The reissued letters patent, No. 4372, issued to Nelson W.
Green, May 9, 1811, for an improved method of constructing artesian
wells, are for the process of drawing water from the earth by means
of a well driven in the manner described in the patent, and are for
the same invention described and claimed in the original letters
patent issued to Green January 14, 1868. It is a reasonable
inference from the language employed in the original description
that the tube, in the act of being driven into the earth to and
into a water-bearing stratum, would form an air-tight connection
with the surrounding earth, and that the pump should be attached to
it by an air-tight connection. The changes made in the amended
specification did not enlarge the scope of the patent or describe a
different invention, but only supplied a deficiency in the original
description by describing with more particularity and exactness the
means to be employed to produce the desired result. The omission in
the second claim of the words, "where no rock is to be penetrated,"
which are found in the first claim, did not change the obvious
meaning of the original claim.
The reissued letters patent, No. 4372, to Nelson W. Green, were
not for the same subject as the letters patent issued to James
Suggett, March 29, 1864, or those issued to John Goode in England
in 1823, nor was the invention patented in them anticipated in any
publication referred to in the opinion of the Court within the rule
as to previous publications laid down in
Seymour v.
Osborne, 11 Wall. 516;
Cohn v. United States
Corset Co., 93 U. S. 366, and
Downton v. Yeager Milling Co., 108 U.
S. 466.
The evidence shows a clear case of infringement on the part of
the defendant in error.
Bill in equity to restrain an infringement of letters patent for
a driven well. Decree for a perpetual injunction, from which
respondent appealed. The case is stated in the opinion of the
Court.
Page 122 U. S. 41
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from the decree of the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of Connecticut upon a bill in equity
filed by the appellees to restrain the alleged infringement of
reissued letters patent No. 4,372, issued to Nelson W. Green on May
9, 1871, for an improved method of constructing artesian wells. The
original letters patent, No. 73,425, were issued to the patentee
January 14, 1868. The defenses relied on were that the defendants
did not infringe, that the patent was void for want of novelty in
the invention, and that the reissued patent was void because it was
not for the same invention as that described and claimed in the
original patent. The controversy relates to what is commonly known
as the "driven well patent."
As one of the defenses is that the reissued patent is void as
covering more than was described and claimed in the original
patent, it becomes necessary to compare the two, and for that
purpose they are here printed in parallel columns, the drawings
being the same in both:
"
Specification forming part of Letters
Patent"
"
No. 73,425, dated January 14, 1868"
"
ORIGINAL"
"Be it known that I, Nelson W. Green, of Cortland, in the County
of Cortland, and State of New York, have invented a new and useful
improvement in the manner of sinking and constructing artesian or
driven wells, where no rock is to be penetrated, and of raising
water therefrom, and I do hereby declare the following to be a
full, clear, and exact description of the same, reference being had
to the accompanying drawings, making a part of this specification,
in which --"
image:a
"Fig. 1 represents a portion of the rod which is driven or
forced into the ground to form the opening or hole for the
insertion of the tube that forms the casing or lining of the well,
and the avenue through which the water is raised to or above the
surface of the ground, and Fig. 2 represents a portion of the
tube."
"My invention consists in driving or forcing an iron or a wooden
rod, with a steel or iron point, into the earth until it is
projected to or into the water, and then withdrawing the said rod
and inserting in its place a tube of metal or wood to the same
depth, through which and from which the water may be drawn by any
of the usual well known forms of pumps."
"To enable others skilled in the art to make and use my
invention, I will proceed to describe the same with reference to
the drawings."
"The driving rod A I construct of wood or iron, or other metal,
or of parts of each, with a sharp point
b, of steel or
otherwise, to penetrate the earth, and a slight swell
a a
short distance above the point to make the hole slightly larger
than the general diameter of the rod. This rod I drive, by a
falling weight or other power, into the earth until its point
passes sufficiently far into the water to procure the desired
supply. I then withdraw the rod and insert in its place the iron or
wooden tube
B, which may be slightly contracted at its
lower end to insure its easy passage to its place. In general, this
tube
B I make of iron, and of a thickness that will bear a
force applied at its upper extremity sufficient to drive or force
it to its place, and where a large or continuous flow of water is
desired, I perforate this tube to admit the water more freely to
the inside."
"The perforations
c may be about one-half of an inch in
diameter, less or more, and from one to one and a half inches
apart, and the perforations may extend, from the bottom of the tube
upward, from one to two feet. The diameter of the tube should be
somewhat smaller than the diameter of the swell
a on the
drill end of the driving rod A."
"In localities where the water is near the surface of the ground
and the well is for temporary use only, as in the case of a moving
army or for temporary camps, lighter and thinner material than iron
may be used for making the tubes, as, for instance, zinc, tin,
copper, or sheet metal of other kind, or even wood, may be used.
The rod may be of any suitable and practical size that can be
readily driven or forced into the ground, and may be from one to
three inches in diameter."
"Any suitable well known pump may be applied to raise the water
up through the tube to the surface or above it."
"I am aware of James Suggett's patent of March 29, 1864, and I
disclaim all secured to him therein."
"Having thus full described my invention, what I claim and
desire to secure by letters patent is --"
"The herein-described process of sinking wells where no rock is
to be penetrated,
viz., be driving or forcing down a rod
to and into the water underground and withdrawing it and inserting
a tube in its place to draw the water through, substantially as
herein described."
"
Specification forming part of Letters Patent No.
73,425,"
"
dated January 14, 1868; Reissue No. 4,372, dated May 9,
1871"
"
REISSUE"
"Be it known that I, Nelson W. Green, of Amherst, in the County
of Hampshire and State of Massachusetts, have invented a new and
improved method of constructing artesian wells, and I do hereby
declare that the following is a full, clear, and exact description
of the same, reference being had to the accompanying drawings,
forming part of this specification:"
"My invention is particularly intended for the construction of
artesian wells in places where no rock is to be penetrated."
"The methods of constructing wells previous to this invention
were what have been known as 'sinking' and 'boring,' in both of
which the hole or opening constituting the well was produced by
taking away a portion of the earth or rock through which it was
made."
