The Corn-Planter Patent
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
A proper decision of the questions in these causes renders it necessary, in the first place, to ascertain, as near as may be, the actual date of Brown’s alleged invention or inventions, such as and whatever they are. His original application for a patent was sworn to on the 27th of September, 1852. But it appears from his own testimony, which does not seem to be discredited, but rather corroborated by others, that he was making experiments in 1850, on a ma
“ It had two runners and two wheels, two cross-bars and nose-pieces, two braces, dropper’s seat, and a tongue. The wheels were hung through the seed-boxes by arms. There were arms running back from the seed-boxes, which the wheels run in, coupled through the seed-boxes with a bolt. I had a loop running down each side of the wheel that went on to the axles on the wheels, and worked a couple of short levers fastened on this loop running forward under the forepart of the machine, and running back far enough to put a cross-piece on behind. I am a poor hand at describing it. The seed-slide passed through the hoppers, running from one to the other, and the lever operated it with the hand, with a person located on the machine crosswise, so that he could see the marks plain on the ground.”
Further evidence was given by him descriptive of the mar chine, and showing its substantial identity with the machine as it stood when the patent was granted.
This, however, was only a model. But it had all the main characteristics of the perfected machine, except that the circular valves were not contained in it, the seed being dropped from the bottom of the hopper by the movement of a straight slide. He further testified that in 1852 he sent that model by his brother to Washington, and that it was very nearly the same as the model filed in the Patent Office, a copj’ of which was shown to the witness, and is an exhibit in the cause. He further states that in the same year he made, after the plan of the model, a machine of one-half the usual size, but large enough to work with, and that he planted three or four acres of corn with it in JVhiy, 1851. He says it worked well. In September of the same year, after harvest, he invited several persons to come and see it operate, giving their names. Several of these witnesses were called and fully corroborated his testimonj^. Early in 1852 he commenced constructing ten machines, but completed but one of them that spring. With this one, and the half-sized machine before mentioned, he planted over twenty
The appellees have endeavored (but we think unsuccessfully) to discredit the statements and testimony of Brown, especially as to the existence of rollers for covering the seed in the model and small-sized machine made in the early part of 1851. He is corroborated on this point by his nephew, V. R. Brown, and others; and nothing but negative testimony is adduced to the contrary.
We think it clear that his machine (except the seat and the flipper-valve) was substantially invented in the beginning of 1851, and that in April or May of that year he had constructed and used a small working corn-planter, containing all the material parts of his machine as it was when patented, except the circular valve in the hopper, which was added as an improvement on the straight slide in the spring of 1852.
We will next proceed to inquire what machines belonging to the same general class had been invented prior to this period, in order to show the state of the art at that time.
It cannot be seriously contended that Cooke’s drill, and other machines of the kind, described in the Farmer’s Encyclopedia, bear any resemblance to the specific features of Brown’s corn-planter. The furrows are made by coulters fixed in beams, and the grain is covered by harrows following the drills. The latter are hollow tubes which are supplied with the seed grain by a revolving cylinder having little cups, or cavities, in its surface, which become filled as they revolve in the bottom of the hopper.
An English patent, obtained by one Hornsby in 1840, was introduced; but the mechanism described therein has very slight resemblance to the corn-planter. It consists of a hollow wheel, with angular compartments and doors in the circumference to receive seed and manure from a hopper, aud deposit them on the ground by the revolution of the wheel. This wheel is situated in rear of a coulter running in the ground, and does not touch the ground itself, but is supported on the frame of the machine, which in turn is supported by large driving wheels on the outside of the frame. The coulter and deposit wheel are located in the inside of the frame. The inventor, however, observes that more than one coulter aud deposit wheel may be used. No method is described for covering the seed or pressing it into the ground. The.side view of the coulter exhibited in the drawing bears some resemblance to the runner in Brown’s machine; but we have no other description of it, or of the manner of its operation.
Thomas’s cottonseed-planter, patented in 1841, is next adduced.
The next machine in order of time is Henry Todd’s, of Oxford, New Hampshire, patented December 15th, 1843.
Hale was the only witness examined on the subject of this machine. He says he helped Todd make six of them, and that they were used, and worked satisfactorily, in or about 1844. This being all that is heard of this machine in the cause, it is probable that its use was discontinued, and that it shared the fate of a thousand other devices which approach the point of final perfection and success, but do not reach it. The differences between this machine and Brown’s are just those differences which rendered the latter a success, and a valuable acquisition to the agriculture of the country.
Earle’s planting plough, patented in 1848, may be dismissed even more summarily than Todd’s machine. It operated automatically in depositing the seed, and was not adapted to check-row planting; the furrow was opened by a plough furnished with a double mould-board; and the seeds were covered by means of scrapers attached to a diagonal position behind the seeding apparatus. It had but one frame, and the Seed was deposited by means of a drum, having cavities in its surface, revolving in the bottom of the hopper, and discharging the seed into a tube behind the plough.
Mumma’s patent for a seed-drill, granted in 1849, was also put in evidence; but it describes only a grain-drill, devised to secure a more equal distribution of seed in the drills or furrows in ascending or descending hills, &c. “To the hindpart of the frame a small trunk is jointed, with a long lever attached to it, by which the whole seeding apparatus is raised from the ground when it is transported from place to place.” This device of the truck or jack and lever for
The machine of Remy & Kelly comes next.
