&: J. MFG. CO. V. STANLEY CYCLE MFG. CO.
279
cially known under various names, and differed in quality and use from the tissue paper of trade and commerce, and was found by court to be "an article advanced beyond the condition of tissue paper, into something else." I think the case falls within Pickhardt v. Merritt, 132 U. S. 252, 257, 10 Sup. Ct. 82, where the court says as to aniline dyes, which were unknown when the statute was enacted: "As the court said to the jury, the law was made for the future; and the term 'aniline dyes and colors by whatever name known' included articles which should be commercially known, whenever afterwards imported, as 'aniline dyes and colors.'''
I fail to find any modification in the application of this rule to articles first discovered, imported, and known subsequent to the passage of such acts, and which are commercially known as, and in fact belong to, the class of exempted articles. The decision of the board of general appraisers is reversed.
& J. MFG. CO.
v. STANLEY CYCLE MFG. CO. et at November 15, 1898.) EI.Dmlil'l's.
(Circuit Court, S. D. New York. 1. PATEliITS-N(JVELTY-COMBINATION OF OLD
A patent for a combination cannot be defeated by showing that each of its elements, separately considered, is old, but it must be shown that the combination Is old.
2.
SAME-ANTICIPATION.
A patent for a device which fails to accomplish the desired end is not an anticipation of one which successfully accomplishes that end. ment if it owned the patent at the time the suit was commenced, and continues to own it at the trial. m' COMPLAINANT. It is sufficient to enable a complainant to maintain a suit for infringe-
3.
SAME-SUIT FOR INFRINGEMENT-TITT.E
4.
SAME-IMPROVEMEN'I'S IN VELOCIPEDES.
The Jeffery patent, No. 398,158, for an improvement in velocipedes, shows patentable novelty, and the invention was not anticipated.
This was a suit in equity by the Gormully & Jeffery Manufacturing Company against the Stanley Cycle Manufacturing Company and others for the infringement of a patent. On final hearing Charles K. Offield, for complainant. Joseph L. Levy, for defendants. COXE, District Judge. The patent in controversy, No. 398,158, was granted February 19, 1889, to Thomas B. Jeffery for improvements in velocipedes. The invention relied on has reference to novel features in the construction of the sprocket-wheel, by means of which. the specification asserts, the machine is made lighter, space is saved on the pedal-crank shaft, and the power-communicating wheel may be removed without detaching the crank. The only claim relied on is the tenth, which sufficiently describes the invention. It is as follows: "10. In combination with the pedal-crank shaft, the pedal-crank provided with a hub, by which it is Secured to the shaft, and with arms, for securing the power-communicating wheel, such power-communicating ",heel having
280
90 FEDERAL REPORTER.
no bUb, but baving an opening about its center large enough to permit the crank·hub and its arms to pass through, whereby said power-communicating wheel may be passed over the crank and its arms, and secured behind or within the same without detaching the crank from tbe sbaft, substantially as set forth."
