Worden v. Fisher

11 F. 505
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJuly 1, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 11 F. 505 (Worden v. Fisher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worden v. Fisher, 11 F. 505 (E.D. Mich. 1882).

Opinion

Brown, D. J.

This suit is prosecuted by the defendants in the casé of Searls v. Worden, ante, 501, to recover damages of the defendants, who are selling whip sockets made by Searls, and purporting to be constructed under the patent issued to Scott, but which were in almost exact imitation of the whip sockets made by the complainants, and which are confessedly an infringement pf their patent, if the same be valid. In Searls v. Worden we held that the Scott patent was valid, and that complainants were infringers; but it seems now that Searls has abandoned, to some extent at least, the manufacture of whip sockets of the particular form shown in the specification and drawings of the Scott patent, and is making them after the Worden patent, claiming the latter to be illegal and void.

Now, although, as was held in Searls v. Worden, supra, the Worden patent contains the underlying principle of the Scott patent, and is to that extent an infringement, still there are improvements in the Worden patent, in splitting the entire socket into two parts and using one as a lever, which I think are patentable, and would justify the charge of infringement against the defendants, provided the patent in other respects be valid. The main ground upon which this case is contested is that Curtis and Worden were not joint inventors of this device, but that the invention was made by Curtis alone, or by Curtis and one Nellis. There can be no doubt that if the circumstances are such as to show that two persons both contributed to an improvement, and such improvement is the result of mutual contributions of the two, they are to be treated as joint inventors., and a joint patent should be taken out. In such cases the joint patent stands for and must be supported by a joint invention, and as an error in this particular is fatal to the validity of the patent, I think it should be made clearly to appear that the patentees were not joint inventors, before the court would be justified in annulling the patent upon that ground.

So far as the participation of Nellis in this invention is concerned, the facts are substantially as follows: That in August, 1867, Curtis and Nellis, who were employed in the same shop in Tpsilanti as workmen in the manufacture of carriages, had a conversation together in relation to making an improvement upon whip sockets; that in the course of that conversation Nellis, holding in his hand a whip socket of the ordinary kind, (a short metal cylinder, or tube, closed at the bottom and provided with fastening devices for attaching it to the vehicle,) suggested that a lever might be connected with it to hold the whip upright, and he put into it a stick to show how [507]*507the lever could be made to act by throwing it out at the bottom and in at the top. Curtis does not state it quite so strongly, but testifies that Nellis made the suggestion of getting up something so “that when the whip struck the bottom it would be clamped at the top.” “I did not speak, but acted; but the hint which he gave me was nothing to show how to make it; until after I had experimented.” Curtis seems to have acted upon this hint, and went on and made a model of iron in two parts, hinged together, with a wedge at the bottom. Upon the Sunday following this conversation they were together again in their shop, in company with the hands, when Curtis exhibited the model, which Nellis says he recognized as embodying substantially the idea he had suggested to Curtis; but be evidently treated it as of little or no value, for whatever interest be had in the invention he gave up to Curtis on condition that he would furnish beer for the company.

Now, there is nothing further in this testimony than a suggestion upon the part of Nellis that the whip might be held firmly by means of a lever in the socket, — the very device for which Scott obtained his patent, and which is no part of the complainant’s patent in this case. It was, at best, a mere suggestion, upon which Nellis never acted himself. It was as if some one had suggested to the inventor of the telephone the possibility of transmitting voice over a wire with the aid of electricity. It was rather a suggestion of a result to be accomplished, than of the means of accomplishing it, and therefore not patentable. He had nothing to do with the making of either of the models in which the invention was afterwards embodied. He made no suggestion of splitting the socket in two and using the outer half as the lever, and did not seem to regard himself as having anything to do with the invention of the whip socket produced by Curtis. On the contrary, he saw the model which Curtis and Worden were preparing to send to Washington, stood by and allowed them to go on, make their application, and obtain their patent without objection. Under these circumstances it seems to me that he cannot be treated as a joint inventor of this device. His suggestion was rather of the lever which Scott was then working upon in Connecticut, and for which be shortly afterwards obtained his patent.

Was Mr. Curtis the sole inventor of this device, or did Worden participate with him? Upon this subject Curtis testifies that upon the Monday following the Sunday already spoken of he went into his shop to work, and threw the iron model he had constructed under the [508]*508bench, but the more he thought of it the better he was satisfied that it could be made useful. He then went to work and made a copper model much like the one he had already constructed, but instead of inserting wedges to throw the bottom out as the whip was inserted, he made it to bulge in the middle by hammering the copper, thus making it considerably larger in the middle than at either end. The effect of this was to bring the two halves together at the top as the whip was inserted. This modelj however, showed that the sides were straight; that the ears, were cut on one side and riveted to the other to form the joint; that one side lapped over the other when the ends were brought together; and that no means were provided for fastening the socket to the dash-rail of the carriage. In fact, it was far from being a complete or useful machine. In this condition he took it to Alva Worden, who was acquainted with the patent business, and was considered a good judge of such matters. He looked it over and replied that if it could be perfected there might be something in it, and expressed a willingness to assist in completing it and getting it patented. Worden and he then began constructing wooden patterns together. At Worden’s suggestion the sides were cut away, the hinges or ears were put upon both parts, and these parts were so constructed that they shut square against each other, instead of slipping by, and a bottom was inserted so that a whip could not pass through. Several of these models were made by them jointly, and after a satisfactory pattern had been worked out in wood, Worden took it to Detroit to get a casting made for the patent-office at Washington. Mr. Worden also suggested several methods of fastening it to the dash-board, although, in the view I take of the loop, this is not material. An arrangement was made between them that if Worden got it patented he was to pay the expense of the patent for a half interest in it. Under this state of facts the question arises whether Worden contributed anything which could be called inventive skill to this machine.

To constitute two persons joint inventors it is not necessary that exactly the same idea should have occurred to each at the same time, and that they should work out together the embodiment of this idea in a perfected machine.

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Bluebook (online)
11 F. 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worden-v-fisher-mied-1882.