The appellees contend that this was an anticipation of several material parts of Brown’s machine. But it is obvious that it had not the runners nor the covering rollers, nor was it adapted to planting in check-rows. As presented to the Patent Office in 1850, and in the models exhibited to the court, it was planned for an automatic drill-planter. The experiment made in 1849, when Remy worked it by hand, was a mere experiment, which was never repeated. It may have presented one or two ideas in advance of other machines, but it can hardly be said to anticipate the machine which we have described as Brown’s. Were it not for the application for a patent it would justly be regarded as an abandoned experiment, iueapable of being set up against any other claim. Can the fact that such an U2>plication was made and afterwards voluntarily withdrawn, and never renewed, make any difference? We think not. liad
The next maehiue which we will examine is that of James Abbott, which is strenuously claimed as an anticipation of the complainant’s machine, or of material parts thereof. Abbott resided iu Brimfield, Peoria County, Illinois. Models of his machine are in evidence.
Abbott then says:
“The next machine which I constructed was, according to the best of my recollection, in the spring of 1852, certainly not later than 1853.”
He then proceeds to describe the machine. It had but one frame, and whilst it exhibited some of the same parts which are found in Brown’s machine, yet it is obviously a different machine from Brown’s, and intended as an automatic drill instead of a check-row planter. But as, in our judgment, the weight of the evidence (of which considerable was taken) is that it was constructed subsequently to Brown’s, it is unnecessary to give it further consideration.
Another machine much relied on by the appellees .was that of Kirkman, of .Peoria County, Illinois, a farmer, but formerly a millwright aud engineer.
It will thus be seen, that Kirkmau’s machine had some of the prominent features of Brown’s. It differed from it in not being a check-row planter, and not planting in hills but in rows, and acting automatically simply as a drill, and having but a single frame.
Considerable evidence, much of it apparently conflicting, was adduced as to the time when Kirkmau’s machine, or rather several machines (for he built three at different times), were constructed. [The court here stated and examined this testimony, as to date, and continued.]
A review of the entire evidence on the subject leads us to the conclusion that Kirkman’s second machine, called the "Wrigley machine, was made in the early part of 1850; that he tried it that spring unsuccessfully; that he then laid it by, and did not attempt to use it again until the spring of 1852, after he had made a material alteration in it — which alteration was made after the summer of 1851 — and not completed, as it would seem from the evidence of Kingsley, until the spriug of 1852. This would make the machine of Kirkman about contemporary with that of Brown’s second machine, which he completed and operated in the spring of 1852; but would bring it, as a completed machine, subsequent to the halt-sized machine which Brown completed and operated in the spring of 1851, and publicly exhibited in September of that year.
The machine referred to by Abbott, as having been made by Kirkman by the aid of drawings furnished by him, was
The last machines relied on as antedating the appellant’s are those of Joab Brown, also of Peoria County, Illinois.
A machine of one Farley, invented in January or February, 1853, was introduced in the ease for the purpose of showing that Brown’s improvement of placing the driver on the machine, which formed one of the subjects of his second patent, had been anticipated. There was a long platform on Earle’s machine, the front part resting on and fixed to the runners, the rear resting on the axle of covering wheels following the runners. The driver rode on this platform, and by stepping forward he could press the runners deeper into the gound, and by stepping back he could raise them out of the ground, using the wheels as a fulcrum. The bearing of this machine on some of the reissued patents will be noted hereafter.
On the subject of the flipper valve (so called), the appellees have introduced two machines, one by Charles Finn, for which he applied for a patent in April, 1852, but which application was rejected; and the other by Jarvis Case, for which he applied for a patent December 9th, 1853.
These devices will be examined hereafter, when we come to consider the claim for the flipper valve as contained in the reissued patent No. 1095 (see infra, page 233).
We have thus gone over and explained, as well as the
It is very obvious, at a glance, that the claim of reissue No. 1037, which is for the construction of a shoe or runner for seed-planting machines generally, cannot be sustained. That device was used long before Brown made his machine. Without adverting to Thomas’s cottouseed-planter, it was contained in Todd’s patent in 1843, and was used by James Abbott in 1848, by Kirkman in 1850, and probably by Joab Brown in the same year and the . year before. There is nothing in the particular form and shape of the appellant’s runner which is sufficiently diverse from others that preceded it, to entitle it to the merit of an invention.
Most of the other claims are more complicated, and require more careful consideration to understand their fair scope, in view of what had been accomplished before. It may be remarked in passing that, in our view, the several reissues are for things contained within the machines and apparatus described in the original patents; but whether they were anticipated by prior inventions, or are void for any other reason applicable to patents and claims generally, is still open. The question of fraud in obtaining these reissues must be regarded as settled by the decision of the Commissioner of Patents.
The first patent in the series of reissues is No. 1086, by which is claimed as the invention of the appellant a “seed-planting machine, constructed principally of framework, the front part of which is supported on uot less than two runners or shoes, with upward-inclining edges, and the rear part supported on not less than two wheels, the latter being arranged to follow the former, substantially as and for the purpose set forth.”
The machine is so constructed that an additional pair of wheels may be attached to it for the purpose of dropping
The last clause of the above claim, “ substantially as and for the purpose set forth,” throws us back to the specification for a qualification of the claim, and the several elements of which the combination is composed. The thing patented is not only, first, a seed-planting machine, made principally of framework; but, secondly, it is composed of two distinct parts; thirdly, the front part is supported on two or more runnel’s with upward-inclining edges; fourthly, the rear part is supported on two or more wheels, arranged to follow the respective runners; and each and all of these parts are to be thus constructed and combined “ substantially as and for the purpose set forth.” That is to say, the object and purpose of the machine as a seed-planting machine is explained to be to plant corn in check-rows, so that it may be cultivated both ways, and.its construction is adapted to that end. The devices used for effecting this purpose, both automatically and by hand, are described in the specification, but they are claimed in separate patents, aud only affect the one in question as they modify and affect the general structure of the machine. Again, the object and the purpose of constructing the machine of framework in two distinct parts, supported separately, one by the runners and the other by the wheels, is expressed to be “so that the rollers may rise aud fall without disturbing the runners, or so that the runners may yield or move independently of the rollers.” The particular manner of connecting the parts, although described in the specification, is the subject of a separate patent. Again, the object and purpose of the runners and wheels or rollers, the latter arranged to follow the former, is set forth, the former to make a furrow for the seed, the
The claim thus limited is considerably narrowed in its operation. It is substantially for a combination of the material parts of the entire machine, and no one can be said to infringe it who does not use the entire combination.