The defenses are defective title, noninfringement and lack of patentable novelty. Of course the claim cannot be defeated by showing that each of its elements, separately considered, was old The defendants must prove that the combination was old. If they fail in this they fail irretrievably. The British patent, No. 3,294, granted to Renouf and Boothroyd in 1886 il!l the defendants' best reference. This is conceded on all sides. If this patent does not defeat the tenth claim it must be sustained. Although a number of novel and valuable features are pointed out as inhering in the Jeffery invention it is thought that the distinguishing characteristic, and the one which gives it its chief merit, is the arrangement by which the power wheel can be removed and a new one, of different gauge, substituted without disturbing the crank. The English patent shows a clumsy device which, apparently, never went into successful operation. It seems to be conceded that the English structure cannot be used as the Jeffery structure is used without first making several important changes. The. proof leaves no doubt on this subject. It is argued that these changes might have occurred to the skilled artisan. That they did not occur to anyone until Jeffery made the invention is evident. They seem simple enough now but invention depended upon their being· successfully wrought out. In short, in these changes lies the difference between the commercial failure of the English patent and the widely-recognized success of the patent at bar. n is a significant fact that the English patentees, having in mind the desirability of making the parts detachable, have only contributed a recipe which .shows the art ''how not to do it." A patent which fails to show the one feature on which invention rests is valueless as an anticipation. Without pursuing the subject further the court is of the opinion that Jeffery's contribution to the art constituted an invention, not a great invention, not a primary invention, but one which made a distinct advance in an art crowded with skilled mechanics, and one which the courts should uphold. There can be no doubt that the bicycle purchased of the defendant corporation and introduced in evidence as "Complainant's Exhibit Defendants' Bicycle" is an infringement. The proof shows, and the memory of the court is in accordance with the proof, that this structure contains the combinaHon of the claim without any material departure therefrom. There is nothing in the record which requires a construction of the claim so narrow as to permit this structure to escape. The court is unable to find any testimony that the individual defendants have infringed and as to them the bill is dismissed. Consolidated Fastener Co. v. Columbian Fastener Co., 79 Fed. 795, 801.
PALMER V. DE YONGH.
281
The criticism of the complainant's title is without merit. If the defendants' proof establishes anything it is that the complainant ae· quired title to the patent before the assignment introduced by the complainant. It is enough that the complainant owned the patent when the suit was commenced and owns it now. The complainant complied sufficiently with the provision of the law in marking its machines "Patented." It follows that the complainant is entitled to the usual decree against the defendant corporation.'
PALMER et aI. v. DE YONGH. (Circuit Court, S. D. New York. November 15, 1898.)
L
PATENTS-INFRINGEMENT-PRODUCTS USED IN DIFFERENT ARTS.
The rule that an Inventor Is entitled to the benefit of all the uses to which his invention can be put, whether he knew of them or not, cannot operate to bring within a patent structures belonging to a different art, Which do not embody the invention claimed, and resemble it only in some of its subordinate features.
I.
SAME-FRINGED VAI,ANOES.
The Palmer patent, No. 474,997, as to Us third claim, which is for a valance formed of woven fabric and having a fringe composed of weftthreads, the article being used for the purposes of ornament, is not infringed by a braid or edging Intended as a protection for the bottom of women's skirts, though having a fringe similarly woven, the two articles having entirely different functions and belonging to different arts.
This action is based upon letters patent, No. 474,997, granted to the complainant Palmer, May 17, 1892, for an improvement in woven valances for hammocks. The complainant Feder owns an exclusive license to make, use and sell garment protectors under the patent. The patentee says: "My invention relates to an Improvement in hammoclt valances or drapery which when applied to the top edge of the hammock will hang in fulled form. The invention consists in a valance or piece of drapery formed of woven fabric in which the woven selvage edge is shorter than the corresponding portion of the fabric intermediate of the selvage edge and fringe. My invention further consists in a valance or piece of drapery formed of woven fabric, having at one of Us edges a fringe formed of weft-threads, which enter into the weaving of the body portion of the hammock."
Again he says: "When the selvage edge or that portion where the warp has been fed and taken up more slowly is applied straight along the edge of the article or along the support from which the valance is to hang, the portion where the warp has been fed and taken up more rapidly and which has advanced in the weaving faster than the edge will hang in folds, presenting an appearance quite similar to that whIch would be obtained by gathering the edge, as is commonly done. '.ro form the fringe, the warp is omitted along the central portion of the blank for a distance equal to twice the length of the fringe, so that when cut through the middle the iringe will hang from the opposite edges of the woven fabric at the point where the warp-threads on the opposite sides of the center of the blank are introduced. To increase the body of the fringe I weave more weft-threads, 0, across the central portion of the fabric than at the edges-for example, by holding open the sheds of warp from the outer edges of the blank up to a point a short distance from where