"This invention consists in producing the well by driving or
forcing down an instrument into the ground until it reaches the
water, the hole or opening being thus made by a mere displacement
of the earth, which is packed around the instrument and not removed
upward from the hole, as it is in boring"
"The instrument to be employed in producing such a well, which,
to distinguish it from 'sunk' or 'bored' wells, may be termed a
'driven' well, may be any that is capable of sustaining the blows
or pressure necessary to drive it into the earth, but I prefer to
employ a pointed rod which, after having been driven or forced down
until it reaches the water, I withdraw and replace by a tube made
air-tight throughout its length except at or near its lower end,
where I make openings or perforations for the admission of water,
and through and from which the water may be drawn by any well known
or suitable form of pump."
"In certain soils, the use of a rod preparatory to the insertion
of a tube is unnecessary, as the tube itself, through which the
water is to be drawn, may be the instrument which produces the well
by the act of driving it into the ground to the requisite
depth."
"To enable others to make and use my invention, I will proceed
to describe it with reference to the drawings, in which --"
"Figure 1 represents a portion of the pointed rod above
mentioned, and Fig. 2 a portion of the tube which forms the casing
or lining of the well."
"The driving rod A I construct of wood or iron or other metal,
or of parts of each, with a sharp point
b, of steel or
otherwise, to penetrate the earth, and a slight swell
a a
short distance above the point, to make the hole slightly larger
than the general diameter of the rod. This rod I drive, by a
falling weight or other power, into the earth until its point
passes sufficiently far into the water to procure the desired
supply. I then withdraw the rod and insert in its place the
air-tight iron or wooden tube B, which may be slightly contracted
at its lower end to insure its easy passage to its place. In
general, this tube B I make of iron and of a thickness that will
bear a force applied at its upper extremity sufficient to drive or
force it to its place, and where a large or continuous flow of
water is desired, I perforate this tube near its lower end to admit
the water more freely to the inside."
"The perforations
c may be about one-half of an inch in
diameter, less or more, and from one to one and a half inches
apart, and the perforations may extend, from the bottom of the tube
upward, from one to two feet. The diameter of the tube should be
somewhat smaller than the diameter of the swell
a on the
drill end of the driving rod A."
"In localities where the water is near the surface of the ground
and the well is for temporary use only, as in the case of a moving
army or for temporary camps, lighter and thinner materials than
iron may be used for making the tubes, as for instance zinc, tin,
copper, or sheet metal of other kind, or even wood may be
used."
"The rod may be of any suitable and practical size that can be
readily driven or forced into the ground, and may be from one to
three inches in diameter."
"In some cases, the water will flow out from the top of the tube
without the aid of a pump. In other cases, the aid of a pump to
draw the water from the well may be necessary. In the latter cases,
I attach to the tube, by an air-tight connection, any known form of
pump."
"What I claim as my invention and desire to secure by letters
patent is --"
"The process of constructing wells by driving or forcing an
instrument into the ground until it is projected into the water
without removing the earth upward, as it is in boring,
substantially as herein described."
The attempts judicially to enforce the rights claimed under this
patent have met with determined resistance and given rise to
extensive litigation in the course of which the original and
reissued patents have been subjected to great scrutiny and
criticism. The first reported case is that of
Andrews v.
Carman, 13 Blatchford 307, decided by Judge Benedict in 1876.
That has been followed by
Andrews v. Wright, before Judges
Dillon and Nelson, 13 Off.Gaz. 969;
Hine v. Wahl, before
Judge Gresham;
Andrews v. Cross, before Mr. Justice
Blatchford, then circuit judge, 19 Blatchford 294, 8 F. 269;
Green v. French, before Judge Nixon, 11 F. 591;
Andrews v. Creegan, before Judge Wheeler, 7 F. 477;
Andrews v. Long, before Judge McCrary, 12 F. 871; the
present case, before Judge Shipman, 15 F. 109, and
Andrews v.
Cone, and
Andrews v. Hovey, heard before Judges Love,
Shiras, and Nelson, 16 F. 387. The case of
Hine v. Wahl
was argued in this Court on appeal at October term, 1882, the
decree below being affirmed by a divided Court. The patent has been
sustained against all defenses made in the cases just mentioned
except in those of
Andrews v. Cone and
Andrews v.
Hovey, 16 F. 387, which are now pending on appeal in this
Court.
The extent of this litigation attests at least the utility of
the process supposed to be described in the patent as it shows and
measures the extent of the public demand for its use. This is
further shown by the statement of one of the complainants in the
present cause, when examined as a witness, who says
Page 122 U. S. 48
that large numbers of wells constructed according to the process
described in the patent are in use in the New England states, New
York, Pennsylvania, and most of the Western states, as well as in
New Jersey and probably in every state in the union, and that from
estimates made by agents, well drivers, and others having an
opportunity of knowledge in the matter, it is believed that the
number of driven wells throughout the United States is somewhere
between 500,000 and 1,000,000.
The wells in general use prior to the date of this patent were
of two kinds: 1st, the open, common, dug well, usually walled or
boarded or otherwise lined, from which the water which collected in
the well was usually lifted by means of a bucket and windlass, or
by a pump, and 2d, artesian wells, bored frequently to a great
depth by means of drills, chisels, augers, and other such tools,
whereby the opening was made into the earth to the water supply. In
both kinds, the process used was to make an excavation, removing
the material through the opening. It was usual in making artesian
bored wells to drive down a wooden or iron pipe, open at both ends,
having a sharp edge around the circumference of it lower extremity,
the earth being taken out from within it. As the driving proceeds,
and after it reaches the rock, chisels, drills, and other tools are
used to disintegrate the rock, which is taken to the surface
through the tube so driven. In the latter case, the tube is
inserted into the hole bored for the purpose of preventing the
caving in of the sides of the opening. Through that tube the water
is drawn, if necessary, by a pump or otherwise flows in consequence
of pressure from the head.
The manner in which the water is obtained and supplied by means
of these two descriptions of wells is thus stated, as we suppose
correctly, by an expert witness in this case. He says:
"Water is supplied to open dug wells only by the force of
gravity, and when the water is pumped from them by the ordinary
suction pump, the pressure of the atmosphere is the same on the
surface of the water in the well as it is upon the water in the
earth surrounding it, and the result is that
Page 122 U. S. 49
the water in the well itself being in free space, is more
readily forced by the pressure of the atmosphere into the suction
pipe of the pump than the surrounding water, which is retarded by
friction through the earth, and in consequence the continued
operation of the pump soon exhausts the water in the well, which
supply can only be replenished by the action of gravity, the
pressure of the atmosphere to retard its flow into the well being
equal to and counterbalancing the pressure exerted by the
atmosphere upon the surface of the water in the earth, and the
operation of the pump has no effect upon the water in the
surrounding earth to force it into the well; hence the supply to
the open dug well is due to and produced only by the action of
gravity."