The first question to settle is, whether, as thus limited and restricted, the patent is valid, or whether the invention, as thus patented, was anticipated by prior inventions.
It is obvious that we may lay out of the question all seed-drills. They were not constructed for the specific purpose for which this machine was constructed, namely, to plant corn in check-rows, and had not the apparatus adapted to such a purpose. The plough-shaped drill of Todd, though it had a cutter under the front part and roller drawn behind for covering the grain, was only a step in the right direction. It was a mere drill, planting in single rows, and not adapted to plant in check-rows; and it was handled and operated in an entirely different manner from Brown’s.
Earle’s, Mumma’s, and Remy & Kelly’s inventions may also be dismissed without observation. The description of them heretofore given shows that they were mere drills, that they had no covering-wheels, and were not constructed for, or adapted to, the purpose for which Brown’s machine was made. Besides, as before seen, the machine of Remy & Kelly was a mere experimental one, abandoned by the inventors. We may also lay out of view Abbott’s drill, constructed in 1848, the only one that can by possibility be brought into the case. That had no covering-wheels, had but one part or frame, and was not a check-row planter. Kirkman’s machine also had but a single frame or part; was a mere drill, not planting in check-rows, nor even in hills. Besides, as a machine, it was incomplete and unfinished until the alteration which was made in it in 1852, when it was first rendered capable of practical use.
The machines of Joab Brown' which are more or less relied on, were all composed of single frames entirely rigid. The machine with one runner, constructed in 1849, was a failure, and is not pretended to have been at all like the appellant’s. The machine with two rollers and one large wheel, constructed in 1850, was automatic, could only plant in rows, so as to be worked one way, and failed entirely as a check-row planter. The other machine or machines, constructed in 1850, had rollers, but these did not follow the runnel's until altered in 1853, and were not used for covering the corn, but for turning a shaft in the hoppers by which the seed was dropped. This is cleai’ly proven and is shown by their thickness, which was little over an inch. They were abandoned for the three-rowed machine without rollers, which was built in 1851, and for which Joab Brown applied for a patent in December, 1852. It is apparent that none of these machines anticipated the appellant’s machine as containing the particulars combined in the claim of the reissued patent No. 1036.
This patent, therefore, construed and limited in the manner before stated, we hold to be valid.
The machine of Selby, which is the subject of the suit of Brown v. Selby and others, in the second case, has all the
The next claim tó be considered is that of reissue 1038. The appellant describes the nature of the invention sought to be secured by that patent as follows:
“ The nature of this part of my invention consists in combining with a seed-planting machine constructed principally of framework, and with not less than two runners and two wheels, a hinged-joint between the point of the tongue and the rear part of the machine (or between what I term its ground supports), so that one part may, by means of said hinge-joint, be raised, lowered, adjusted, or supported on the other part for purposes herein mentioned; meaning by ‘ one part’ and ‘the other part’ the part in advance and the part in rear of said hinge-joint.”
The claim adopts nearly the same language, and is in the following terms:
“What I claim under this patent is, in combination with a seed-planting machine, constructed principally of framework, with not less than two runners and not less than two wheels, a hinged-joint between the point of the tongue and the rear part of the machine, so that one part of the framework may be raised, lowered, adjusted, or supported cm the other part, substantially as described.”
Understanding this claim as applying and confining to a seed-planting machine, consisting of two separate parts, with runners under one part and rollers or wheels under the other, we do not find in any of the machines produced to us this particular feature of the hinged-joint in combination with the elements referred to. Kirkmau’s came the nearest to it, if we should designate as a hinged-joint the free connection of his tongue with his machine, which was made by a common bolt between hounds, like those of a wagon. But his machine lacked the elements of the two distinct parts
The appellees insist that this patent attempts to secure an‘ old device merely applied to a new use, and that the supposed new úse is analogous to that which the same device subserved in the machine of Remy & Kelly. But we have seen that the machine of Remy & Kelly was a mere experiment, abandoned by the inventors. And the device in question is not claimed as an original invention, nor as an improvement; it is only patented in combination with other material elements of the machine to which it is attached as a part. As an element in that combination alone is it claimed. The combination expressed in the claim, viewed as an entirety, and in reference to its purposes and uses, is new, and produces a new and useful result. And it is no objection to the validity of a patent for such a combination that some of the elements of which it is composed are not new.
It is objected to several of the patents under consideration
These observations apply equally to patents for combinations and patents for improvements. Where a patentee, .’after describing a machine, claims as his invention a certain combination of elements, or a certain device, or part of the machine, this is an implied declaration, as conclusive, so far as that patent is concerned, as if it wex*e expressed, that the specific combination or thing claimed is the only part which the patentee regards as new. True, he or some other person may have a distinct patent for the portions not covered by this; but that will speak for itself. So far as the patent
The patents under consideration expressly declare, for the most part, what the patentee claims; generally referring, it is true, to the specification as embodying the substantial form of the invention. Such a reference is pi’oper if it does not introduce confusion and uncertainty, and is often necessary for restraining the too great generality, or enlarging the literal narrowness of the claim.
These remarks apply to reissue 1038, which we are now considering. We regard it as sufficiently explicit; and we think the patent is valid.
