually made of wire of No. IS to 20 wire gauge. It adds: “These staples, after being prepared as shown in Fig. 2, are subjected to the action of dies with serrated ridges, to produce corresponding indentations in the staples, and so shaped and arranged as to press harder, or come nearer in contact, as they approach the points a, c, than at a distance therefrom. By this means, the impressions are deeper towards the piercing point, and the wire is spread and made to taper in thickness towards that point” The patentee states, that he prefers bevel-ling the points before using the dies, and that the action of the dies will cause the be-velled extremities to assume a central position, and will give a rounded edge in the other direction. The object of the bevelling he states to be to produce sharper points, to facilitate their insertion into the wood.

[Drawings of reissued letters patent No. 2.-183, granted March 6, 1866. to B. Boardman. Published from the records of the United States patent office.] ¡35 ⅞. fc Mill» -jVVWVV— % IDE ½

He adds: “The transverse indentations should slant, or be bevelled, in such directions as will favor their being driven into the wood, or other substance, in which they are driven, and prevent them from being easily withdrawn. I generally make the indentations square across the wire, as shown in the drawings, but this is not indispensable, as they may be made to form an acute or obtuse angle with the wire, without essentially impairing their general utility. Some of the advantages over the ordinary staples formerly in use, which are secured by thus pointing and swaging them with transverse grooves, as herein described, are: First. They may be made shorter than the ordinary staples which are not clenched, and hence will allow of a much smaller rod, as they will sustain from three to four times as much strain, without being drawn out. Second. They will also dispense with the necessity of being clenched, and will hold in the rod equally as well as that variety called the fish-back staple, while the rod is not bruised or defaced, as is the case when the staple is clenched. Third. They will hold as well in the slat, where clenching is impracticable, as in the rod, and will not be liable to be drawn out by turning the slats. Finally. They may be driven without previously piercing the rod or slat, as the peculiar form of the points enables them to part the grain of the wood, and enter without breaking the fibre, which, as the staple is driven, closes into their indentations, and holds the staple firmly imbedded in the wood. It is easy to contrive machinery that shall accomplish the purposes above-mentioned, without the exercise of any inventive ingenuity, and, as I make no claim to any such machinery, it has not been thought necessary to describe the construction or operation of any such machinery. I am aware that Ballard’s patent of 1841 shows a spike constructed with transverse corrugations, made substantially like those proposed by me, so that, while it will penetrate wood without much increased resistance, it cannot be withdrawn without great difficulty. I do not lay claim to the discovery of any new principle, nor do I seek to patent such principle. But what I do claim as new, and desire to secure by letters patent, as a new manufacture or commodity, is — a wire staple, adapted for use in making window-blinds or screens, and constructed substantially as above described.”

The proceedings before the patent office, on the original granting, as well as on the reissue, of this patent, are in evidence in the case. A comparison of the specification of the original patent with the specification of the reissue fails to detect any substantial difference between the descriptive parts of the two. The orginal specification does not contain the statement that the new staple can be readily and rapidly made by machinery, so as to be produced in great quantities, and kept for sale in the market as an article of merchandise. But, the claim of the original patent was in these words: “Constructing wire staples, (such as are used for connecting [1128]*1128the semi-revolving slats of window-blinds and screens to a rod governing their positions,) by giving them a rounded edge in the direction as shown at a, c, Fig. 1, and an acute or sharp edge, as viewed crosswise, at f, h, in combination with transverse indentations across the wire, the whole being formed by compression between dies, substantially as described.” It appears that this claim was granted by the patent office solely on the ground that, although spikes, bolts and staples, furrowed or barbed, for the purpose of holding with greater force when driven into wood, were old, yet the patentee’s staple was to be regarded as new when formed by compression between dies; and that it was granted as a claim to a staple, the shanks of which were to have a rounded edge in the direction. of their width, a sharpened edge in the direction of their thickness, and transverse indentations, when those three qualities were produced by compression between-dies, as contradistinguished from forging the points and cutting the barbs by a chisel. This difference, leading to the production of the article at a cheaper rate by the new method, was regarded by the patent office as a patentable difference warranting the granting of the claim.

The object sought to be attained by the reissue was, - evidently, to patent the staple as a new manufacture. The reissued specification states, that the patentee desires to obtain for the staples a patent as for a new manufacture; that his invention consists in rhe production of a vendible article; and that its shape is to be such that it can be readily and rapidly made by machinery, soi that it can be produced in great quantities, and kept for sale in the market as an article of merchandise. These suggestions are not found in the original specification. So, too, the claim of the reissue states, that the patentee claims, “as a new manufacture or commodity,” “a wire staple, adapted for use in making window-blinds or screens, and constructed substantially as above described.” It is as such new . manufacture or commodity, that the staple adapted for such use, and constructed substantially as described, must be held, under the claim, to be a patentable invention, if the claim is to be upheld at all.

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Bluebook (online)
20 F. Cas. 1126, 7 Blatchf. 507, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-sargent-circtsdny-1870.