"In the artesian well, the same principles govern in regard to
the means of supply when they are not flowing wells, but in
consequence of such wells' being usually inserted down into rock or
like substance until they meet with open fissures in the rock
through which water flows more freely and readily than it does
through ordinary compacted earth, sand, etc., which form the
water-bearing strata above the rock, a much larger quantity of
water is obtained therefrom in proportion to their diameter than is
usually obtained from the dug well, unless, as in some cases, the
dug wells are carried down into a rock stratum, and strike a
similar seam in the rock. When artesian wells are flowing wells,
the generally received opinion is that their supply of water comes
from a water-bearing stratum lying beneath a stratum practically
impervious to water, but which lower stratum extends beyond and
crops out at the surface of the earth at a greater or less distance
from the well itself (often many miles away), and at a considerably
higher elevation than the surface of the earth at the well."
The same witness describes the invention, which he supposes to
be embodied in the driven well and covered by the patent in suit,
as follows:
"I understand the invention to be founded upon the discovery by
Colonel Green that if a pipe which is air-tight throughout its
length except at its upper end and at or near its lower end, where
are openings for the admission of water, be inserted
Page 122 U. S. 50
into the earth, down and into a water-bearing stratum, the pipe
within the water-bearing stratum being surrounded and in close
contact with the earth, and having a pump of any ordinary
construction attached by an air-tight connection to its upper end,
thus forming a well, air-tight from its upper end into and below
the surface of the water in the earth, that upon operating the pump
so attached and removing the pressure of the atmosphere from the
well, the pressure of the atmosphere through the earth upon the
surface of the water within the earth would force the water into
the body of the well with a velocity due to the pressure of the
atmosphere, and that the supply of the water to the well directly
from the earth surrounding it would be continuous and lasting, so
long as water was contained in the stratum of earth with which the
lower end of the pipe was in communication, and that the water
contained in that stratum could be made directly tributary to the
well without regard to the distance to which said water-bearing
stratum might extend. In other words that, unlike the previously
known open wells, either dug or bored, into which the water from
the surrounding earth was forced by the action of gravity alone, he
could control the delivery of water to a well by this pressure of
the atmosphere, which he discovered acted as effectually through
the earth to force water from the earth into a well from which the
pressure of the atmosphere had been removed as if no earth existed
above the surface of the water."
"To utilize this discovery, he proposed a method of making a
well by simply driving a tube down through the earth into a
water-bearing stratum, by which means he secured a close contact of
the lower end of his tube with the earth of the water-bearing
stratum."
The differences between the wells previously in common use and
the driven wells are stated by the same witness as follows:
"The distinguishing characteristics of a driven well, as it
differs from the dug well, is that when the pressure is relieved
from the interior of the tube which itself forms the body of the
well, not only does the force of gravity act to supply it
Page 122 U. S. 51
with water directly from the earth, but, there being no
intervening body of water between the wall of the well itself and
the earth surrounding it upon which the atmosphere can act directly
and with greater effect to force it into the well (as it can and
does in the open well), the water is supplied directly to it from
the earth surrounding it in a direct inverse ratio to its distance
from the well, and, the friction of the water through the earth
being directly as the square of its velocity, as the distance from
the well increases the water moves very much slower than it does
immediately next to the well itself; but the area of the source of
supply being increased exactly in the ratio of the square of its
distance from the well, and the friction being increased exactly as
the square of the velocity (in any given stratum), the one exactly
counterbalancing the other, it follows that from natural laws, the
surface of the water in the earth surrounding the well in and must
be maintained practically at a given level, whereas, in the open
well, supplied by gravity only, the water in the earth inclines
from the natural service of the stratum in the earth to the bottom
of the well, the angle of that decline decreasing as the supply is
taken from the well, and unless pumping is stopped and time allowed
for a resupply, the lowering of the water in the earth extends to a
continually increasing distance, and a longer time is required to
obtain the original quantity in the well, while the supply to the
driven well is continuous and steady, and practically
inexhaustible, the supply in a given time being proportioned in any
given soil to the size of the pipe forming the well, having
openings proportionate to its size, different wells varying in the
supply according to the nature of the soil in which they are
inserted, but remaining virtually constant at all times in the same
soil. It is not claimed, nor is it a fact, that water can be pumped
from a driven well, in any given stratum, with greater ease than
from an open well sunk into the same stratum; but the great
advantages are that a much larger and more extended supply of water
is controlled, and, in consequence of the passage of the water
through the earth under the pressure of the atmosphere, a constant
filtration is secured, thus securing both a greater supply and
better water. And
Page 122 U. S. 52
where large and continuous supplies are obtained by
unintermitted pumping for days and weeks at a time, experience has
shown that the quantity of water has gradually but perceptibly
improved, as in the case of the wells at Bellville heretofore
mentioned, where an amount of water is emptied largely exceeding
the rainfall upon the entire territory not shut out from the valley
by outcropping rocks upon three sides and open to salt water upon
the fourth, and no practical diminution of the height of the water
is observed."
"One peculiar characteristic of a driven well, as distinguished
from the bored artesian well, is that the driven well is for use in
soil where no rock is to be penetrated and where the pressure of
the atmosphere is free to act upon the surface of the water in the
earth surrounding it, while the artesian well is usually, if not
always, bored into a rock stratum, and is supplied with water
through fissures in the rock, instead of through the earth itself
surrounding the entrance or opening to the well."
In describing the mode of constructing a driven well under the
patent, the same witness states that the pipes in general use,
which are driven into the ground, have openings for the admission
of water into them near the lower end, usually extending up around
the sides of the pipe from 15 inches sometimes up to several feet.