The next inquiry is whether this patent is infringed by the appellees. ’ It is apparent on inspection of the models before referred, to that they exhibit every requirement of the patent. They clearly have, “in combination with a seed-planting machine, constructed principally of framework,” and consisting of two separate parts, with two runners under one part and two wheels under the other, a hinged-joint between the point of the tongue and the rear of the machine, so that one part of the framework may be raised, lowered, adjusted, or supported on the other part, substantially as described in Brown’s specification. In Selby’s machine, it is true, the hinge-joint is not located at the same point (the seed-boxes) as in Brown’s machine, but is at the front point or toe of the runnei’. This is not a substantial difference. The office, purpose, operation, and effect are the same- as in Brown’s machine, and a change a little more or less backward or forward does not change the substantial identity of the thing. The same remark applies to the location of the hinge-joint in Bergen’s machine, which is at the rear part of the front frame.
We do not see how it can be seriously contended that either of the machines is not an infringement of this patent.
Reissue 1039 contains two claims, as follows:
“ What I claim under this patent is a seed-planting machine, wherein the seed-dropping mechanism is operated by hand or
“I also claim, in combination with a seed-planting machine, composed substantially of framework, and upon which the person who works the seed-slides or valves sits or stands, a lever or its equivalent, by which a driver or second attendant may raise or lower that part of the framework that carries the attendant and the seeding devices, and thus ease the machine in passing over intervening obstacles or in turning around, substantially as described.”
The first of these claims, if construed simply as claiming the placing of the seed-dropper on the machine, would probably be void, as claiming a mere result, irrespective of the means by which it is accomplished. But if construed as claiming the accomplishment of the result by substantially the means described in the specification, it is free from that objection; and we ought to give a favorable construction, so as to sustain the patent if it can fairly be done. By reading the claim in connection with the final qualifying clause, thus, “the mounting of said attendant upon the machine, &c., substantially as herein set forth,” the fair construction would seem to include the means and manner of placing him upon the machine. This view is corroborated by reference to the body of the specification. ££ To enable others skilled in the art,” says the patentee, “ to make and use this invention, I will proceed to describe the same, with reference to the drawings.” He then gives a detailed description of the seat or platform and its relation to the other parts, and the mode of occupying and using the same. Construing the claim in this manner, is it then a valid claim ?
The only device of a similar character at all competing with it in the matter of time, was that used by Joab Brown, in his machines constructed or’ altered in the spring of 1851, the same spring in which the appellant’s machine was made. Which was first made, it is impossible for us from the evi
The second claim is for a combination, embracing, as one of its elements, the arrangement or seat for the dropper last described; and if that was new, this combination must also be new. And, indeed, we shall look in vain in any previous machine for the lever here described in the combination with which it is associated. Standing by itself, the lever as well as the hinged-joint was exhibited in the experimental machine of Remy & Kelly. But as, in our view, that machine was never brought into successful operation until after Brown’s invention was completed, we do not regard the fact referred to as seriously affecting the question. The particular combination described by the patent under consideration is new, and the claim is valid.
This is the proper place, however, to notice an objection made against the three patents conjointly, namely: reissues 1036, 1038, and 1039. It is contended that they are for substantially the same combination. We do not think that this is the fact. We l’egard the reissue 1036 as a patent for the corn-planting machine in outline, comprising its most essential elements, namely: constructed principally of framework “ substantially as and for the purpose set forth ” in the specification; containing the two frames or parts, loosely or freely connected; one supported by the runners, the other by the wheels following them, each having its distinct purpose as indicated; and the seeding apparatus being arranged for planting in check-rows, whether automatically or by hand, the method of each being shown in the specification. This patent does not call for a hinged-joint with its particular
This view of the relative objects of the three patents, as we think, shows that they are not obnoxious to the objection raised.
Having already examined the question of infringement as it respects reissues 1036 and 1038, it remains to inquire whether the appellants have infringed reissue 1039. Of this there can be no doubt. In both of their machines the dropper is mounted on the machine on a seat or platform arranged for that purpose, so as to observe the cross-rows, and drop by them; and in both, levers are used (not precisely in the form of Brown’s, but equivalent thereto, and substantially the same), by which the driver may raise or lower that-part of the framework that carries the dropper and the seeding devices. In Bergen’s machine, this lever is the rear frame itself, which is hinged to the rear part of the seeding-frame, and is operated by the driver by tilting it back and forward by his own weight.
It is unnecessary to examine reissue 1010, as there is no pretence that the appellees have infringed that patent.
The second group of reissues is next to be considered.
The first, No. 1091, after describing the entire machine as finally perfected by Brown, prior to the issue of his second patent, May 8th, 1855, has the following claims:
“First. In combination with a seed-planting machine that is operated by hand, the placing of both the driver and the person who operates the seed-slides or valves, upon the machine, in such position as that each may attend to his particular duty
“ I also claim, in combination with a seed-planting machine, that is operated by hand, and upon which the driver and the person who works the seed-slides or valves sit or stand, the so locating of said seats or stands, as that the weight of one of the persons may be used to counterbalance or overbalance the weight of the other, for the purpose of more readily raising or lowering the seeding apparatus, substantially as and for the purpose described.”
These claims are analogous to those of reissue 1089, and the first is anticipated by the machines of Joab Brown, constructed and altered in the spring of 1851. It is not pretended that the appellant placed both attendants on his machines uutil the spring of 1853, when he placed the driver’s seat, as well as the dropper’s, on the twelve machines which he manufactured and sold at that time.
The second claim is for the relative location of the seats for the driver and operator, such that one of them may overbalance the weight of the other, and thus more readily raise or lower the seeding apparatus. The claim is made only in reference to machines operated by hand, on which both driver and operator sit or stand. The seats themselves can be of little consequence in this combination. The relative location of the attendants is the material thing.
The process of tilting the frame of a seed-planter on-the . wheels as a fulcrum, by shifting the weight of the driver standing or sitting thereon, was exhibited in Kirkman’s machiue, in the spring of 1852, and in Farley’s model, made in January, and publicly deposited in the Patent Office in February, 1853.
