Simmonds v. Morrison

44 F. 757, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1185
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio
DecidedJanuary 24, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 44 F. 757 (Simmonds v. Morrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmonds v. Morrison, 44 F. 757, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1185 (circtsdoh 1891).

Opinion

Sagk, J.,

(after stating the facts as above.') From the state of the art as exhibited in tho evidence in this cause it appears that before the introduction of leather-covered dashes, wooden dash-boards were used, especially in light vehicles; and dash-rails attached to the finished wooden dash-board were patented as long ago as July, 1870, to Noyse and Stratton, No. 105,362. There is shown in that patent a dash-rail with supports to hold it free from the finished edges of the dash-board, and to attach it to the board. The supports have only one lip, instead of two, as in the patent sued on, and tho dash-rail is attached to the dash-board by means of a screw and nut. Another form of rail, standing free from the finished wooden dash-board, and secured thereto by posts and supports, is shown in patent to Warner, No. 128,933, July 9, 1872; and still another in patent to Munson, No. 149,878, April 21, 1874. Those patents make it clear that the rail and tho form of the rail of complainants’ patent are old.

Clips of various kinds to hold attachments to leather-covered dashes wore old and in common use before the date of the alleged invention described in complainants’ patent. In patent No. 264,145, September 12,1882, to Gibbs, for rein-holder, there are shown supports connected by a, small rail or cross-piece, and clipped to the finished edge of a leather-covered dash-board. The specification sets forth that the device is capable ol being attached upon the dash-board of any vehicle. The base is a curved or narrow casting, i-n the shape of an inverted U, the wings of which have openings at each end, provided with thumb or set screws for attaching them to the dash of the vehicle. Fig. 3 of this patent shows a device not differing in any essential degree from that shown in Fig. 2 of the patent in suit.

There is also shown in patent No. 263,908, September 5, 1882, to Howell and Burdick, for rein-holder, a clip-spring for attaching the holder to the dash-board, which is a complete anticipation of the clip shown in complainants’patent. Patent to Kinlook, April 26, 1881, No. 240.-732, for supplementary dash-board for vehicles, designed to keep out of tho vehicle body the dust, mud, etc., flung by the horse in traveling, shows a rectangular or other shaped shield or fender, provided with clasping or clamping devices at one edge, whereby it may be readily set, and securely, but removably, held upon the ordinary dash-board of a vehicle at the elevation and angle required. This, too, is a complete anticipation of the complainants’ clip.

Patent to Peters, No. 225,019, March 2, 1880, shows a fastening attachment for vehicle dashes, which is also a complete anticipation of tho complainants’ clip. It shows a clip and foot adapted to grasp a half-round rod. The dip is bolted above and below the dash-rod, and shows a concave bearing placed between the dash-rod and the dash-foot [760]*760proper, and extending upwardly and downwardly, so that the bolts securing the clip in position pass through this concave bearing, and keep it also in position. The clip is in the shape of a horseshoe, with a screw-thread cut on each end. These ends pass through the dash-foot, and are secured in place by nuts. This, too, is a complete anticipation.

But it is urged for the complainants that none of these devices would serve the purpose of that described in the complainants’ patent. Thus it is said that no dash-board rail is shown or described in the Peters patent, and that the Kinloek patent differs from that shown in the complainants’ patent in this: that the clasping or clamping devices are not adapted to embrace closely the upper part of the frame of the dashboard,- but extend down along the dash-board, so as to form a sufficient leverage to hold the shield and supplementary dash-board at the proper angle; also that, there being no provision for handles at the ends of the dash-board, as in complainants’ patent, they being wholly wanting, and the device shown in Kinloek not being a dash-rail in any sense of the word, it does not anticipate. Similar distinctions are drawn between the complainants’ device and that shown in the Howell and Burdick patent and in the Gibbs patent. In other words, the claim is, in substance, that because the complainants have applied this old. device to a new use, they, are entitled to a patent, and, inasmuch as the complainants’ improvement displays novelty and utility, they are entitled to a decree.

These propositions are so utterly unsound, and so in conflict with the authorities, that it is not worth while to enter upon any extended consideration of them; but it is a proper occasion for two or three observations with reference to some authorities cited. Judge NelsoN’s charge to the jury in McCormick v. Seymour, 2 Blatchf. 240, that “novelty and utility in the improvement seems to be all that the statute requires as a condition to the granting of a patent,” is cited. This quotation does not, of itself, convey the true and full meaning of the charge. In the sentence immediately preceding he says that “ the improvement upon a machine, which is the kind of invention here, must be new, not known or in use before, and must be useful, — that is, the person claiming the patent must have found out, created, and constructed an improvement which had not before been found out, created, and constructed by any other person; and it must be beneficial to the public, or to those persons who may see fit to use it.” In another part of the charge he says that, “in order to take the separator of the defendants out of the charge of infringement, it is necessary that they should satisfy you that it is substantially and materially different from the plaintiff’s; in other words, that it involves some new idea in its construction not to be found in the plaintiff’s. If it is found there, of course it is an appropriation of his invention; if not, then it is an independent improvement, and not in violation of the plaintiff’s right.” Again: “If the defendants have taken the same general plan, and applied it for the same purpose, although they, may .have varied the mode of construction, it will still be, substantially, and in the eye of the patent .law, the same thing.” And, again, [761]*761referring to the defendants device, he says: “If it embodies the same ideas, and its arrangement carries out the same idea, — if this is the true view of the question involved, — then undoubtedly it is an infringement.”

Taking all these together, it may well be insisted that when he spoke of novelty and utility he referred to inventive novelty, and not more novelty in construction. But if the citation made by counsel expresses correctly the statement of the law' by Judge Nelson, all that it is necessary to say about it is that he has been overruled again and again. The case before him was under the act of July 4, 1836, and the question discussed raised under section 6 of that act.

In Thompson v. Boisselier, 114 U. S. 11, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1042, the supreme court say that a patentee must be an inventor, and he must have made a discovery, and that the statute has always carried out this idea. The court then say:

“TTider the act of July 4, 1836, (5 St. p. 119, § 6,) in force when these patents were granted, the patentee was required to be a person who had ‘ discovered or invented’ a ‘ new and useful art, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter,’ or a ‘new and useful improvement in any art, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter.’ In the act of July 8, 1870, (16 St. p.

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Thompson v. Boisselier
114 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1885)
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McCormick v. Seymour
15 F. Cas. 1322 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York, 1851)
Stanley Works v. Sargent
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Bluebook (online)
44 F. 757, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmonds-v-morrison-circtsdoh-1891.