Seabury v. Am Ende

152 U.S. 561, 14 S. Ct. 683, 38 L. Ed. 553, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2145
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 2, 1894
Docket285
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 152 U.S. 561 (Seabury v. Am Ende) 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
Seabury v. Am Ende, 152 U.S. 561, 14 S. Ct. 683, 38 L. Ed. 553, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2145 (1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shirks,

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

The specification and claim of the patentee were in the following terms:

“ This invention has for its objects to combine the various *565 advantages of cotton-fibre with those possessed by boracic acid and glycerine for preserving animal and vegetable matter from decay.

“ Heretofore boracic acid has been used as a preservative agent in a fluid state, and also as a powder. In use, the matter to be preserved had to be immersed in the solution of boracic acid, or completely covered with the powder. In either case, a very large quantity of boracic acid was used.

“ My present invention, which consists in saturating cottonfibre with boracic acid and glycerine in a manner hereinafter described, enables me to apply a very small proportion of boracic acid and glycerine to the cotton-fibre with fully as good an effect as though the matter to be preserved were entirely embedded in large quantities of the solution or powder. It enables me, at the same time, to utilize the germ-filtering properties of the cotton, and its elasticity as a superior material for packing or covering delicate tissue.

“ I produce my improved borated cotton as follows : I first pfepare a solution of boracic acid in the usual manner, and add thereto a small proportion of glycerine. For the preservation of tender substances, such as veal, I may also add from ten to forty per cent of soda or potash, never sufficient, however, to reach neutrality. The cotton, either in bulk or wadding, is next immersed in the solution until well impregnated therewith, and then pressed, to discharge all surplus solution, or so much thereof as may be required. The cotton is then dried and ready for use.

“ When applied to the material to be preserved, either as a covering or as a wrapping or packing, the cotton will constitute a filter for keeping germs of putrefaction from passing through, and the boracic acid absorbed by the. cotton will, at the same time, preserve the. surfaces from decay, and counteract all injurious influences of germs, or other elements of destruction, already in contact with such surfaces.

“ The glycerine is added to increase the preserving power of the borated cotton. It renders the cotton slightly hygroscopic, thus aiding in the diffusion of the acid ancl in the preservative effect of the prepared cotton.

*566 “ I have found that the impregnated fibre shows, even under a good microscope, no difference from a fibre not impregnated with boracic acid, and that, therefore, although a very thin film of acid may adhere to the exterior surface of the fibre, the main proportion of the acid is absorbed by and diffused within the fibres. In consequence, 'the acid can, in use, be but gradually released from the fiber, and will thus produce a constant and lasting effect.

“ I claim—

“ The borated cotton, being cotton-fibre which is saturated with boracic acid and glycerine, substantially as herein shown and described.”

The first ground of defence relied on is that the patentee has failed to describe his invention in such full, clear, and exact terms as to enable persons reading the description of the invention to construct and use it; and it is contended that the strength of the boracic acid solution is not prescribed, nor the precise proportion of glycerine. Tn,considering this objection it must be remembered that the description is addressed to persons skilled in the art to which it relates. The solution of boracic acid is referred to, not as anything new, but as ah article well known to druggists and physicians, and when the. patentee says that he “ prepares a solution of boracic acid in the usual manner,” he means as it has formerly and customarily been prepared. When he directs that a small proportion of. ■ glycerine shall be added, it is obvious that the quantity of the glycerine is to vary with the amount of cottotí and boracic acid used, but that the merits of the invention will not depend on whether, in a given case, a little more or less glycerine is used. Such general directions are common in the arts, a.s appears in some of the very publications introduced by the defendant to show anticipation. Thus in the Druggists’ Circular and Chemical Gazette it is stated that Dr. Edmunds had used “ a solution of boracic acid ; ”.and in the Journal de Pharmacia it is said that, in making his dressing, Professor Gubler saturated, his wadding with “ a certain quantity of glycerine,” and his formula is thus given : “ It is only necessary to pour a small quantity of glycerine over the square sheet,” etc.

*567 We, therefore, agree with the court below in thinking that “an intelligent chemist, setting out properly to combine the enumerated ingredients into which the cotton is to be.immersed, and with which it is to be. impregnated, could hardly go astray.” ■ It is also to be observed that neither the defendant, in making the infringing.article, nor the several witnesses of eminence in the medical profession, who testified to the practical value- of the patented dressing, seem to have had any difficulty in understanding and applying the description contained in the patent.

In Loom Co. v. Higgins, 105 U. S. 580, where the sufficiency of a description was in'question, it was held that" a specification in letters patent is sufficiently clear and descriptive when expressed in terms intelligible to a person skilled in the art to which it relates.

The next contention is, that as the plaintiffs’ patented dressing was composed of materials whose specific virtues and modes of operation were well known, there was no invention shown in combining them in the manner described. It is, -indeed, true that the patentee did not claim to have been the first to suggest the use of cotton fibre as a means of excluding germs from wounds or from the article to be protected.. Nor did he claim to have first discovered the antiseptic qualities of boracic acid or the hygroscopic property of glycerine. But the patentee was the first to perceive that by combining these articles, in the manner he pointed out, there would be formed a convenient and permanent dressing with the desirable qualities of the several constituents. Thé complainant’s evidence satisfactorily shows that, in such a dressing, the cotton acts as a screen to exclude germs and as a vehicle to hold the other ingredients; that the boracic acid possesses marked antiseptic qualities, but is liable, if used alone, to dry on the cotton and to form crystals, which impair the antiseptic qualities of the acid, and which mechanically scratch or irritate the' sensitive surface of a wound; and that the glycerine,- owing to its property of absorbing moisture from the atmosphere, keeps the boracic acid from hardening or crystallizing, and besides adds somewhat to the healing, and preservative" power of the dressing.

*568

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Bluebook (online)
152 U.S. 561, 14 S. Ct. 683, 38 L. Ed. 553, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seabury-v-am-ende-scotus-1894.