These holes are about three-eighths of an inch square, over which
upon raised rings is placed a screen of perforated brass, having
openings of a size giving from 150 to 300 to the square inch. When
the pump is first applied to such a pipe, a small amount of mud or
sand is at first usually brought up, coming from a greater or less
distance from the outside of the tube, but not leaving an open
space around the perforations, as these are not large enough to
admit of but the smaller particles near the tube. It leaves
interstices between the coarser particles in it, and through which
the water flows, and which are constantly filled with water. The
swell on the point of a driven-well tube, shown in the drawing and
marked
a, is made larger in diameter than the tube itself
or the coupling to the tube, for the reason, as stated, that there
is a certain elasticity in the soil which,
Page 122 U. S. 53
after driving a certain sized instrument into it, causes the
hole to contract after the point passes, and it was thus found
necessary to make the point somewhat larger than even the couplings
of the pipe, for the purpose of partially relieving the pipe and
couplings from the great friction resulting from their passage
through the hole thus contracted. After reaching a water-bearing
stratum of the earth, the earth at once settles around the point
and tube, even more rapidly and effectually than it does above the
water stratum, and the hole made by driving an instrument into a
water-bearing stratum and withdrawing it will remain intact but a
very short time unless that stratum is composed of gravel and
similar substances, thus leaving the entrance to the pipe in close
contact with the earth, and effectually protecting the entrance
from the admission of air or free water standing between the pipe
and the earth surrounding it. The effect, therefore, of this
feature of the tube is more effectually to make air-tight the point
or lower part of the tube.
The scientific theory stated by the expert witness on behalf of
the complainants as an explanation of the principle according to
which the patent process operates in furnishing a supply of water
by means of a driven well is not contradicted or qualified by any
opposing testimony, and, so far as we can know, is not inconsistent
with accepted scientific knowledge. The general introduction and
use of driven wells since the date of the patent, both in this
country and abroad, strongly corroborates the supposition that
their construction and operation is based upon the application of
some natural force not previously known or used. It appears from
the evidence in this cause that the process of making driven wells
was subjected to experimental tests by the best authorities in
England, and found so successful that it was used to great
advantage in the supply of water to British troops in the
Abyssinian expedition under General Napier in 1867.
In view of these premises, Judge Benedict, in
Andrews v .
Carman, 13 Blatchford 307, construed the patent in suit
according to the following extracts from his opinion in that
case:
"The difference between the new process under consideration and
the old is that the pressure of the atmosphere,
Page 122 U. S. 54
which, in the ordinary well, operates at the sides and bottom of
the well pit to maintain an equally distributed atmospheric
pressure upon the water, whereby the flow of water into the well is
made dependent upon the force of gravity, in the new process is
removed from within the well pit and ceases there to operate
against the inward flow of water, so that the pressure of the
atmosphere operates with its full power to force the water in the
earth from the earth into the well pit, and without any opposition
caused by meeting, in its flow, the pressure of the atmosphere at
the sides or bottom of the pit. This process involves a new idea,
which was put to practical use when the method was devised of
fitting tightly in the earth, by the act of driving, without
removing the earth upwards, a tube, open at both ends but otherwise
air-tight, and extending down to a water-bearing stratum, to which
is attached a pump, a vacuum in the well pit, and at the same time
in the water-bearing stratum of the earth, being necessarily
created by the operation of a pump attached to a pipe so
driven."
"
* * * *"
"The novelty of the process under consideration does not lie in
a mechanical device for sinking the shaft or raising the water to
the surface, but in the method whereby water, by the use of
artificial power, is made to move with increased rapidity from the
earth into the shaft, whence it results that a tube but a few
inches in diameter, driven down tightly to a water-bearing stratum
of the earth, affords an abundant supply of water to a pump
attached thereto, and constitutes a practical and productive well.
Such an invention is without the field of mechanical contrivance.
It consists in the new application of a power of nature by which
new application a new and useful result is attained. There is no
new product, but an old product -- water -- is obtained from the
earth in a new and advantageous manner."
"
* * * *"
"In the specification, we find stated more clearly the
distinguishing feature of the process wherein it differs from any
process before adopted for procuring a supply of water from the
earth, for the specification says that an instrument is to
Page 122 U. S. 55
be driven into the ground until it reaches water, having the
earth tightly packed around it. It is by means of this packing of
the earth tightly around the tube that the force developed by the
creating of the vacuum in the well pit is brought to bear directly
upon the water lying in the water-bearing stratum to force it into
the well pit, and this driven tube forms the well pit of the new
invention, for, as stated, it is to be a tube made air-tight
throughout its length except at its lower end, where are to be
perforations for the admission of water, and through and from which
the water may be drawn by a pump. The specification also mentions
the vacuum, and points out where it is to be created, for a vacuum
must of necessity be formed in the well pit and in the
water-bearing stratum, by operating a pump attached to such a tube
so driven into the earth."
"
* * * *"
"I therefore understand this patent to be a patent for a
process, and that the element of novelty in this process consists
in the driving of a tube tightly into the earth without removing
the earth upwards, to serve as a well pit, and attaching thereto a
pump, which process puts to practical use the new principle of
forcing the water in the water-bearing strata of the earth from the
earth into a well pit, by the use of artificial power applied to
create a vacuum, in the manner described."
Assuming this construction of the patent to be correct, it is,
however, now contended on behalf of the appellant that the reissue
is void because the invention described in it is not contained in
the original patent.
It is to be observed that the scientific theory and principle,
the application of which is supposed to constitute the invention of
Colonel Green are not set forth either in the original or reissued
patents. This feature was commented upon by Mr. Justice Blatchford
in
Andrews v. Cross, 8 F. 269, as follows:
"It may be that the inventor did not know what the scientific
principle was, or that, knowing it, he omitted, from accident or
design, to set it forth. That does not vitiate the patent. He sets
forth the process or mode of operation which ends in the result,
and the means for working out the process or mode of operation. The
principle referred
Page 122 U. S. 56
to is only the why and the wherefore. That is not required to be
set forth. Under § 26 of the Act of July 8, 1870, 16 Stat.
201, under which this reissue was granted, the specification
contains a description of the invention, and of 'the manner and
process of making, constructing, compounding, and using it' in such
terms as to enable any person skilled in the art to which it
appertains to make, construct, compound, and use it, and even
regarding the case as one of a machine, the specification explains
the principle of the machine within the meaning of that section,
although the scientific or physical principle on which the process
acts when the pump is used with the air-tight tube is not
explained. An inventor may be ignorant of the scientific principle,
or he may think he knows it and yet be uncertain, or he may be
confident as to what it is and others may think differently. All
this is immaterial if by the specification the thing to be done is
so set forth that it can be reproduced."
The particulars relied on to establish the proposition that the
reissued patent describes a different invention from that contained
in the original are as follows: 1st. It is said that it is
essential to the success of the process that the end of the tube
should form an air-tight connection with the surrounding earth;
that the tube itself should be air-tight, and attached to a pump
with an air-tight connection; which elements are set out in the
reissued patent, and are not contained in the original.
