Wells v. Jacques

29 F. Cas. 658, 1 Ban. & A. 60, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 1993
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 21, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 F. Cas. 658 (Wells v. Jacques) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells v. Jacques, 29 F. Cas. 658, 1 Ban. & A. 60, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 1993 (circtdnj 1874).

Opinion

NIXON, District Judge.

The complainant files her bill against the defendants for the infringement of a patent originally granted to Henry A. Wells, April 25th, 1846, for a new and useful improvement in machinery for making hat-bodies, which patent was extended to the complainant, by an act of congress for seven years from the 25th of April. 1867, and was by her surrendered and reissued May 19th. 1868.

The large amount of litigation in the courts for several years past in regard to this patent, is, perhaps, the best evidence that can be had .of ins value in the art of making hat-bodies.

Useless inventions are not ordinarily infringed; or. if they are. not enough interest is involved in them to induce the owners to spend their money and time in protecting them against the infringement. But it is not too much to say that the Wells patent revolutionized the mode of forming fur hat-bodies; that, upon its introduction the anterior slow and expensive process of "bowing,'’ in which the workman snapped the string of a bow upon the mass of loose fur to throw it upon the bat, was almost at once superseded: and that since then the Wells machine under its numerous re[659]*659issues, or other machines with such variations in their mode of operation as to produce the same result by the use of substantially different means, as their owners allege, or by the use of substantially the same means, as the owner of the Wells patent claims, have supplied the trade with a cheap and complete fur hat-body, with the deposit of the fur so graduated and controlled as to defy all competition by any other methods of formation known in the art

The pleadings and proofs in this case present two questions for consideration: (11 What is the Wells patent, and what is the complainant entitled to claim and hold under it? (2) Do the machines used by the defendants infringe any of these claims?

1. Mr. Wells calls his invention “an improvement in machinery for making hat-bodies,” thus recognizing the existence of other machinery which was in use in efforts to accomplish the same result.

It is alleged that it does not clearly appear from his descriptions that he fully comprehended the extent of his improvement or the capabilities of his machine. But it is not necessary that he should, in order to give to him. and those claiming under him, all the rights and benefits of his invention. Whatever are the necessary and legitimate results of an invention — whether the patentee comprehends them all or not — belong to him when he has complied with the requirements of the patent law, to protect him in its enjoyment and use against infringement.

His patent was for a combination — a combination of old and well-known mechanical devices to produce a new and useful result. In his schedule to the original patent he says—

“My improvements consist in feeding the fur (called the stock), after it has been picked, to a rotating brush between two endless belts of doth, one above the other, the lower one horizontal and the upper inclined, to gradually compress the fur and gripe it more effectually when it is presented to the action -of the rotating brush, which, moving at a great velocity, throws it in a chamber or tunnel, which is gradually changed in form toward the outlet, where it assumes a shape nearly corresponding to the vertical section passing through the axis of the cone, but narrower, for the purpose of concentrating and directing the fur thrown by the brush into the cone — this casing being provided with an aperture immediately under the brush, through which a current of air enters, in consequence of the rotation of the brush and the exhaustion of the cone, for the purpose of more effectually directing the fibres toward the cone, which is placed just in front of the delivery aperture of the chamber or tunnel, which aperture is provided at top with a bonnet or hood hinged thereto, and at the bottom with a hinged flap, to regulate the deposits of the fibres on the cone or other former, with the view to distribute the thickness of the bat wherever more is required to give additional strength."

This sentence reveals what was in the inventor’s mind — a combination of machinery to produce, not a fur hat-body merely, but one with a regulated distribution of the fur on the cone, in the process of formation, giving, as he afterward states, “greater thickness in the parts of the hat which form the brim and edge or square of the top than on the top and crown.”

The combination which he formed to accomplish this result was (1) an apron or endless belt; (2) revolving rollers; (3) a rotating brush or picker; (4) a chamber or tunnel with a hinged flap or hood; (5) a perforated revolving cone; and (6) an exhausting apparatus to produce a current by exhausting the air under the cone. After describing their relations to each other and their methods of operation and combination, he states his claim as follows:

“What I claim as my invention and desire to secure by letters patent in the machine above described, is the arrangement of the two feeding belts, with their planes inclined to each other and passing around the lips formed substantially as described, the better to present the fibres to the action of the rotating brush, as described, in combination with the rotating brush and tunnel or chamber, which conducts the fibres to the perforated cone or other former placed in front of the aperture or mouth thereof, substantially as herein described. I claim the chamber into which the fibres are thrown, in combination with the perforated cone or other former placed in front of the delivery aperture thereof, for the purpose and in the manner substantially as herein described; the said chamber being provided with an aperture below and back of the brush for the admission of a current of air to aid in throwing and directing the fibres on to the cone or other former, as described. I also claim the employment of the hinged hood, to regulate the distribution of the fibres on the perforated cone or other former, as described. And I also claim providing the lower part or delivery aperture of the tunnel or chamber with a hinged flap, for the purpose of regulating the delivery of the fibres to increase the thickness of the bat where more strength is required, as herein described, in combination with the hood, as herein described. And in the process I claim hardening the bat while on the perforated cone or former, and preparatory to its removal therefrom, by immersing it in hot water, as herein described. I also claim covering the bat with felted or fulled cloth, before it is removed from the cone or former, as described. And, finally. I claim the employment in combination of both the perforated cones, one for making pressure on and retaining the fibres of the bat until hardened, and the other to prevent the collapse of the cone or other former on which the hat is formed, substantially as herein described."

It is quite obvious to any one familiar with the controversies in the courts to which the owners of the Wells patent have been par-’ [660]*660ties, that these controversies have been aggravated, if not caused, by the defective manner in which the patentee specified his invention and stated his claims in the original patent. It is no imputation upon Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Simonds Manuf'g Co. v. E. C. Atkins & Co.
63 F. 584 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana, 1894)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 658, 1 Ban. & A. 60, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 1993, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-jacques-circtdnj-1874.