Special Equipment Co. v. Coe

324 U.S. 370, 65 S. Ct. 741, 89 L. Ed. 1006, 1945 U.S. LEXIS 2753, 64 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 525
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 26, 1945
Docket469
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 324 U.S. 370 (Special Equipment Co. v. Coe) 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
Special Equipment Co. v. Coe, 324 U.S. 370, 65 S. Ct. 741, 89 L. Ed. 1006, 1945 U.S. LEXIS 2753, 64 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 525 (1945).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit in equity, brought in the District Court of the District of Columbia, under R. S. § 4915, to compel respondent, the Commissioner of Patents, to issue a patent upon an application for a subcombination of the elements of a machine for which the inventor had previously filed a patent application. The district court gave judgment for respondent. The Court of Appeals for the District affirmed, 144 F. 2d 497, and we granted certiorari, 323 U. S. 697. The question is whether the Court of Appeals correctly rested its decision upon the ground that petitioner did not intend to make or use the invention and that the purpose of seeking the patent was to exploit and protect the combination invention embodied in the complete machine, of which the subcombination is a part. '

[372]*372Ewald, the plaintiff in the district court in whose stead petitioner, his assignee, was later substituted as a party, made application for a patent on a “fruit-treating apparatus” embracing the combination embodied in his complete machine. Certain claims of his application were allowed October 27, 1938, but a patent has not yet issued. The following year he made a renewed application for the subcombination, with which the present suit is concerned. The specifications of the original application disclosed mechanisms for automatically performing the successive operations of bobbing (cutting off the stems), splitting, paring, and coring pears, in preparation for canning or other processing.

The original application specified and claimed an apparatus consisting of two spaced, horizontally mounted turrets or turntables, combined with means for continuously, but intermittently, rotating both in the same direction. Fixed upon and rotatable with the table of the first turret are a plurality of pear receiving and clamping means, spaced upon the upper surface of the turntable, adapted to receive and clamp either a pre-split or a whole pear. At the first intermittent stop a swinging knife shears off (bobs) the stem of the fruit, which extends beyond the clamps. At the next intermittent stop, overhead traveling jaws or clamps grasp the fruit concurrently with its release from the first clamp and carry the fruit longitudinally to a point over the second turntable.

As the pear is thus carried from the first turret to a position over the second, it is split' by a fixed vertically positioned knife straddled by the overhead traveling clamps. As the clamps force the pear against and past the knife, it cleaves the pear into substantially equal half sections. The pear sections are then automatically, successively deposited in spaced cups fixed on the second revolving turntable. At the next stop of that turntable the pear section resting in its cup is peeled by an automatically [373]*373operated paring knife. At the next successive stop the core is removed from the pear section by an automatically operated coring device. After completing the coring, the mechanism automatically separates the pear section from the core and the peeling and discharges them and the pear section into appropriate receptacles.

In the operation of the machine whole or split pears may be fed by hand to the holding and clamping devices on the first turret where the pears are bobbed. The whole pear is then split as it is carried by the overhanging jaws from the first turret to the second. The peeling and coring of both pre-split and whole pears are then carried through by the operation of the second turret.

The patent application for the complete machine discloses a highly ingenious device, which is said to have achieved a great advance in the art by increasing the speed and skill with which pears are prepared for canning, and to result in a great saving of manpower. The renewed application for the subcombination specifies and claims the apparatus which we have described but without the splitting knife. In the operation of the device thus claimed the pears are pre-split by hand. The split sections are placed face to face in the receiving and clamping means upon the first turntable, after which the operation, except the splitting by the splitting knife, proceeds in exactly the same way and accomplishes the same result as when the splitting knife is present.

Additional claims, which are those sued on, covering all the elements of the combination except the splitting knife, were duly presented to the Patent Office. There they were rejected as incomplete, broader than the invention disclosed by the petitioner in his application, and misleading, and as covering constructions not contemplated by petitioner’s application. Respondent Commissioner, alleging no prior art against the allowance of the claims, set up these objections in his answer in the district court as the [374]*374sole grounds of defense to the suit. The district court sustained the Commissioner on the grounds assigned by him for rejection of the claims, and for the further reason that the subcombination claims did not “combine to produce any useful result.”

The Court of Appeals, after observing the operation of petitioner’s subcombination without the cutting knife, as shown by moving pictures, concluded that the device was far more useful in its operation than the old method of preparing fruit by hand, and, without deciding the point, added that it was plausible to say “that two distinct inventions are disclosed in the application.”

Without further examination of the issues raised by the pleadings, it affirmed the judgment of the district court upon the new and independent ground that a patent on the subcombination should not be granted because of “the dangers of approving a principle which permits a patent monopoly to be extended by granting claims on distinct inventions, which the applicant has no intention of exploiting as distinct inventions.” It said: “The record shows that it [the subcombination patent] is to be used to exploit and protect the patent monopoly of another related invention, to-wit: the complete machine. There is no intention to make or license others to make the partial machine because, although it is possible to use it without the cutting knife, it is not designed for such independent use.” It thought that the grant of a patent which the patentee has no intention of exploiting as a distinct invention “for the purpose of blocking the development of machines which might be constructed by others,” is inconsistent with the constitutional requirement that the patent grant must “promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts.”

We are pointed to no factual basis in the record for the assertion that petitioner contemplates either the misuse or non-use of the combination patent, other than that [375]*375suggested in the court’s opinion that the complete machine does the work better than the subcombination, without the knife, can do it and that there would be no reason to manufacture the partial machine when the complete machine was available. A separate opinion in which all the judges concurred also states that petitioner “admitted, both on argument and in its brief in the present case, that its purpose in filing the disputed claims was to ‘protect’ the main invention and that it had no intention of manufacturing the subcombination machine.” The reference, as agreed by counsel on the argument before us, is to a statement in petitioner’s brief in the court below that: “The claims in issue are sought purely to prevent appropriation of the . . .

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Bluebook (online)
324 U.S. 370, 65 S. Ct. 741, 89 L. Ed. 1006, 1945 U.S. LEXIS 2753, 64 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/special-equipment-co-v-coe-scotus-1945.