Upon this point, speaking of the original patent, Judge Shiras,
in the Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa, in
Andrews v. Hovey, 16 F. 397, said:
"He describes a driving rod, having a swell thereon, which is to
be driven into the ground and then withdrawn, and a tube of a
diameter somewhat smaller than the diameter of the swell of the
drill-rod is to be inserted in the hole thus made. In no part of
the description is it said either expressly or by fair implication
that the tube, when inserted, must fit so closely into the opening
made by the rod that no air can pass down on the outside of the
tube to the water, nor is it stated that the pump must be attached
by an air-tight connection to the
Page 122 U. S. 57
top of the tube. A person can follow with exactness all the
instructions therein given, and yet it would not necessarily follow
that he had excluded the air from the lining of the well or from
the water-bearing stratum at the place where the tube penetrated
the same. In other words, the description of the means to be
employed, as set forth in these specifications, does not show that
one of the results arrived at is to render the lining of the well
air-tight and to have attached thereto a pump by an air-tight
connection. The description of the means to be employed can be
carried out in practice without making an air-tight lining or tube,
and hence without forming a vacuum around the bottom of the tube or
in it. This being true, it follows that it cannot, from the
description of the means employed, be inferred that Colonel Green
then intended to claim, as part of his discovery or invention, the
application of the principle that by creating a vacuum in and about
the tube, the same having been made air-tight, the flow of water
would be largely increased. He did not claim it in express words,
and the description of his invention and the means to be used in
carrying the same into practical use fail to show that such was the
main or even a necessary part of his invention."
To this view there are two sufficient answers.
1st. We think it is a reasonable inference from the language
employed in the specification of the original patent that the tube,
in the act of being driven into the earth to and into a
water-bearing stratum, would form an air-tight connection with the
surrounding earth, and that the pump should be attached by an
air-tight connection. This inference reasonably follows from the
fact, shown in the evidence, that the mere act of driving the tube,
as distinguished from boring, usually results in making an
air-tight connection with the surrounding earth. The necessary
effect of driving the tube is to displace the earth laterally by
compressing it, and the elasticity of the earth is such as to cause
it to cling and contract around the tube so as to exclude the air,
so that anyone following the directions in the specification of the
original patent would in fact usually so drive the tube as to make
the necessary air-tight
Page 122 U. S. 58
connection, whether he consciously intended to do so or not. As
the object of applying a pump to the upper orifice of the tube was
to draw the water flowing into its lower end, it would equally
follow as a matter of common knowledge both that the tube itself
should be air-tight and that it should be attached to the pump with
an air-tight connection, because a vacuum in the tube is necessary
to raise the water in all cases where it does not flow out in
consequence of the superior height of its source and the consequent
pressure of the head.
The precise objection to the reissued specification is that it
states that the tube which is to replace the driven rod is "made
air-tight throughout its length," and also that in cases where the
aid of a pump to draw the water from the well may be necessary, the
patentee attaches "to the tube by an air-tight connection any known
form of pump," and that the original specification does not state
that the tube is made air-tight throughout its length, nor that the
pump is to be attached to the tube by an air-tight connection, but
only states that "any suitable well known pump may be applied to
raise the water up through the tube to the surface or above
it."
It appears, however, in evidence, that the patentee, when
applying for his reissue, with the text of the specification
reading as it does now, applied to have granted to him a second
claim in these words: "I also claim, in combination with a tube
driven well, an attachment of a pump to the tube by an air-tight
connection substantially as herein set forth." That the Patent
Office rejected this second claim, assigning its reasons in these
words:
"The second clause is for a pump attached to a tube by an
air-tight connection. This is indispensable to the operation of a
pump, and a universal right. Whenever a supply of water is found, a
pump may be applied without new invention;"
that, in a subsequent communication by the Patent Office to the
patentee, the office, in speaking of this proposed second claim,
said: "This device is of universal use in artesian well tubes and
other connections, and is a necessity in the relation of pumps to
well tubes," and that the patentee afterwards withdrew the proposed
second claim.
As the air-tight connection was indispensable to the
operation
Page 122 U. S. 59
of a pump, it was implied of necessity in the original
specification, as much so as if it had been expressed, and there
was no enlargement of the invention in stating the fact in the
reissued specification.
In view of all this, it is also fairly to be implied from the
entire language of the original specification that the tube was
intended to be air-tight throughout its length. As that
specification states that the water is to be raised up through the
tube to the surface by the pump, and as an air-tight connection at
the junction of the pump with the tube was "indispensable to the
operation of the pump," so it was equally a necessity to the
perfect operation of the apparatus that the tube should be
air-tight throughout its length, these facts being both of them
common knowledge in the art.
2d. But even if this were not so, the case would be simply that
of a specification defective for not containing a full and perfect
description of the process intended to be patented. It presents the
very case of the right secured to a patentee by § 53 of the
Act of July 8, 1870, which provides
"That whenever any patent is inoperative or invalid by reason of
a defective or insufficient specification, . . . if the error has
arisen by inadvertence, accident or mistake, and without any
fraudulent or deceptive intention, the commissioner shall, on the
surrender of such patent and the payment of the duty required by
law, cause a new patent for the same invention, and in accordance
with the corrected specification, to be issued to the
patentee,"
etc.
If the amended specification does not enlarge the scope of the
patent by extending the claim so as to cover more than was embraced
in the original, and thus cause the patent to include an invention
not within the original, the rights of the public are not thereby
narrowed, and the case is within the remedy intended by the
statute. Those cases in which this Court has held reissues to be
invalid were of a different character, and were cases where by the
reissued patent the scope of the original was so enlarged as to
cover and claim as a new invention that which was either not in the
original specification, as a part of the invention described, or,
if described, was, by
Page 122 U. S. 60
not being claimed, virtually abandoned and dedicated to public
use.
Such is not the present case. Here, the amended specification
does not enlarge the scope of the original invention, as described
in the original specification. It simply in this respect supplies a
deficiency by describing with more particularity and exactness the
means to be employed to produce the desired result. It is thus
said, in the specification of the reissued patent, that
"this invention consists in producing the well by driving or
forcing down an instrument into the ground until it reaches the
water, the hole or opening being thus made by a mere displacement
of the earth, which is packed around the instrument, and not
removed upward from the hole, as it is in boring."
