Smith v. Whitman Saddle Co.

148 U.S. 674, 13 S. Ct. 768, 37 L. Ed. 606, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2264
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 17, 1893
Docket188
StatusPublished
Cited by147 cases

This text of 148 U.S. 674 (Smith v. Whitman Saddle 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. Whitman Saddle Co., 148 U.S. 674, 13 S. Ct. 768, 37 L. Ed. 606, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2264 (1893).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Fuller,

after stating the ease, delivered the opinion of the court:

Section 4929 of the Revised Statutes provides that: “ Any person who, by his own industry, genius, efforts and expense, has invented and produced any new and original design for a manufacture, bust, statue, alto-relievo or bas-relief; any new and original design for the printing of woollen, silk, cotton or other fabrics; any new and original impression, ornament, pattern, print or picture to be printed, painted, cast or otherwise placed on or worked into any article of manufacture; or any new, useful and original shape or configuration of any article of manufacture, the same not having been known or used by others before his invention or production thereof, or patented or described in any printed publication, may, upon *678 •payment'of the fee prescribed and other due proceedings had, the same as in cases of inventions or discoveries, obtain a patent therefor.”

The first three of these classes plainly refer to ornament, or to ornament and utility, and the last to new shapes or forms of manufactured articles; and it is under the latter clause that this patent was granted.

In Gorham Manucfacturing Co. v. White, 14 Wall. 511, 521, it was said- by this court, speaking through Mr. Justice Strong, that the acts of Congress authorizing the granting of patents for designs contemplated “ not so much utility as appearance, and that, not an abstract impression, or picture, but an aspect given to those objects mentioned in the acts. . . . And the thing- invented or produced, for which a patent is given, is that which gives a peculiar or distinctive appearance to .the manufacture, or article to which it may be applied, or to which it gives form. The law manifestly contemplates that giving .certain new and original appearances to a manufactured article may enhance its salable value, may enlarge the demand for it, and may be a meritorious service to' the . public. It, therefore, proposes to secure for a limited time to the ingenious producer of those appearances the advantages flowing from them. Manifestly the mode in which those appearances are produced has very' littlé, if anything,'to do with giving increased salableness to the article. It is the appearance itself which attracts attention and' calls out favor or dislike. It is. the appearance itself, therefore, no ' matter' by what agency caused, that constitutes . mainly, if not entirely, the contribution to the public which the law deems worthy of recompense.” ' This language was used in reference to ornamentation merely, and moreover the word “ useful,” which is in section 1929,. was-' not contained in the'act of .181-2, under which the patent in Gorham Co. v. White, was granted. So that now where a new and original shape or configuration of an article of manufacture is claimed, its utility may be also an- element for consideration. Lehnbeuter v. Holthaus, 105 U. S. 94.

*679 But as remarked by Mr. Justice Brown, then District Judge for the Eastern District of Michigan, in Northrup v. Adams, 12 O. G. 430, and 2 Bann. & Ard. 567, 568, which was a bill for the infringement of a design patent for a cheese safe, the law applicable to design patents “ does not materially differ from that in case? of mechanical patents, and ‘ all- the regulations and provisions which apply to the obtaining or protection of. patents for. inventions or discoveries . '; . ■ shall apply to patents for designs.’ (Sec. 4933.) ” And he added : “ To entitle a party to the beneTt of the act, in either case, ■ there must be originality, and the exercise of the inventive faculty. In the one, there must be novelty and utility; in the other, originality and beauty. Mere mechanical skill is insufficient'. There must be something akin to genius — an effort of the brain as well as the hand. The adaptation of old devices or forms to new purposes, however convenient, useful or. beautiful they may be in their new role, is not invention.” Many illustrations are referred to, as, for instance, the use of a. model of the Centennial Building for paper weights and ink stands; the thrusting of a gas-pipe through the leg and arm of the statue of a shepherd boy, for the purpose of a drop light; the painting upon a familiar vase of a copy of Stuart’s portrait of Washington — none of which were • patentable, because the elements of the combination were old. The shape produced must be the result of industry, effort, genius' or expense, and new' and 'original as applied to articles of manufacture. Foster v. Crossin, 44 Fed. Rep. 62. The exercise of the inventive or originative faculty is required, and a person cannot be permitted to select an existing form and simply put it to a1 new use any more 'than he can be permitted to .take a patent for the mere double use of a machine. If, however, the selection and adaptation of an existing form is more than the exercise of the imitative faculty and the result is in effect a new creation, the design may be patentable.

In Jennings v. Kibbe, 10 Fed. Rep. 669, and 20 Blatchford, 353, Mr. Justice Blatchford, when Circuit Judge, applied the rule laid down in Gorham Manufacturing Co. v. White, supra, stating it thus, that “ the true test of identity of design is *680 sameness of appearance, — in other words, sameness of effect upon the eye; that it is not necessary that the appearance should be the same to the eye of an expert, and that the test is the eye of an ordinary observer, the eyes of men generally, of observers of ordinary acuteness, bringing to the examination of the article upon which the design has been placed that degree of observation which men of ordinary intelligence give.” Ripley v. Elson Glass Co., 49 Fed. Rep. 927.

In this case it appeared from the evidence' that among other trees and saddles that were old in the prior art was one called the Granger tree, which had a out-back pommel and a low, broad cantle, and was well known; and another called the Jenifer tree or Jenifer-McOlellan saddle, which was also well known, and had a high, prominent pommel and a high-backed cantle, or hind protuberance, in the shape of a duck’s tail. ’

The exhibits embrace, among others, a slotted Granger saddle, the Jenifer-McOlellan, the Sullivan-Black-G^anger tree, and the saddle sold by the defendants, the latter being substantially the Granger saddle with the Jenifer cantle.

The saddle design described in the specification differs from the Granger saddle in the substitution of the Jenifer cantle for the low, broad cantle of the Granger tree. In other words, the front half of the Granger and the rear half of the Jenifer, or Jenifer-McOlellan, make up the saddle in question,'though it differs also from the Granger saddle in that it has a nearly perpendicular drop of some inches at the rear of the pommel, that is, distinctly moré of a drop than the Granger saddle had.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 U.S. 674, 13 S. Ct. 768, 37 L. Ed. 606, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-whitman-saddle-co-scotus-1893.