Royer v. Roth

132 U.S. 201, 10 S. Ct. 58, 33 L. Ed. 322, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1863
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 25, 1889
Docket83
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 132 U.S. 201 (Royer v. Roth) 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
Royer v. Roth, 132 U.S. 201, 10 S. Ct. 58, 33 L. Ed. 322, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1863 (1889).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Blatchford

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in equity, brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of California, by Herman Royer against Solomon Roth and L. P. Degen, to recover for the infringement of letters patent No. 172,346, granted to the plaintiff January 18, 1876, on an application filed November. 15, 1875, for an improvement in machines for treating raw-hides.

The. bill states that the invention consisted in “ combining with the drum, of a rawhide fulling machine, operating to twist the hide alternately in one direction and then in the other, a shifting device for the purpose of making the operation automatic and continuous.”

*202 Each defendant put in a separate answer denying that the plaintiff was the inventor of such shifting device, and alleging want of novelty, with proper averments.

After a replication to the answers, proofs were taken, the case was brought to a hearing, and the Circuit Court dismissed the bill. The decree states that the plaintiff first conceived of the combination of an automatic reverser attached to the drum of a rawhide fulling machine, operating to twist theleathsr in one direction and the other, for the purpose of .making the operation automatic and continuous, as described and claimed in the patent; that, at the request 'of the plaintiff, one Clero, a mechanic, made'the automatic reverser • described in- the patent, and, in October, 1867, delivered the same to the plaintiff, who attached it to his fulling machine; that the combination was new with the plaintiff, and was useful, and his use thereof was secret - until he applied for the patent; that it was not obvious and was not known whether -the new combination could be used successfully for j;he practical' treatment of rawhide, which was the work for which the combined inachine was intended, until after it had been tested and tried by the plaintiff; that it was obvious to any skilled mechanic that an automatic reverser could be applied to the drum of a rawhide fulling machine ’ so as to make it reverse its motion automatically at any desired fixed intervals; that the patent does not cover any patentable invention ;• and that, for that reason alone, the bill is dismissed.

The specification says: The object of my invention is to provide an improvement in a rawhide fulling machine, for which letters patent were granted to me, and it consists in an automatic device by which Tam enabled to run the machine in one direction for a sufficient length of time and then reverse it, this, process continuing automatically until the leather is finished.”

The drawings show the machine as operated by belts, but the specification states that gears or friction couplings could be used if desired, and the action of the machine still be automatic. The machine employed for fulling rawhides, or forming them into leather, has a drum, A, the central shaft of *203 which, has upon its lower end a bevel gear. With this gear two pinions mesh at opposite sides, one of the pinions being mounted upon a solid shaft, which passes through the hollow shaft of the other pinion, and has a driving pulley keyed to it. Another driving pulley is keyed to the hollow shaft, and a loose pulley runs between them. When the belt turns one of the keyed pulleys, the machine will operate in one direction, and when the belt.is shifted to the other keyed pulley, it will operate in the opposite direction. In order to make such action automatic, there is a belt-shifter, which is a part of, or attached to, a sliding bar., That bar is operated by a lever, which is hinged or pivoted, and works in a slot or link upon the bar, so that when turned from side to side it will slide the bar in one direction or the other. A weight is secured to the top of the lever, so that as soon as the lever passes the centre it will fall by its own weight and suddenly shift the belt. In order to operate this lever, there is another sliding bar, which moves below and parallel with the sliding bar first mentioned, the second bar having pins upon each side of the lever,'so that when the second bar is moved it will shift the lever. The second bar has a nut projecting downward from it, and there is a screw formed upon a horizontal shaft so as to fit the nut. A belt from a pulley on the solid shaft extends to a pulley on the last-named horizontal shaft, and by its action the screw will be turned in one direction until the lever has passed the centre and fallen over so as to shift the belt to the other pulley, Avhen the' whole mechanism will be moved in an opposite direction until the screw has again moved the second sliding bar and reversed the lever. The specification states that the machine is thus made automatic in its action, and can be left until the work is éntirely finished; and that a frictional coupling or reversing gear might be used in place of a belt, but would not work as well.

The claim of the patent is as follows: “ In combination with the drum A of a rawhide fulling machine, operating to twist the leather alternately in one direction and the other, a shift-’ ing device for the purpose of making the operation automatic and continuous, substantially as described.”

*204 The evidence is conclusive that one Clerc, as early as 1864, in San Francisco, made an automatic shifting device the same as that described in the patent, and attached to it -a,- washing machine, and. continued from' that time to make such automatic revers'ers and put them into use; and that, in 1867, at the request of the plaintiff, he made the shifting device described in the patent, which the plaintiff attached to his fulling machine. The only difference between the shifting device made by Clerc for the washing machines, and that made by him for the plaintiff, was that in the washing machine reverser the. screw-shaft was driven by two gears, one on each end of it, while the one described in the patent is driven, by a belt; and that the washing machine was horizontal, while the plaintiff’s machine was upright, in consequence of which the horizontal machine required a spur gear, while the upright machine had a bevel gear. But these- changes were such as any skilful mechanic could make. The plaintiff, in giving his order to Clerc to make the reverser, gave him no directions as to how to construct it, and only gave him a drawing of the fulling machine to which it was to be attached. ■

The operation of the automatic reverser in connection with the fulling machine is precisely the same as its operation in connection with the washing machine, or with any other machine to which it can be applied. There is no modification of its action produced by attaching it to the fulling machine.

The plaintiff testifies that, before he had the automatic reverser, his fulling machine would run in one direction until the belt was shifted by hand ; that if the hides got too hot he had to stop the .motion and reverse it; and that he had also to stop the action of the machine when the automatic reverser was attached to it, if the hides got too hot. It also appears, from the plaintiff’s testimony, that from 1867,'when he attached the automatic reverser.

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Bluebook (online)
132 U.S. 201, 10 S. Ct. 58, 33 L. Ed. 322, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royer-v-roth-scotus-1889.