And
"I prefer to employ a pointed rod which, after having been
driven of forced down until it reaches the water, I withdraw and
replace by a tube made air-tight throughout its length, except at
or near its lower end, where I make openings or perforations for
the admission of water, and through and from which the water may be
drawn by any well known or suitable form of pump."
And
"In certain soils, the use of a rod preparatory to the insertion
of a tube is unnecessary, as the tube itself, through which the
water is to be drawn, may be the instrument which produces the well
by the act of driving it into the ground to the requisite
depth."
And
"In some cases the water will flow out from the top of the tube
without the aid of a pump. In other cases, the aid of a pump to
draw the water from the well may be necessary. In the latter cases,
I attach to the tube by an air-tight connection any known form of
pump."
There is nothing in these additions and amendments which either
was not virtually contained by reasonable implication in the
original description or, if new, amounted to more than specific and
exact directions to supplement those contained in the original. The
invention is not differently described, and is not described so as
to be a different invention, nor is the claim enlarged.
In the second place, however, under this head, a material
alternation from the original, in the amended specification, is
Page 122 U. S. 61
said to have been made in the following respect: the original
specification starts out with a declaration that the patentee
has
"invented a new and useful improvement in the manner of sinking
and constructing artesian or driven wells where no rock is to be
penetrated, and of raising water therefrom,"
and the claim is stated to be "the herein described process of
sinking wells where no rock is to be penetrated," etc. In the
specification of the reissued patent, he says: "My invention is
particularly intended for the construction of artesian wells in
places where no rock is to be penetrated," and the claim is for
"the process of constructing wells by driving or forcing an
instrument into the ground until it is projected into the water,
without removing the earth upward, as it is in boring,
substantially as herein described,"
from which, it will be observed, are omitted the words "where no
rock is to be penetrated."
It is therefore contended that the effect of this amendment to
the specification and claim is to enlarge the scope of the patent
so as to cover by the reissued patent the process of constructing
driven wells, whether rock is to be penetrated or not, while the
original patent was expressly limited to cases where no rock was to
be penetrated. We do not, however, so understand either the reason
or the effect of these amendments. It is perfectly evident from the
nature and description of the invention that a driven well cannot
be made where, through its whole course, the formation is rock, or
where the supply of water to be utilized is found in the fissure of
a rock formation. This is so for the reason that the tube cannot be
driven through rock. Rock must be bored by drills, augers, chisels,
and other similar instruments for perforating it, and withdrawing
the comminuted particles. So, where the supply of water which must
be utilized consists of a flowing stream, or a pool found in a rock
formation, the point of the driven rod or tube cannot be inserted
by driving, as described in the patent, so as to form the air-tight
connection necessary to the successful operation of the principle
on which the process of the patent depends. Therefore it follows
from the amended specification and the claim of the reissued
patent, by the necessity of the case, as expressly declared in the
original, that a driven well cannot be constructed in a rock
formation.
Page 122 U. S. 62
On the other hand, it does not follow either from the amended or
the original patent that a driven well, according to the process
described, may not be constructed and operated notwithstanding in
its construction some rock has to be penetrated. There may be a
layer of rock on the surface. When this is removed or cut through,
a driven well may then be constructed in the space thus uncovered
from the obstruction. So, if a stratum of rock is met in the course
of driving the rod or tube, that layer may be penetrated, not by
driving the rod or tube through it, but by other usual means of
boring and drilling. After it is passed, the rod or tube, having
been inserted in the opening made through the rock, may then be
driven in the usual manner through the remainder of its course
until it reaches a water-bearing stratum of earth as if no rock had
been met in its passage.
The object and purpose of the amendments to the specification
obviously were to meet a possible construction of the original
whereby the patentee would be precluded from the use of his process
where it was evidently intended to be applied, simply because one
or more strata of rock had to be penetrated in the process of
driving. Such, in our opinion, is not the meaning of the original
patent. Its true meaning is that, so far as it may be necessary to
penetrate a rock in the course of constructing a well, the process
of driving cannot be used to overcome the obstacle presented by the
rock, but that otherwise the tube may be driven until it reaches
the proper supply of water, and then operate as a driven well. The
only effect of the amendments contained in the new specification
and claim is to make that intention clear. So far as, in the course
of constructing a well, rock must be penetrated, the driven-well
process cannot be used in the perforation of the rock, but in every
other part of its course it may be applied. Such, in our judgment,
is the legal effect of both the original and the reissued
patents.
In our opinion, therefore, the grounds on which it is sought to
invalidate the reissued patent, as being for a different invention
from that described in the original, cannot be sustained.
Page 122 U. S. 63
This conclusion is not in conflict with anything said in
Russell v. Dodge, 93 U. S. 460,
93 U. S. 463.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD, in delivering the opinion of the Court in that
case, referring to the provisions of the statutes in reference to
reissues, said:
"According to these provisions, a reissue could only be had
where the original patent was inoperative or invalid by reason of a
defective or insufficient description or specification or where the
claim of the patentee exceeded his right, and then only in case the
error committed had arisen from the causes stated. And, as a
reissue could only be granted for the same invention embraced by
the original patent, the specification could not be substantially
changed, either by the addition of new matter or the omission of
important particulars, so as to enlarge the scope of the invention
as originally claimed. A defective specification could be rendered
more definite and certain so as to embrace the claim made, or the
claim could be so modified as to correspond with the specification,
but, except under special circumstances, such as occurred in the
case of
Morey v. Lockwood, 8 Wall.
230, where the inventor was induced to limit his claim by the
mistake of the Commissioner of Patents, this was the extent to
which the operation of the original patent could be changed by the
reissue. The object of the law was to enable patentees to remedy
accidental mistakes, and the law was perverted when any other end
was secured by the reissue."
And this is in harmony with all that has since been said by this
Court on the subject of reissued patents.
