A patentee is not at liberty to insist in the courts upon a
construction of his patent which the Patent Office required him to
expressly abandon and disavow as the condition of the issue of his
patent.
Shepard v. Carrigan, 116 U. S. 593,
affirmed.
Page 119 U. S. 531
The improvement in the apparatus for resweating tobacco which
was patented to Abraham Robinson, June 10, 1819, by Letters Patent
No. 21G, 293, consisted in the substitution of a wooden vessel in
place of a metallic one for holding the tobacco while being
resweated.
Bill in equity for the infringement of letters patent. The case
is stated in the opinion of the court.
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a bill in equity filed by Isaac Robinson and Abraham
Robinson against the appellants to restrain an alleged infringement
of letters patent granted by the United States to Abraham Robinson
on June 10, 1879, for an improved apparatus for resweating tobacco.
The defenses relied on are that the patent is invalid for want of
novelty, and a denial of the alleged infringement. The
specifications and claims of the patent, with reference to
accompanying drawings, are as follows:
"Figure 1 is a top or plan view of an apparatus embodying my
improvements, and Fig. 2 is a vertical central section of the steam
receiver and tobacco holder."
"Like letters of reference indicate like parts."
"It is usual to soften the leaves of tobacco, as is well known,
in order to prepare them for being manufactured into cigars and
other manufactured goods, and to bring out a good and uniform
color. This has been done heretofore in various ways, and, among
others, by dampening the leaves, and exposing them to heat while in
that condition."
"The object of this invention is to provide improved means for
exposing the leaves to the action of the steam for the purposes
above set forth, and to that end my invention consists of a
tobacco-holding vessel made of wood sufficiently porous to permit
the steam to percolate through it, in combination,
substantially
Page 119 U. S. 532
as hereinafter described, with a steam-generating apparatus and
a steam-receiving chamber surrounding the vessel for containing the
tobacco."
"I am aware that the general structural plan of the apparatus
hereinafter described is old, and I do not therefore here intend to
claim the same independently of a tobacco-receiving vessel made of
wood sufficiently porous to permit the steam to percolate through
it, as and for the purposes set forth, the said wooden vessel
constituting, as I believe, an improvement upon the apparatus
heretofore in use for the reason that, in employing wood instead of
metal in the construction of the said vessel, the tobacco is
prevented from being tainted, and may be kept continually moist by
the action of the steam, instead of being merely heated and sweated
by it, or steamed only by the generation of steam in the same
vessel containing the tobacco, it being obvious that if the
tobacco-receiving vessel be made of metal, as heretofore in devices
of this class, the steam in an outer surrounding vessel would
merely heat the tobacco, and sweat it without imparting new
moisture to it. Neither do I here intend to claim the process, as
such, of steaming tobacco."
"In the drawings, A represents an ordinary boiler for generating
steam. B is a tank or vessel for receiving the steam generated by
the boiler A. C is a tight wooden vessel for receiving the tobacco
to be treated. This vessel should be provided with a tight-fitting
cover
a. I make the vessel C of wood, as an essential
feature of my invention, in order that the steam may sweat or
percolate through it from the tank B, and so that the tobacco will
not be tainted by contact with metal. The vessel C is enough
smaller than the tank B to be suspended in the latter and leave an
annular space
b. between the two, as well as a space
underneath the bottom of the vessel C, as shown. The space
b should also be covered. In order to provide a cover for
the space
b and also suspend the vessel C firmly in the
tank B, I employ an annular rim or lid
c having an
upwardly turned flange
c' fitted to the vessel C and a
downwardly turned flange
c' fitted to the tank B, screws
or other fastenings passing through the flanges into the parts
Page 119 U. S. 533
to which they are fitted; but it is not essential that these
flanges should be continuous or extend entirely around the vessels.
