Smith v. Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co.

93 U.S. 486, 23 L. Ed. 952, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1402
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 18, 1877
Docket113
StatusPublished
Cited by297 cases

This text of 93 U.S. 486 (Smith v. Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co.) 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
Smith v. Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co., 93 U.S. 486, 23 L. Ed. 952, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1402 (1877).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Strong

delivered the opinion of the court.

A brief review of the history and nature of the patent which the complainants allege has been infringed will aid materially in solving the questions presented by this appeal. On the fourteenth day of May, 1852, Dr. John A. Cummings, a dentist of Boston, filed in the Patent Office a caveat to protect an invention he claimed to have made, of certain new and useful im[490]*490provements in the setting and plates of artificial sets of teeth. The description accompanying the caveat indicated with very considerable clearness what the alleged invention was, and the objects sought to be gained by it. The improvement was declared to “consist in forming the plate, and also, the gums in which the teeth are inserted, of rubber, or some other elastic substance, so compounded with sulphur, lead, and other similar substances as to form a hard gum, or whalebone gum, rigid enough for the purposes of mastication, and pliable enough to yield a little to the mouth.” “ By this improvement,” the caveator said, “ the teeth, can be easily baked into the gums which form one piece with the plate.” Subsequently, on the 12th of April, 1855, he applied for a patent, reciting in his application, that he had previously entered a caveat. His accompanying specification declared the invention to consist in “ forming the plate and gums to which the teeth are attached of rubber, or some other elastic material, so indurated as to be rigid enough for the purpose of mastication, and pliable enough to yield a little to the motions of the mouth, and in one piece, the teeth being embedded in the elastic material while the material is in a soft condition, and then baked with the gums and platej so that the teeth, gums, and plate will all be connected, forming, as it were, one piece.” This application for a patent was rejected on the 19th of May next following ; and the applicant was referred to two printed publications, one suggesting the use of gutta-percha as a base for artificial sets of teeth, and the other suggesting pastes, analogous to porcelain paste, as well ds gutta-percha. Cummings then amended his specification by striking out all reference to gutta-percha or other merely elastic material, disclaiming the use of gutta-percha, and any material which is merely rendered plastic by heat and hardened by cooling, and he claimed the improvement in sets of mineral, or other artificial sets of teeth which consists in combining the teeth with a rubber plate and gums, which, after the insertion of the teeth, are vulcanized by Goodyear’s process, or any other process, forming thereby a cheap, durable, and elastic substitute for the gold plates theretofore used. . This amendment, however, proved ineffectual. The application for a patent was again rejected; and a third rejection followed, a reconsideration for which the [491]*491applicant had asked. This third rejection was on the third day of February, 1856. From that time' onward for several years, indeed, until the patent was finally granted, the evidence very satisfactorily shows that Dr. Cummings was in a condition of extreme poverty, utterly unable to bear the necessary expenses of prosecuting his case further. But he did not withdraw his application. He did -not ask for á return of part of the fee he had paid, nor by any act of his did he indicate acquiescence in the unfavorable action of the Patent Office. On the contrary, he continued to assert his expectation of ultimately obtaining a patent, formed plans for his own action after it should be obtained, and complained of what he supposed to be the negligence of his solicitor. 'The proof of his extreme poverty is ample. His ill-health interfered with his working successfully in the line of his profession, and his family was subjected, to great privations. He seems never to have had any considerable money. He borrowed, sometimes, small sums to purchase underclothing for himself. He made frequent applications to his friends for advances to enable him to prosecute his application for a patent, offering as a compensation for such advances sometimes one quarter and sometimes one half, of the patent when obtained. He appears never to have remitted his efforts until, in 1864, he induced Dr. Flagg, who had been his partner in former years, and Dr. Osgood, to advance, first, $100, and afterwards $720, by means of which the patent was obtained. Even then he had not the $20 necessary to be paid when it was allowed. For the assistance he' thus received he gave one quarter of his invention. Before this time, between the third rejection of his application and his obtaining the advances mentioned, every thing was done which was within his power. In February, 1859, in the midst of his pecuniary embarrassments, his. solicitor applied to the Patent Office, not for a return of any portion of the fee paid, nor for a withdrawal of the application, but that the specification and one drawing might be sent to him. This request was refused.' An attempt was then made for an appeal to the board, but that not being allowed by the commissioner, nothing further was done in the Patent Office until the applicant was enabled, by the funds obtained from Drs. Flagg and Osgood, to [492]*492renew his endeavors. Then, on the 1st of March, 1864, he presented a petition for the grant of a patent to himself for the same _ invention which he had endeavored to secure in 1855 (the application for which remained in the office unwithdrawn), and accompanied his petition with a specification and drawings corresponding exactly with those he had previously made. This final effort was successful. The office practically acknowledged that the prior rejection had been an error, and declared, that, in justice to his rights as an inventor, the admission of his claim, limited to the use of hard rubber or vulcanite, as he had before limited it, would not be objected to. Accordingly the patent was granted on the 7th of .June, 1864, and by sundry conveyances it subsequently became vested in the complainants. Two surrenders and reissues have since been made, the last dated March 21, 1865, and it is for an alleged infringement of this second reissue that the present suit has been brought. The bearing of this history upon the merits of the controversy will appear as we proceed to examine the several defences set up.

Among these the one perhaps most earnestly urged is the averment that the device described in the specification was not a patentable' invention, but that it was a mere substitution of vulcanite' for other materials, which had previously been employed as a base for artificial sets of teeth, —r a change of one material for another in the formation of a product. If this is in truth all that the-thing described and patented was, if the device was merely the employment of hard rubber for the same use, in substantially the same manner and with the same effect that other substances had been used for in .the manufacture of the same articles, it may be conceded that it constituted no invention. So much is decided in Hotchkiss v. Greenwood, 11 How. 248. But such is not our understanding of the device described and claimed. .In the specification, it is declared that the invention “ consists in forming the plate to which the teeth, or teeth and gums, are attached, of hard rubber, or vulcanite,' so called, an elastic material, possessing and retaining in use sufficient rigidity for the purpose of mastication, and at the same time being pliable enough to yield a little to the motions of the mouth.” This is immediately followed by a description of the manner of the proposed use; that is,' .of making the hard rub[493]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 U.S. 486, 23 L. Ed. 952, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-goodyear-dental-vulcanite-co-scotus-1877.