It is further contended on the part of the appellant that the
reissued patent in suit is void for want of novelty:
1. Under this head, it is first alleged that it is anticipated
by a patent granted to James Suggett, March 29, 1864. In the
specification of the original patent of Green of January 14, 1868,
he says: "I am aware of James Suggett's patent of March 29, 1864,
and I disclaim all secured to him therein." The reissued patent
omits that disclaimer. After the application for the reissued
patent, as appears by the contents of the file-wrapper, an
interference was declared, to which the parties were Byron Mudge,
for a reissue of his patent for a mode of
Page 122 U. S. 64
constructing wells, and the above-named patent of James Suggett,
for putting down and operating bored wells, and the application of
Colonel Green. The matter was carried by appeal from the decision
of the Commissioner of Patents to the Supreme Court of the district
of Columbia. The judgment of that court was that Suggett was
entitled to priority of invention in regard to what was claimed by
him in his patent, and that Colonel Green was also entitled to have
a patent issued to him according to his amended specification. The
decision of the judge of the Supreme Court of the district of
Columbia says:
"I am clearly of opinion that Green first put into practice the
conception of making a driven well, and is entitled therefore to
his patent for the broad claim of sinking wells by driving down the
pump or rod without removing the dirt upward, and that Suggett was
entitled to a patent for the perforated pipe and point for sinking
wells, and I therefore affirm the decision of the
commissioner."
Suggett's patent, on the face of his specification, is for a
"new and improved method of putting down and operating bored
wells," and all that his claim covers is the apparatus, consisting
of the perforated pipe with a pointed end, constructed as a drill,
and united with a pump. The subjects of the two patents are quite
different, and do not necessarily conflict, even on the supposition
that Suggett's patent is in force, although, as testified in this
case, it has been judicially declared to be invalid for want of
novelty.
2. An anticipation of the driven-well patent is also alleged by
reason of an English patent granted to John Goode August 20, 1823.
That patent, however, like that of Suggett's, does not profess to
be a patent for a process of raising water from the earth by means
of wells of any particular construction or mode of operation, but
merely for "certain tools of various formation for the purpose of
boring the earth, and certain apparatus for the purpose of raising
water," which the patentee says "constitute my certain improvements
as aforesaid."
3. It is further contended that the driven-well patent is
anticipated by having been previously described in numerous printed
publications. Of these there were introduced in evidence
Page 122 U. S. 65
in this cause by the appellant those enumerated in the following
list:
1. An extract from volume 4, "Repertory of Patent Inventions,"
published in London in 1827, by T. & G. Underwood, p. 113,
which, however, merely contains a detailed description of the
machinery, tools, and apparatus for boring the earth, described in
John Goode's patent of August 20, 1823.
2. Extract from "Dictionary of Arts, Manufactures, and Mines,"
by Andrew Ure, published in New York in 1847, by D Appleton &
Co., p. 63, under the head of "Artesian Wells."
3. Extract from page 388 of "MacKenzie's 5,000 Receipts in All
the Useful and Domestic Arts," first published in 1840.
4. Extract from "Rees' Cyclopaedia," vol. 40, published at
Philadelphia, by Samuel F. Bradford, about 1819, title "Well in
Rural Economy."
5. Extract from "Journal of the Franklin Institute," third
series, published at Philadelphia by the Franklin Institute, in
1844, vol. 7, p. 128.
6. Extract from "Brande's Encyclopaedia, or Dictionary of
Science, Literature, and Art," published by Harper Bros., New York,
in 1843, vol. 3, p. 1333, under article "Well."
7. Extract from "Rees' Cyclopaedia," vol. 33, title "Spring
Draining Pump."
8. Extract from "London Encyclopaedia," published by Thomas
Tegg, London, 1829, vol. 22, p. 593.
9. Extract from "Mechanic's Magazine," published by Knight &
Lacey, London, 1824, vol. 2, pp. 15, 16.
10. Extract from "Harper's New Monthly Magazine," September,
1851, p. 540.
11. Extract from "De L'Art du Fontenier Sondeur et des Puits
Artesiens," published in Paris, France, in 1822, p. 99, §
79.
12. Extract from "Bulletin du Musee de l'Industrie," published
by De Mot et Cie, Bruxelles, 1846, tome 10, p. 163.
13. Extract from "Hericart de Thury, Jaillissement des Eaux,"
published by Bachelier, Paris, France, 1829, pp. 274, 275.
14. Extract from "F. Arago, Oeuvres," tome 6, by Gide et J.
Baudry, Paris and Leipzig, by J. O. Weigel, 1856, p. 457.
Page 122 U. S. 66
15. Extract from "F. Garnier, Traite sur les Puits Artesiens,"
published by Bachelier, Paris, France, 1826, p. 207.
16. Extract from "The Encyclopaedia of Domestic Economy,"
published in New York in 1849, by Harper Bros., p. 848.
The rule governing defenses alleging the invalidity of the
patent by reason of prior printed publications was stated by Mr.
Justice Clifford in
Seymour v.
Osborne, 11 Wall. 516,
78 U. S. 555,
in this language:
"Patented inventions cannot be superseded by the mere
introduction of a foreign publication of the kind, though of prior
date, unless the description and drawings contain and exhibit a
substantial representation of the patented improvement, in such
full, clear, and exact terms as to enable any person skilled in the
art or science to which it appertains to make, construct, and
practice the invention to the same practical extent as they would
be enabled to do if the information was derived from a prior
patent. Mere vague and general representations will not support
such a defense, as the knowledge supposed to be derived from the
publication must be sufficient to enable those skilled in the art
or science to understand the nature and operation of the invention,
and to carry it into practical use. Whatever may be the particular
circumstances under which the publication takes place, the account
published, to be of any effect to support such a defense, must be
an account of a complete and operative invention, capable of being
put into practical operation."
The same rule was repeated by Mr. Justice Strong in the opinion
of the Court in
Cohn v. United States Corset Co.,
93 U. S. 366,
93 U. S. 370,
as follows:
"It must be admitted that unless the earlier printed and
published description does exhibit the later patented invention in
such a full and intelligible manner as to enable persons skilled in
the art to which the invention is related to comprehend it without
assistance from the patent, or to make it, or repeat the process
claimed, it is insufficient to invalidate the patent."
This rule was affirmed in
Downton v. Yeager Milling
Co., 108 U. S. 466,
108 U. S.
471.
The application of this rule to the publications relied upon in
the present case shows that none of them can properly be said to
anticipate the invention of the driven well. It would
Page 122 U. S. 67
serve no useful purpose specially to notice in this opinion all
the publications mentioned in the record. A few, as samples most
relied on, will be considered.