Neither is it essential that the flanged portions of the lid
c should be continuous or in the same piece with the
remaining part of the said lid. It is in fact much the easier way
to make the flanged portions separately from the lid proper, and I
have represented them as made in that manner."
image:a
"I do not, however, here intend to be restricted to any
particular way of applying the lid
c and suspending the
vessel C,
Page 119 U. S. 534
as both may be done in various suitable ways, but I deem the
manner shown to be the best."
"D is a steam pipe leading from the upper part of the boiler A
into the upper part of the space
b, and E is a water pipe
leading from the lower part of the said space into the lower part
of the boiler. To use this apparatus for the purpose for which it
is intended, the water in the boiler should be heated until steam
is generated. The tobacco to be treated should be placed in the
vessel C and covered, the tobacco being then in the condition in
which it exists when taken from the cases or packages in which it
may have been packed by the producers or shippers."
"The water as well as the steam will enter the space
b
and produce a sufficient temperature in the vessel C to sweat the
tobacco therein, the steam producing moisture in the vessel C by
sweating or percolating through it from the space
b in
addition to the moisture originally in the tobacco before it was
confined in the vessel. The steam which enters the space
b
through the pipe D, finding a lower temperature in the said space
than in the boiler, becomes condensed, and is added or returned to
the volume of water which flows from the said space into the
boiler, and thus keeps the latter supplied. A circulation of water
and steam is also kept up to a certain extent."
"In a building where steam is supplied through pipes, the steam
may be conducted into the space
b from the boiler which
supplies the steam, wherever the boiler may be situated. The
tobacco should be exposed to this treatment from three to eight
days, according to the result desired to be produced, and it will
thus be rendered soft and pliable and of a uniform and dark color,
without being in any way injured. The tobacco prepared in this
manner may be manufactured into various articles, like cigars and
cigarettes."
"I deem it preferable to make the tank B as well as the tank C
of wood, so as to prevent tainting the tobacco and so as to render
the apparatus capable of treating large quantities of tobacco at
the same time and without making the apparatus heavy and expensive,
and to employ a boiler wholly detached
Page 119 U. S. 535
from the tank B excepting by the steam and water pipes
connecting the same, thus enabling me to make the outer or larger
tank of wood without exposing it to danger from fire. A detached
boiler amply sufficient to be employed in connection with very
large tanks will be comparatively simple and cheap."
"Having thus described my invention, what I claim as new, and
desire to secure by letters patent, is:"
"1. The apparatus, substantially as described, for treating
tobacco, to-wit, the tight vessel or tank B, the tight vessel C,
made of wood and suspended in the tank B, and a steam generator or
heater, combined and operating together, substantially as and for
the purposes specified."
"2. The combination of the boiler A, the tight tank B, made of
wood, the tight vessel C, made of wood and suspended in the bank B,
and the pipes D and E entering the tank B and the boiler, all
arranged and operating substantially as and for the purposes
specified."
On the hearing in the circuit court, it was found upon the
evidence that the device used by the defendants differed from that
of the complainants as described in the patent only in this
respect, that the defendants' tobacco holder is not made tight so
as to exclude moisture except through the pores of the wood, the
defendants using the ordinary tobacco cases in which the leaf
tobacco comes packed to hold the tobacco during the process of
resweating. It was contended on the part of the defendants that
this was a substantial difference because the complainants' claim
required their tobacco holder to be tight, while that of the
defendants was not. In disposing of the case upon this point, the
judge holding the circuit court, in his opinion, said:
"The essential feature of complainants' invention consists in
subjecting the mass of leaf tobacco to moisture and heat in a
comparatively close wooden box for a sufficient time to have it
undergo the process of resweating, and it is no answer to
complainants' charge of infringement of their patent to say that
defendants' box is not quite so tight as that complainants deem
desirable or necessary for the most satisfactory operation of their
device."
Robinson v. Sutter, 8 F. 828.