The appellant does not fix the date of his alleged improvement earlier than the 20th of April, 1853, it being first introduced into the twelve machines built in that year. He was anticipated, therefore, by Kirkman and Farley, so far as their machines were identical with his. They do not come within the literal terms of his claim which refers the improvement only to machines operated by hand, and on which the oper
We are of opinion, therefore, that reissue 1091 is void.
The claim of reissue 1092 is as follows:
“What I claim under this patent is: In combination with a seed-planting machine, operated by hand, and having its seeding devices forward of the centre of the wheels, and forward of the driver’s seat and a hinged connection, the locating of the seat in such relation to a line drawn through the centres of the wheels or ground-supports, as that the occupant of said seat may, by moving himself, or throwing his weight forward or backward on his seat, without the necessity of rising, walking, or standing over or near the seeding devices, force the seeding apparatus into, or raise it from, the ground, substantially as described."
After a careful consideration of this claim, we are brought ■to the conclusion that the subject of it is not patentable. Prior inventions having placed the driver on the machine, and having constructed the platform in such manner that his movement backward or forward would raise or lower the seeding apparatus, and the seat itself not being claimed as new, it can hardly be contended that the proper location of the seat for effecting the same object, required the exercise of inventive power.
The next patent, reissue 1093, after describing the machine as before, with its runners and front frame, its wheels and rear frame, its seat for the driver over the wheels, and contrivance for raising and lowering the front’frame, its seat for the dropper over the runners, its hinged-joint, &e., concludes as follows:
“ There are two points in this machine that have unvarying positions or heights with regard to the ground, viz.: the point
“Having thus fully described the nature and object of this part of my invention, what I claim under this patent is, in combination with a seed-planting machine that has a hinged or yielding joint between its fixed points of support, and with its seeding devices between said points, the so connecting of the parts between said fixed points of support as that that portion of the machine carrying the seeding devices may be raised up out of the ground by the attendant riding on the machine, and be carried by the tongue or horses’ necks, and the supporting wheels, substantially as and for the purpose described.”
The precise thing claimed here, after defining the combination of which it is to form a part, is, “ the so connecting of the parts ” as to produce the result mentioned, “ substantially as and for the purpose described.” If this means to include any and every connection of the parts which will produce the result “substantially as described” (which result is to enable the attendant, riding on the machine, to raise that portion of the machine carrying the seediug devices out of the ground so as to be carried on the horses’ necks and the wheels), then the claim was anticipated by Kirkman, for the connection of the parts in his machine enabled the attendant, riding on the machine, to raise the front part which carries the seeding apparatus, out of the ground, when it would be suspended on the horses’ necks and the wheels; and he had a hinged joint between the fixed points of support. The same might be said of the machine of Remy & Kelly, if it were to be taken into consideration in determining this question. But if the claim is to be construed as limited to the mode of connecting the parts in the appellant’s machine (being a hinged connection between the two frames, and, therefore, different from Kirkman’s machine), and to the means by which the final result was accomplished, namely, by the
We are of opinion, therefore, that this patent cannot be sustained.
The next patent, reissue 1094, is for a matter too frivolous to form the. subject of invention. It is Bimply for a peg or stop to prevent the rear part of the machine from tipping so much as to dump the driver on to the ground. No mechanic of any skill would construct a machine of the character described without providing some such arrangement. This patent is not sustained.
The latest patent of the series, reissue 1095, is for a peculiar valve in the tube through which the seed is dropped to the ground, called the flipper valve. When .the machine is in motion, the time taken for the seed to drop from the hopper to the ground, supposing it to drop from a height of only 18 or 20 inches, would carry it forward more than a foot after its discharge, and thus carry it beyond the cross-row. It became important, therefore, to drop the seed from a point near the ground, or from the bottom of the tube instead of the hopper, at each movement of the lever by the operator. To do this required two movements; one for dropping the seed from the hopper into the tube; the other for dropping it from thence to the ground. By the device described in this patent, which was noticed at the commencement of this opinion, both of these movements of the seed take place at the same instant and by one movement of the hand; the seed for one hill being dropped into the ground at the same time that the seed for the next hill is dropped into the tube.
The claim of the patent is in the following words:
“Having thus fully described my invention, what I claim
As before stated, the mode by which this was effected was by placing in the seed-tube a long slender valve composed of a slip of metal, suspended on a pivot in the middle, so that when one end was pushed forward the other end would be pushed backward. Iu this way each movement of the upper extremity would let a charge of seed into the tube on one side and keep it there, whilst the simultaneous movement of the lower extremity would discharge the previous charge on the other side.
The appellees endeavored to show that this apparatus was anticipated by the inventions of Charles Finn and Jarvis Case, before mentioned.
But it is insisted that Brown, in I860., admitted in a newspaper article that the process in question was old. We have examined the article, and, according to our construction, his declaration amounted in substance to nothing more than that the principle of the double drop was old (which was probably true), and that Case’s application of it was old (which may or may not be true); but it does not contain, or amount to, an admission that his own peculiar process was old.
We think, therefore, that this patent must be sustained.
The last patent is clearly infringed by the Selby machine. The flipper valve and mode of operating it are almost precisely the same.
In the case of the Bergen machine, it is contended that no lever is used for moving the connecting rod backward and forward between the hoppers. A fixed perpendicular handle is used instead of a lever. The question is, whether that is such an alteration as to change the character of the combination. The object in view is to put into the hand of the operator something by which he can move the connecting rod, and consequently open the valves, the instant he
In our judgment both machines are an infringement of the patent.
We have thus, with perhaps unnecessary detail, gone over and considered the various questions and points raised in these cases. The result is, that the reissued patents, numbered respectively 1036, 1038, and 1039, of the first series, and 1095, of the second series, are sustained as good and valid patents, and that the appellees arc infringing the same.