The first is the extract from MacKenzie's 5,000 Receipts. It
appears, from the file-wrapper in the matter of the reissued
letters patent in suit, that the application was rejected at first
by the examiner in the Patent Office on reference to this extract,
which is as follows:
"To raise water in all situations. The finest springs may be
found by boring, which is performed in the simplest manner by the
mere use of an iron rod forced into the earth by a windlass. The
workmen in a few days get to a genuine spring of pure water, fit
for every purpose. After the water is found they merely put the tin
pipes down the aperture, and it preserves a fine stream which
sometimes rises from four to five feet high."
It is quite obvious that this has no relation whatever to the
process of obtaining water by means of driven wells. It is nothing
more than a simple process of finding water in the usual way, as in
the case of an ordinary dug or bored well, such as have been
immemorially used.
The same observation equally applies to the extract from Rees'
Cyclopaedia, under the title of "Wells in Rural Economy," which is
as follows:
"The most ingenious of these is that proposed by a French
philosopher, who has advised that the ground should be perforated
to a sufficient depth by means of an auger or borer; a cylindrical
wooden pipe being then placed in the hole, and driven downward with
a mallet, and the boring continued, that the pipe may be forced
down to a greater depth, so as to reach the water or spring. In
proportion as the borer becomes filled with earth it should be
drawn up and cleared, when, by adding fresh portions of pipe, the
boring may be carried to much extent under ground so that water may
in most cases be thus reached and obtained. It is stated that wells
made in this manner are superior to those constructed in the common
method, not only in point of cheapness, but also by affording a
more certain and abundant supply of water, while no accident can
possibly happen to the workmen employed. In case the water near the
surface should not
Page 122 U. S. 68
be of a good quality, the perforation may be continued to a
still greater depth till a purer fluid can be procured, and when
wells have become impure or tainted from any circumstance or
accident, when previously emptied, and the bottom perforated in a
similar manner, so as to reach the lower sheet of water, it will
rise in the cylindrical tube in a pure state into the body of the
pump fixed for the purpose of bringing it up."
The extract from "Brande's Encyclopaedia," under the article
"Well," is as follows:
"The use of the borer alone may procure an adequate supply of
water in particular situations. This mode appears to have been long
resorted to in this and other contries. From what we have already
stated as to the disposition of strata, the conditions requisite
for its success will be readily conceived,
viz., watery
strata connected with others on a higher level. The pressure of the
water contained in the higher parts of such strata on that in the
lower will readily force up the latter through any orifice, however
small. All that is necessary, therefore, is to bore down to the
stratum containing the water, and, having completed the bore, to
insert a pipe into the bore, which may either be left to overflow
into a cistern, or it may terminate in a pump."
A similar one from the Mechanics' Magazine, volume 2, p. 16, is
this:
"
Boring Wells"
"
Answer to Question"
"LEEDS, March 15, 1824"
"Drive a cast-iron pipe through the gravel --
i.e., by
means of a weight hung at the end of spring pole, used in boring,
and, should the pipe meet with and loose stone to obstruct its
passage, put the boring rods into the pipe, and bore until the
stone is broken to pieces or driven sideways, the drive the pipe as
before. I have had the management of a great many bore-holes for
water in this neighborhood, some above 100 yards deep, and many
contrivances I have used on account of difficulties met with in
different strata. I shall be happy to give your correspondent every
information in my power on the subject, and if agreeable to you,
will send a list of a few
Page 122 U. S. 69
holes, stating the different strata gone through and the several
springs of water met with."
"Yours, &c.,"
"T. T."
"N.B. -- The shell-borer must be used at times to bring out the
gravel that gets into the pipe, and the pipe must have spigot and
faucet joints."
There is nothing in these extracts to suggest the peculiarities
which distinguish the driven well as described in the reissued
patent, and it may be said in general of all the extracts contained
anything in actual and practical use that, so far as they undertake
to describe anything in actual and practical use, they point merely
to the ordinary bored artesian well, or the instruments and
implements to be used in its construction.
This view of these publications is strongly corroborated by the
circumstances attending the introduction of Green's process of
driven wells into public use in England. It is shown that his agent
for the introduction of the well into that country, and to whom the
invention was sold, James L. Norton, took out in his own name an
English patent, and as has already been stated and as is shown in
the proof, after various experimental tests made by civil and
military engineers of high authority, the driven well according to
this process was adopted and successfully employed for the purpose
of obtaining a water supply for the British troops in the
Abyssinian expedition. The present record contains extracts from
standard scientific publications in England showing how extensively
and successfully the driven well has, since its first introduction,
been employed in England for the purpose of raising water, in which
it is admitted, as the facts show, that the process was considered
new, differing in substance from any previously known and in use,
and ascribed to the American invention.
The next defense relied upon by the appellant is that the
evidence fails to establish a case of infringement. It is not
important to set out fully the evidence on this point. The
substance of it is contained in the opinion of Judge Shipman
Page 122 U. S. 70
in this case, 15 F. 109. In reference to it, the court says:
"The defendant's counsel strenuously urge that these wells were
constructed by boring; that the wells were bored until water was
struck -- that is, until a supply of water was obtained, and that
the wells were finished by pressing the pipes more deeply into the
source of supply which had been reached when the workmen 'struck
water.' In other words, the defendant seeks to bring the case
within the decision of Judge McCrary in
Andrews v. Long,
12 F. 871. In this case, however, the witnesses, when they used the
common expression 'struck water,' did not mean that they had
reached an adequate source of supply for a well, but that they had
reached a place where the presence of water manifested itself, and
where by continuous excavation an adequate supply would be
attained. The wet sand or wet day upon the auger showed that water
was at hand. The well was then finished, and a supply of water was
obtained by pressing or driving a tube into the ground, without
removing the earth upward, and attaching thereto a pump. When this
was done, there was put"
"to practical use the new principle of forcing the water in the
water-bearing strata of the earth from the earth into a well pit,
by the use of artificial power applied to create a vacuum in the
water-bearing strata of the earth, and at the same time in the well
pit."
"
Andrews v. Cross, 8 F. 269."
In other words, the case of the appellant is this: he sought to
evade the patent by boring instead of driving until he came to the
water-bearing stratum. Then, in order to avail himself of the
patent, he drove the tube downward into the water-bearing stratum
so as to secure those conditions of an air-tight connection between
the point of the tube and the surrounding earth which constitute
the principle of the driven-well patent. It is therefore a clear
case of infringement.
The decree of the circuit court is accordingly
affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, MR. JUSTICE FIELD, and MR. JUSTICE GRAY,
JJ., dissenting.