Page 119 U. S. 536
The issue as to novelty, upon the proof, was also decided
against the defendants for the reason that the two devices relied
upon -- one described in the Oppelt patent of June 16, 1874, and
the other in the Wenderoth patent of July 16, 1878 -- both use
metal tanks and a metal tobacco holder. It was shown that contact
with metal taints and injures the tobacco operated upon, and that
the free admission of steam wets and to some extent cooks the
tobacco, and the conclusion of the circuit court was that
"the porous wooden tobacco holder devised by Robinson seems,
from the proof, to stimulate that slow fermentation and action in
the constituent elements of the leaf which is required to make the
whole mass homogeneous."
Upon a showing made by the defendants, a rehearing of the cause
was granted and further proofs taken. Upon that hearing, it was
made clearly to appear from the testimony that the artificial
resweating of tobacco had been effected, long prior to the
application for the complainants' patent, by means of the
application of steam in a chamber adapted for that purpose, applied
to the tobacco while in the ordinary tobacco cases in which the
leaf tobacco comes packed, just as the defendants were found to
have practiced. The case, however, was decided against the
defendants upon another ground, as appears from the opinion of the
judge holding the circuit court.
Robinson v. Sutter, 11 F.
798. He said:
"The distinctive feature of complainants' device for resweating
tobacco is the water tank in the bottom of their outer chamber, so
that, by keeping this water at the proper temperature, the
atmosphere of the outer chamber can be kept warm and humid, whereby
the process of resweating will be induced and carried on to
whatever extent shall be deemed desirable."
The devices used prior to Robinson's invention and proven as
anticipations, which would avoid his patent for want of novelty,
were found not to meet that point in the description of the
complainants' device, inasmuch as the outer tank in each, into
which the steam entered for the purpose of heating and moistening
the tobacco, had specific provision made in it for drawing off the
water formed by condensation of the steam, instead
Page 119 U. S. 537
of being arranged so as to hold a body of water in order to
equalize and maintain the temperature of the vapor in the room or
tank.
The defendants had also introduced in evidence as an
anticipation a patent granted in 1865 to one Huse. His invention is
described in his specification as follows:
"I take the tobacco, by preference after it has been desiccated
and packed in the usual manner in hogsheads or cases, and which it
is well known are not by any means so close as to exclude steam. I
place these hogsheads or cases, or both, in a chamber of convenient
size, and which can be closed up steam-tight, and I then introduce
heat and moisture by means of steam apparatus such as generally
employed for heating buildings, the coils or congeries of pipe
being arranged in any suitable manner for a proper distribution of
the heat. Some of the pipes, about one-half of them, are to be
pierced with very small holes, to permit the escape of steam into
the chamber. It will be found best to raise and maintain the
temperature at about 150 degrees Fahrenheit, and for about
forty-eight hours for tobacco which has been well desiccated, a
longer time being required when treated before it has been well
dried. At the end of the time specified, the tobacco should be
examined, and so soon as nicotine is well developed, which will be
indicated by the evolution of ammonia, the steam must be shut off,
the chamber opened, the hogsheads or cases opened, the tobacco all
opened and shaken and thoroughly dried, which is best done in an
open and well ventilated room, and after it has been well dried,
the tobacco will be found to be thoroughly cured and ready of use,
and further fermentation so completely stopped that it can be
repacked and kept for any desired length of time. In this way I
avoid all the evil consequences of the method heretofore practiced,
while at the same time it will enable the planter to put his crop
of tobacco in market in a comparatively short space of time."
"What I claim as my invention, and desire to secure by letters
patent, is the process, substantially as herein described, of
curing tobacco, which process consists in subjecting it to
Page 119 U. S. 538
the action of artificial heat and steam to induce the required
fermentation until nicotine is evolved, and then stopping the
further progress of fermentation by opening the packages, and
thoroughly drying every part, substantially as described."
In respect to this, the circuit court said:
"As for the Huse patent of 1865, it was only a box heated with
steam coils, in which the tobacco was to be placed and heated by
the radiation of heat from the pipes and the introduction of live
steam."
11 F. 798.
There was accordingly a decree entered in favor of the
complainants for an injunction and for the recovery of $3,309.30
damages found by the master. The defendants have brought the
present appeal.