Decrees reversed, and the causes - remanded, to be proceeded in
According to law.
See a drawing of it, supra, p. 190, Fig. 7.
See a drawing of it, supra, p. 190, Fig. 8.
See a drawing of it, supra, p. 191, Fig. 9.
These rollers were shown only in the model. They do not appear in the drawing on page 191.
See a drawing of it, supra, p. 192, Fig. 10.
See a drawing of it, Ib., Fig. 11.
See the drawing of it, supra, p. 193, Fig. 12.
See a drawing of the principal one, the last, supra, p. 193, Fig. 13.
See a drawing of it, supra, p. 196, Fig. 16.
See a drawing of Selby’s machine, supra, p. 197, Fig. 18.
See drawings of these, supra, p. 200, Figs. 2-3, 24, 25, and 26.
Dissenting Opinion
with whom concurred Justices MILLER and DAVIS, dissenting.
Applicants for a patent are required to file in the Patent Office a written description of their invention and of the manner and process of making, constructing, and using the same, in such full, clear, concise, and exact terms as to enable any person skilled in the art or science to which it appertains, or with which it is most nearly connected, to make, construct, and use the same; and in the ease of a machine he must explain the principle thereof and the best mode in which he has contemplated applying that principle, so as to distinguish it from other inventions. Patents granted with
Letters-patent were granted to the complainant on the second of August, 1863, to take eftect from the secoud of February prior to the date of the patent. Seed-planter is the name of the invention given in the patent, but in the introductory part of the specification it is denominated “ new and useful improvements in seed-planters for planting corn and smaller grains.” Very minute description is given of the machine and of the several devices of which the machine is composed, for the declared purpose of enabling others skilled in the art to make and use the invention. Suffice it to say, without entering into details, that of all the numerous devices described as ingredients of the machine not one of them is new, nor is it claimed that the patentee either invented the machine or any one of the ingredients of which it is composed. "What he claims'in that patent is as follows: (1.) The oscillating horizontal wheels' or distributors in tbe bottom of the hopper, having slots and tubes of various sizes, in combination with the stationary caps and pins for the discharge of different kinds and qualities of seeds. (2.) He also claims the arrangement of the covering rollers, mounted as described, and performing the functions of covering the seed, elevating the cutters in turning the machine, and also in adjusting the cutters to different depths.
Tested by the descriptive portion of the specification the better opinion is that the second claim is also for a combination, but in the view taken of the case it is unimportant whether it be regarded as a method of accomplishing the. described result or as a combination of the described ingredients to eftect the same end, as it is quite clear that the patentee does not claim that he is the original and first inventor of any one of the several devices of which the entire machine is composed. Beyond all doubt the invention con
Like the original patent the reissued patent was in form both operative and valid, but inasmuch as it was not sufficiently comprehensive to supersede all other improvements the patentee surrendered it for a second time and caused the original invention to be reissued in five parts, embracing several claims, all of which except one are involved in the present action.
Surrendered patents cease to be a cause of action from the moment the surrender takes place, nor can the owner of the patent recover, even for an infringement which preceded the surrender, unless the claim for profits or damages had passed into judgment' before the surrender took place. Such a patent, though inoperative as a cause of action, may be admitted as evidence to support or disprove an issue that the reissued patent is not for the same invention as the original. Reference may also be made to such patent, as to a repealed statute, to aid in the construction of a reissued patent, if the latter is ambiguous, but it ceases to be operative for any other purpose just as much so as a repealed statute, and can never have the effect to enlarge or diminish the operative words of a reissued patent.
Patents are public grants, and every person claiming any right under such an instrument must show that the right claimed is secured by the instrument; nor can he be benefited by showing that the right claimed was secured by a
Viewed iu the light of these suggestions it is clear that the rights of the complainant in this case depend solely upon the last-mentioned reissued patents, which are the patents mentioned in the bill of complaint, and which it is alleged by the complainant that the respondents have infringed.
Defences of various kinds are set up by the respondents to the allegations of the bill of complaint, as follows: (1.) That the complainant is not the original and first iuventor of the improvements described in the said several patents mentioned in ¿he bill of complaint. (2.) They deny that the said new patents were issued in good faith, and they allege that said reissued patents are not for the same invention as that described and embodied either in the original patent or in the prior reissues of the original patent. (3.) That the five last-mentioned reissued letters-patent are severally invalid in law and void aud of no effect, and that they do not confer any such right or monopoly to the complainant as he alleges and pretends to claim.
Enough has already been remarked to show that the original patent was a combination of old ingredients by which the described result was effected; or, in other words, that the patented invention consisted iu a new combination of the described ingredients, every one of which was proved to be old. Old ingredients are not the proper subjects of letters-patent in any other form than as a combination, for the plain reason that nothing is the proper subject of a patent which is not both new and useful.
Reissued patents must be for the same invention as the original, and that condition is just as applicable to a second reissue as to the first; nor is the second i’eissue relieved in any respect from the full force of'that condition in a case where the invention in the reissue is divided into several parts.
Undoubtedly a new and useful combination consisting of old ingredients may be the proper subject of letters-patent if the combination produces a new and useful result, but the
Authorities to support these propositions are unnecessary as they are self-evident, nor is it necessary to do more than to refer to the several claims of the several reissues under consideration to show that every one of those reissues are invalid, both for the reason that the alleged improvements old, and also for the reason that the invention embodied in each of the reissued patents is different from the one secured by the original patent. Even the court here admits that each one of those reissues is “for a distinct and separate part of the original invention alleged to have been made by the complainant,” full proof of which is exhibited in the claims of the respective reissued patents.
1. No. 1036. — Appended to that patent is a claim much more comprehensive than is to be found in either of the four other patents, but it is plainly not a claim for a combination, nor one for the whole machine, as was admitted in argument by the complainant. What he there claims is a seed-planting machine constructed principally of framework, the front part of which is supported on not less than two runners, or shoes, with upward inclining edges, and the rear part is supported on not less than two wheels, the latter being arranged to follow the former.
