The Barbed Wire Patent

143 U.S. 275, 12 S. Ct. 443, 36 L. Ed. 154, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2022
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 29, 1892
Docket128
StatusPublished
Cited by580 cases

This text of 143 U.S. 275 (The Barbed Wire Patent) 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
The Barbed Wire Patent, 143 U.S. 275, 12 S. Ct. 443, 36 L. Ed. 154, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2022 (1892).

Opinion

Mn. Justice Beowst

delivered the,opinion of the court.

No serious question is or can be made regarding the infringement in this suit, the defendants relying solely upon the want of novelty. To determine satisfactorily the question whether there is involved in this device sufficient of novelty to support a patent, it is necessary to consider somewhat at length the progress which had been made in constructing barbed wire fences prior to the issue of this patent, as it appears both from the face of the prior patents themselves and from the oral evidence introduced by the defendants tending to show an un-patented use of such device before the application was made in this case.

(1) The use of wire fences, composed either of a single wire, or of two or more wires twisted together, antedates by many years the barbed feature of such fences. But, either by reason of their comparative invisibility or their weakness, they proved an insufficient protection against cattle, and fell largely into .disuse. Something was needed, not so much to strengthen them, as to deter cattle from encountering them or testing their strength. Natural hedges of thorn, which in effect contain the principle of the barbed wire, have been employed both in. this country and in England from time immemorial. Fences' of other materials and various forms had been armed with pickets, spurs, iron points, spikes, sharp stones, or bits of. broken glass inserted in plaster, but prior to 1867 no one seems to have conceived the idea of arming wire fences with a similar protecting device. In July of that year, however, one William D. Hunt took out a patent for arming the wires with á series of small spur-wheels, their spurs being sharpened so as *278 to prick readily. These wheels were provided with openings at their centres through which the wire passed, fitting, it loosely so that the wheel would revolve easily upon it. There was a provision sometimes used and oftener not, for keeping the spurs in their places, and at suitable distances apart, by means of flanges. This was obviously a crude and unsatisfactory device, and never seems to have gone into general use. The spurs were- small seriated wheels revolving loosely about a wire, aided by flat bits of metal to render them more readily visible, and kept in place, if at all, by a clumsy and expensive flange.

In the slame year, and about four weeks before the patent to Hunt, although his actual invention was antedated by Hunt in point of time, Lucien B. Smith took out a patent for a wire fence, having spools of iron or wood strung upon it, each, spool being perforated and provided with four spurs projecting radially from, them, and [ so arranged that they would revolve, while they were held in place lengthwise of the wires by slight •bends or deflections in the wires at a distance of two or three feet apart, forming short straight lengths of about'.four inches, upon which the spools were hung. This .patent contained the first suggestion of a barb proper, though in a very imperfect form; but it embodied an idea of which the public was not slow to avail itself, and gave an impetus to succeeding inventors, which finally resulted in the barbed- fence now in use. Though valuable as illustrating the state of the art, it will scarcely be claimed to be an anticipation of the Glidden ■device.

The patent of Eebruary 11,1868, to Michael Kelly indicated a'decided step -in advance of its predecessors, consisting as it did of small flat pieces-of iron or steel, cut from a plate by machinery, each-provided-with a hole, corresponding with the-size of the wire, though a little larger, so that they could' be • introduced easily upon the wire, either , by proper machinery or by hand. “ These pieces,” says the patentee, “ after being ' strung on the wire at distances about six iuches apart, are compressed laterally upon the wire by a blow of a hammer, or. otherwise, so as to flatten the hole e, .and' also correspondingly *279 flatten the wire at the point where this adjunct is to stand. I term these pieces ‘ thorns; ’ and it will be observed that each presents two sharp points. . They may be so placed- that they-will all stand in the same plane; or they may stand irregular in many different planes. I prefer the latter arrangement. The wire thus provided with the sharp, points or thorns serves in the ordinary manner, with the addition of possessing an offensive character, which will soon teach cattle to respect it and not attempt to force it.” , .Pigurfe 2 of this patent, a representation of which is here given, undoubtedly contained the idea subsequently developed by Glidden, but there was apparently no method of holding the barb in place, save by a blow of a hammer — at least such seems to have, been the opinion of the patentee at the time the patent was originally issued. He

KELLY PATENT

says of this in his specification: “I can, where it is desirable to increase the strength of the wire, lay another wire of the same o*1 a different size alongside of a thorn-wire, and can twist the two together by any suitable mechanism.” No claim was made for this method of construction in the original patent, although it seems to have been made the principal, feature of a reissue obtained in 18’76, which was not made an exhibit in this case. In this reissue he made a claim for twisting two wires and a series of t' orns strung upon one of the wires and held in position by them. In the case of Washburn & Moen Manufacturing Company v. Fuchs, 16 Fed. Rep. 661, it was held that if this reissued patent were to be considered as covering-more than the mode of fastening the plate barbs to the wire in the combination stated, i.e. by hammering, and as extending *280 the use of the twisted wire so as to include its use for the distribution and locking of all kinds of barbs, the reissue was invalid as to such extension, because it was not included within the scope of the original invention. It is evident from this that the use of the second twisted wire for the purpose of locking the thorn was not contemplated by the patentee at the time his patent was originally granted, but was an afterthought suggested by other devices which in the meantime had made their appearance.

A second patent'to Kelly, issued November IT, 1868, exhibits a flat wire pierced at intervals of six inches, through which thorns were inserted and locked to the wire by the blow of a hammer or otherwise. This device evidently bears a much 'more distant resemblance to the Glidden patent than the prior one, and is far from being an anticipation.

The application for the patent in suit was filed October 27, 1873, though the patent was not issued until November 24, 1874. Subsequent to the application for this patent, and on March-14, 1874, Glidden filed an application for an improvement in wire stretchers for fences, upon which a patent was issued May 12,1874. It is not perceived how this patent could affect in any way the pending application for the later patent. The patentee abandoned nothing he had claimed before, but sought, as an improvement upon the former, to claim a slotted tube midway between the posts, in which was put a coil spring to spread the wires and automatically tighten them and keep them at the proper tension as against expansion by heat and contraction by cold.

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Bluebook (online)
143 U.S. 275, 12 S. Ct. 443, 36 L. Ed. 154, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2022, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-barbed-wire-patent-scotus-1892.