It sufficiently appears from the evidence that if the essential
and sole characteristic of the complainants' invention consists in
a substitution of a close wooden box to hold the tobacco while
being subjected to the process of resweating, for metal tobacco
holders previously in use, either the practice of the defendants in
using as a tobacco holder the ordinary tobacco cases in which the
leaf tobacco comes packed, during the process of resweating, is not
an infringement, or, if it be so held, the complainants' invention
was anticipated by others long prior to its date. This is shown by
the Huse patent, and it is proven to have been employed by others,
particularly by Louis Specht in the tobacco factory of August Beck
& Co., in Chicago.
It only becomes important, therefore, to consider the ground
finally taken in support of the decree, which involves the question
whether the appellees are entitled to claim the water tank in the
bottom of the outer chamber, and the use of water in it, whereby
the atmosphere of the outer chamber can be kept warm and humid, so
that the process of resweating may be induced and carried on to any
desirable extent. In this connection, it becomes important to
consider the proceedings in the Patent Office in the granting of
the patent, as shown by the file wrapper. It appears from the
transcript of the record in the case that the defendants offered in
evidence a copy of this file wrapper and contents, which was
objected to as incompetent
Page 119 U. S. 539
and not sufficiently verified. No ruling of the circuit court
seems to have been made upon the objection, and the paper, although
described as marked, "Defendant's exhibit, copy of the file wrapper
and contents of the Robinson patent," is not certified as a part of
the evidence and is not contained in the transcript. It does not
therefore appear that the paper was ever before the court below or
considered by it in the hearing of the case. In this Court,
however, on the hearing, by consent of parties, the file wrapper
and contents were ordered to be made a part of the record. From
that paper, it appears that the original specification, on which
the application for a patent was based, declared that the
petitioner had invented certain new and useful improvements in the
method as well as apparatus for steaming leaf tobacco.
In setting out the object of the invention he said:
"The object of this invention is to provide suitable means
whereby the leaves may be subjected to the process of sweating by
means of steam or water under the influence of heat, and to that
end my invention consists of that process, and in the apparatus by
means of which I carry on the said process, substantially as
hereinafter specified."
It was also stated that "B is a tank or vessel for containing
water and receiving the steam generated by the boiler, A," and
that
"steam may also be generated in the space by filling the latter
partly with water, and by applying heat directly to the bottom of
the tank B. A good result will be accomplished by keeping the water
hot, though not to a degree sufficient to generate steam to any
appreciable extent."
The claims were set out as follows:
"First. The method or art, substantially as described, of
treating tobacco, to-wit, by placing the leaves in a tight vessel,
surrounded, or partly surrounded, by a chamber for containing
water, and subjecting the tobacco to heat by heating the water in
the said chamber, and keeping it to the proper temperature by means
of heat applied to the said chamber continuously during the
operation of sweating the leaves, substantially as and for the
purpose specified."
"Second. The method or art, substantially as specified, of
Page 119 U. S. 540
treating tobacco, to-wit, by placing the leaves in a tight
vessel surrounded by a steam and water tight chamber, and by
introducing steam into the said chamber, substantially as and for
the purpose specified."
"Third. The apparatus, substantially as described, for treating
tobacco, to-wit, the tight vessel or tank B, the tight vessel C,
made of wood and suspended in the tank B, and a steam generator or
heater, all combined and operating together, substantially as and
for the purpose specified."
"Fourth. The combination of the boiler A, the tight tank B, made
of wood, the tight vessel C, made of wood, and suspended in the
tank B, and the pipes D and E, entering the tank B, and the boiler,
all arranged and operating substantially as and for the purpose
specified."
This application was filed on the 28th of February, 1879, and
rejected by the Patent Office on the 6th of March, 1879.