Evidently that claim is not intended to cover the whole machine; nor would it benefit the complainant even if it could receive that construction, as it is not pretended that he was the original and first inventor of such a planting machine, nor that the specification of the original patent professed to describe such an original invention. Machines of the kind have existed for a very long period before the
2. No. 1037. — Nothing is claimed in this patent except the construction of a shoe or ruuuer for a seed-planting machine, with an upward inclining edge, with its point sufficiently raised so that it will climb up and over, or cut and break through intervening obstacles without materially forcing the earth laterally at its front part, and widening towards the rear end so as to open a furrow in which the seed to be planted may be deposite*}, and long enough to furnish a support to the framework of the machine. Explanations of that patent are certainly unnecessary, as it is plain that the claim is for distinct and separate ingredients of the combination embodied in the original patent.
3. No. 1038. — Under this patent the complainant claims a hinged joint between the point of the tongue and the rear part of the machine in combination with a seed-planting machine, so that one part of the framework may be raised, lowered, adjusted, and supported on the other part. Nor is any argument necessary to show that the claim of the patent is for one of the separate and distinct ingredients of the combination embodied in the original patent, all of which were confessedly old.
4. No. 1039. — Two claims are made in this patent as follows: (1.) The seat for the attendant, or, in the language of the claim, the mounting of the attendant upon the machine or seed-planter, wherein the seed-dropping mechanism is operated by hand, in such a position that he may readily see the previously made marks upon the ground, and operate the dropping mechanism to conform thereto. (2.) He also claims a lever, in combination with a seed-planting machine, or its equivalent, by which the driver or second attendant may raise or lower that part of the framework that carries the attendant and the seeding devices.
Manifestly the lever or its equivalent is the principal subject-matter of that claim, reference being made to certain other parts of the seed-planter merely as a means of describing the functions to be performed by the level’, and the
5. No. 1040. — Two claims are also made by the patentee in this patent: (1.) He claims a pair of auxiliary wheels and an axle, in combination with the seed-planting machine, carried mainly upon not less than two runners and two covering-wheels, for the double purpose of taking a portion of the weight off from the runners atid the other wheels, and for affording means of readily converting the machine from a hand-planter to an automatic seed-sowex*. (2.) He also claims hanging the axle of the auxiliary wheels on hinged or adjustable arms or levers, so that more or less of the machine may be placed upon the auxiliary wheels.
All necessity for any remarks upon those claims is superseded by the admission that they are not infringed by the respondents.
Four of the five reissues are included in the charge, and the complainant also charges that the respondents have infringed five other reissued patents held by him, which also secure to him the exclusive right to the l’espective improvements therein described, all of which appertain to the same machine for planting corn and smaller grains.
Reference will first be made to the original patent from which those several reissues are derived. Like the preceding reissued patents, these were all derived from a single original patent, issued May 8th, 1855, as appears by the record, which it is claimed is an improvement upon the prior original patent.
Doubtless the patentee made some change in the original machine, as appears by the descriptive portion of the specification ; as for example, he enlarged the l’ollei’s, increased the length of the side pieces, connected those pieces by cross pieces, and constructed the frame in two pai’ts, denominated fi’out and real’, placing the long seat for the driver on the fi’out end, in order that he may slide forward or back, to tilt the machinery when necessary to deepen the furrow, or
Tested by the description contained in the specification it is not doubted that the pateut was a valid one for the described combination, which, beyond all doubt, is composed of all ingredients. Regarded as an invention for a combination it may be regarded as an improvement upon the original invention described in the first-mentioned patent, but it is quite clear that it contains no devices except such as had long before been well known to mechanics.
Though operative and valid still it was not satisfactory to the complainant, because not sufficiently effective to shut out other improvements for planting seeds. Accordingly, on the tenth of November, 1857, he surrendered the patent and the same was, on the same day, reissued to him with a single claim, as follows: He claims the locating the seat for the driver in the rear of the supporting axle in combination with the hinged frames or hinged joint, so that as the driver moves forward or back, cu his seat, the rear frame may act as a lever for loweriug or raising the seed part of the machine, and thus throw it into or out of the ground, as circumstances may require.
Probably it would be difficult to frame a claim which would more exactly embody the true nature of the actual improvement, but still it was not satisfactory to the com plainant, and on the eleventh of December, 1860, he sur
1. No. 1091. — Two claims are contained in this patent as follows: (1.) The placing of both the driver and the person who operates the seed-slides or valves, in such a position on the seed-planter that each may attend to his particular duty without interfering with that of the other. (2.) The so locating the seats or stands for those, persons, in combination with the machine, that the weight of one of the persons may be used to counterbalance or overbalance the weight of the other, for the purpose of more readily raising or lowering the seeding apparatus.
2. No. 1092. — He claims in this patent the locating of the seat in the machine in such relation to a line drawn through the centre of the wheels or gi’ound supports that the occupant of the seat may, by moving himself or throwing his weight forward or backward on his seat, without the necessity of rising, walking, or standing over or near the seeding devices, force the seeding apparatus into or raise it from the grouud.
3. No. 1093. — His claim in this patent is the so connecting of the parts between the fixed points in the described machine that the portion of it carrying the seeding devices may be raised up out of the ground by the attendant riding on the machine and be carried by the tongue or horses’ necks and the supporting wheels.
4. No. 1094. — "Where he claims a lock-block or stop, in combination with the machine, which prevents the rear part, of the frame from descending so low as to strike the ground or inconvenience the occupant of the seat upon the rear portion of the frame.
