Worswick Manuf'g Co. v. City of Kansas

38 F. 239, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2814
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri
DecidedMarch 4, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 38 F. 239 (Worswick Manuf'g Co. v. City of Kansas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worswick Manuf'g Co. v. City of Kansas, 38 F. 239, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2814 (circtwdmo 1889).

Opinions

Philips, J.

This is a bill in equity, complaining of an alleged infringement by respondents of patent No. 171,190, granted to Edward 0. Sullivan-, December 14, 1875, and assigned to complainants. The issue in this case is limited to the third claim of said patent, which is as follows:

“The combination, with the harness for a fire-engine or like apparatus, of a device for suspending said harness above the,place occupied by the horse when attached to the apparatus, substantially as and for the purpose set forth.”

This double harness, in combination, consists of the collar, with hames permanently attached, the collar opening at bottom, fastening with a spring-lock secured to the lower points of the hames. The other part of the harness consists of an outer and inner trace, back strap, belly-band, and breeching. The suspension of this harness over the place occupied by the horse at the vehicle is effected by means of straps suspended from spring barrels secured to the ceiling above the front part of the engine. The ends of these straps are provided with catches, which are attached to the hames and the inner part of the harness for suspending them. In this device only the collar and hames and the inner trace are suspended. The breeching is constructed with a hinge, and the other trace is in two parts, the first secured to the hames and the other to the whiffletree, so that the trace is divided, and the one part and the breeching are carried back by hand and laid on the fore part of' the engine or vehicle; and in harnessing this breeching and outer trace are'likewise brought forward by hand, and the two parts of the trace attached. The respondents also claim under patent No. 330,320, granted to'the respondent George 0. Hale, November 10, 1885, which relates to improvements in such swinging harness, and has also for its object the suspension of the entire harness over the pole of a fire-engine or like apparatus, so that the horses can readily place themselves in position for hitching without obstruction by the harness, and by one effort to detach the harness simultaneously with the lowering thereof from its suspending frame. By this method the entire harness, collar, and hames, and breeching, with both traces attached to the whiffletree, are suspended. The harness is suspended by means of a square adjustable frame over the point of elevation, with slotted straps extending therefrom to the harness,' with improved snaps for seizing the different parts of the harness. The two front suspending cords engage the middle and outside terrets or rings of the collar, thus elevating the outside of the collar, and holding the sections apart. 'Like cords are suspended from the frame for suspending the traces, back strap, and breeching, whereby the whole harness is suspended, and the horses take their places under it, and the entire harness • comes down, op them. The frame is suspended in proper position by means of cords or ropes passing over pulleys, connecting [241]*241with a rod' extending transversely across the bars on the ceiling, and thence by cords down the sides of the wall of the room, connecting with a weight, which operates automatically, by which the whole process of suspension and letting down the harness on the horses is accomplished. The Hale device also employs the opening collar, with hames attached; the collar working on a rigid hinge at the top, and being secured at the bottom by a spring-lock, different in its construction from that of the Sullivan patent. In the Sullivan device the fastenings of the suspending straps are detached from the harness by the driver, after taking his seat on the engine or vehicle, by reaching a ring at the end of a rope running on pulleys above, and jerking it. In the Hale device the suspending cords are detached by the mere movement forward of the horses. The principal propositions insisted on by the defendants are substantially as follows: (1) That the invention in the third claim of the Sullivan patent was substantially known to and used by others before Sullivan’s discovery; and because of the history of the art the third claim of the Sullivan patent is to be restricted to the particular devices and apparatus described in his letters patent. (2) In view of the state of the art no invention was required in making the pretended invention and combination described in the said third claim. (3) The third claim of the Sullivan patent is not for the same invention covered by any one of the five claims in Sullivan’s original application, and that the said third claim was granted in violation of rule 11 of the patent-office, and is therefore void. (4) The Sullivan patent, particularly the third claim, is void on the ground of ambiguity

We are met at the threshold of this discussion with the suggestion that the validity and priority of the Sullivan invention has been adjudicated in complainants’ favor in the case of Manufacturing Co. v. City of Buffalo, reported in 20 Fed. Rep. 126. It requires no citation of authorities to the proposition that that adjudication constitutes no estop-pel. The respondents were not parties to that litigation, nor do they sustain the relation of privies to the city of Buffalo. The only consideration to which that decision is entitled, aside from the recognized ability of the judge, rests upon the comity between courts. The broadest application that can possibly be claimed for this principle is that the decision of courts of co-ordinate jurisdiction upon the same subject-matter of controversy is entitled to high respect as a precedent, when the subsequent case presents substantially the same state of facts. The former case is not conclusive. After giving due weight to all prior adjudications, the question of infringement of a patent is still to be determined in each particular case as it arises on the evidence adduced. Manufacturing Co. v. Judd, 28 Fed. Rep. 621; Blake v. Robertson, 6 O. G. 297. Where the facts in evidence are materially different, a decision of the supreme court itself sustaining a patent may not be followed in a suit between other parties. Kirby v. Manufacturing Co., 10 Blatchf. 307. A comparison of the pleadings and evidence in the Buffalo Case with these in the pending case, satisfies us that the questions of fact as well as lawr to be considered and determined here are materially differ[242]*242ent. The defense is not only placed on new and additional grounds, but new and important facts have been developed and presented. The case, therefore, must stand on its own merits.

That the- third claim- applies to a single as well as double harness suspension the complainants' are in no position to deny. In paragraph commencing on line 13 of the second page of the printed specification of the Sullivan patent it is stated that “ the same arrangement' of harness can be readily applied to a hose-cart or other apparatus using one horse.” It also states that the parts will be connected with the shafts. And this is the construction placed by the complainants on the patent. In their circular letter, in evidence, commending this device to the public, they say: ' ' .

“ This Sullivan patent broadly covers and includes all and any method of suspending a harness over the place where it is designed to be put upon a horse..” ...

This circular letter has for its frontispiece the cut of a single set of harness in suspension.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 F. 239, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worswick-manufg-co-v-city-of-kansas-circtwdmo-1889.