Thereupon the applicant filed certain amendments to his
specification by striking out everything that related to the method
or process for steaming leaf tobacco and all that had reference to
the use of water under the influence of heat, as contained in the
tank B, and the first two claims. Amendments were also made by
inserting other parts of the specification as it now stands --
among others, the following:
"I make the vessel C of wood as an essential feature of my
invention in order that the steam may sweat or percolate through it
from the tank B, and so that the tobacco will not be tainted by
contact with the metal."
And also the following:
"The steam producing moisture in the vessel C by sweating or
percolating through it from the space
b, in addition to
the moisture originally in the tobacco before it was confined in
the vessel."
On the 10th of April, 1879, the examiner informed the applicant
that he
"should specifically set forth that the structural plan of the
device is old, and that the improvement consists alone in making
the vessel C of wood instead of metal, and sufficiently porous to
permit the steam to percolate through it."
Thereupon the applicant filed an amendment by inserting
Page 119 U. S. 541
the following:
"I am aware that the general structural plan of the apparatus
hereinbefore described is old, excepting that the vessel, C, for
receiving the tobacco has not, so far as I am aware, heretofore
been made of wood, but of metal. The making of the vessel, C, of
wood, and sufficiently porous to permit the steam to percolate
through it, constitutes the essential feature of this invention.
When metallic vessels are employed to receive the tobacco, it is
liable to be and in such cases is merely heated, but not subjected
to the moistening influence of steam or vapor percolating through
the vessel containing the tobacco, as when this vessel is made of
wood sufficiently porous to admit of that result. I do not
therefore here intend to claim the general structural plan of the
said apparatus independently of a vessel C, made of wood,
sufficiently porous to allow the steam to percolate through
it."
On the 24th of April, 1879, the examiner wrote to the applicant
as follows:
"The specification should be amended by omitting all statements
that the applicant has an improved process, or is the inventor of
such. . . . The statement of invention, and reference to the state
of the art, both require correction, as the invention is an
improved apparatus only."
Thereupon further amendments were made, resulting in the
specification and claims as they now stand, and the patent was
granted.
A comparison of the patent as granted with the application very
conclusively establishes the limits within which the patentee's
claims must be confined. He is not at liberty now to insist upon a
construction of his patent which will include what he was expressly
required to abandon and disavow as a condition of the grant.
Shepard v. Carrigan, 116 U. S. 593, and
cases there cited. It appears therefore distinctly that the
patentee has no claim for a process of steaming tobacco by means of
steam, or steam and a body of hot water, nor by any process
whatever. His invention must be limited to the apparatus, and as to
that he was expressly required to state that its structural plan
was old, and not of his invention. What is meant by the structural
plan of the apparatus is the arrangement of the vessels for holding
the tobacco, for confining
Page 119 U. S. 542
the steam and water, and for supplying the steam, and the
precise improvement which is alone the subject of the patent is the
substitution of a wooden vessel for holding the tobacco while being
resweated in place of a metallic one. So that the ultimate question
in the case is reduced to this: whether, in such an apparatus, the
use of the cases or boxes or packages in which the tobacco leaves
are originally packed by the producer is equivalent to the wooden
tobacco holder mentioned in the complainants' specification. If it
is not, there is no infringement; if it is, as we have already
seen, it had been anticipated for many years by the practice of
other persons. It is expressly described in the Huse patent of
1865, where the inventor states as follows:
"I take the tobacco, by preference, after it has been desiccated
and packed in the usual manner in hogsheads or cases, and which it
is well known are not by any means so close as to exclude steam. I
place these hogsheads or cases, or both, in a chamber of convenient
size, and which can be closed up steam-tight, and I then introduce
heat and moisture by means of steam apparatus, such as generally
employed for heating buildings, the coils or congeries of pipe
being arranged in any suitable manner for a proper distribution of
the heat. Some of the pipes, about one-half of them, are to be
pierced with very small holes to permit the escape of steam into
the chamber."
And the same thing was done at the establishment of August Beck
& Co., in Chicago, before the date of Robinson's application,
and by several others.
For these reasons, we are of opinion that the decree below was
erroneous.
It is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded with
instructions to dismiss the bill.