5. No. 1095. — His claim in this patent is for a valve or slide in the seed-hopper and a valve in the seed-tube, so combining with a lever operating both that a half-motion of the lever by the operator riding on the machine, shall open and close the seed-passages at regular periods and pass only the right quantities.
Most of these ten reissued patents are for a single iugre
Argument to show that such is the theory of the present suit is scarcely necessary, as it is plainly shown in that part of the bill of complaint which alleges that the improvements and inventions contained in those several letters-patent constitute separate parts of an entire machine for seed-planting, and that they may be constructed for use and used in one machine in that department of agriculture; and the complainant charges that the respondents have constructed machines and used the same and vended the machines to others to be used in imitation of all those improvements and inventions except the improvement described in the reissued patent No. 1040, which it is admitted is not infringed by the respondents.
All the ingredients described in those ten reissued patents are old, and it was admitted at the argument that no one of the patents contains a claim for a combination of the several ingredients described in the said séveral reissued patents, and that the case rests on the basis that the several claims or some of them are valid though not amounting to a combination.
Valid patents may be granted for a new combination of old ingredients, provided it appears that the new combination produces a new and useful result, but the invention in such a case consists entirely in the new combination, and any other party may, if he can, make a substantially different combination of the same ingredients, or he may irse any number of the ingredients less than the whole, for the reason
Patents may also be granted for a machine or for a separate and distinct device, but it cannot be held that such a patent is valid unless it be proved that the patentee is the original and first inventor of the thing patented.
Noue of the separate devices patented in those reissued patents are new, and it being conceded that no one of the patents contains any such a combination as that embodied in either of the original patents, it is clear in my judgment that the decree of the Circuit Court should be affirmed, unless the theory that these several patents can.be massed aud be by judicial construction converted from patents for separate and distinct ingredients into one patent for a combination of all the ingredients described in the several patents mentioned in the bill of complaiut.-
Courts of justice cannot accomplish such an object by construction nor in any other mode, for several reasons: (1.) Because the province of construction is restricted to the ascertainment of the meauing of the language employed in the grant. (2.) Because the object can only be accomplished by the surrender of these patents and by a reissue of the original pateut, which is a matter within the exclusive jurisdiction of the commissioner. (3.) Because each of these patents is a separate and distinct grant. (4.) Because the court in construing such a grant, is restricted to the language employed by the granting power. (5.) Because several patents for several separate and distinct devices do not in law amount to a patent for a combination, and, therefore, cannot so be declared by a court-of justice.
16 Stat. at Large, 201.
Gould v. Rees, 15 Wallace, 194.
Gill v. Wells, 22 Id. 1.
Vance v. Campbell, 1 Black, 428; Prouty v. Ruggles, 16 Peters, 341.
Seymour v. Osborne, 11 Wallace, 355.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The Corn-Planter Patent. [Brown v. Guild. Same v. Selby.]
- Cited By
- 107 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Five reissues were granted on a surrendered patent, granted originally in 1853 to G. W. Brown, for improvements in corn-planting machines. On two bills, one against Bergen & Sisson and the other against Selby et al. for infringement, four of these reissues were sustained and one declared void for want of novelty. 2. Out of five reissues granted on a surrender of a patent granted in 1855, four were declared invalid for want of patentable novelty, and one reissue, No. 1095, was declared valid. 3. An invention described in an application for a patent filed in the Patent Office is not of itself a bar to a subsequent patent therefor to another. Such an application may have a bearing on the question of the defence of prior invention or discovery, but will not of itself take such prior invention or discovery out of the category of unsuccessful experiments. 4. The several reissues, Nos. 1036, 1038, and 1039, held to be good, as being for things contained within the machines and apparatus described in the original patents, although not claimed therein. Any question of fraud in obtaining these reissues is to be regarded as settled by the act of the Commissioner of Patents in granting them. 6. Reissues Nos. 1036, 1038, and 1039 are not obnoxious to the objection that they are for substantially the same combination, and therefore not for distinct parts of the original machine. 6. The use of the words “substantially as and for the purposes set forth,” in a claim, throws it back to the specification, for qualification of words otherwise, general. 7. The claim of Reissue No. 1036 thus construed, held to be valid and to be for two separate frames — one having two wheels, and the other two runners. 8. The defendants held to have infringed it. 9. Reissue No. 1037 declared void for want of novelty. 10. Reissue No. 1038 held to cover the combination of two separate frames, one having two wheels and the other two runners, when they are combined together by a hinged joint. 11. The defendants hold to have infringed this claim, although in one, Selby’s machine, the hinge is located at a different part of the machine ; the office, purpose, operation, and effect being the same. A change a little more or less backward or forward held not to change the substantial identify. 12. A patentee by his claim as to what he regards as new, by necessary implication disclaims the rest as old, and such remaining parts are to be regarded as old or common and public. 13. Claim 1 of Reissue 1039, if construed simply as claiming the placing of the dropman on the machine, would probably be held void as claiming a mere result irrespective of the means by which it is accomplished; hut if construed as claiming the accomplishment of the result by substantially the means described in the specification it is free from that objection. Such claim should be construed in this limited manner if possible in order to save the patent. 14. Claim 2 of Reissue No. 1039 embraces the combination consisting of one frame, the runner-frame having the seat for the dropman, and another frame, the wheel-frame, having a lifting lever fulcrumed to it. The defendants held to have infringed this claim, although the levers used, in themselves, were different in form and point of attachment from the appellant’s lever. 15. Reissues Nos. 1091, 1092, 1093, and 1094 declared void for want of sufficient invention to constitute patentable novelty. 16. The combination (in 1091) of a seat for a driver, on a machine which had a dropman’s seat on it when a driver’s seat had been used on a similar machine before, but without a dropman’s seat thereon, does not constitute a patentable invention. 17. The Reissue 1095 explained, and the novelty of the combination for effecting double dropping pointed out. Both the defendants held to have infringed the claim of this reissue.