Letters patent No. 165,164, issued September 28, 1875, to Alfred
B. Lawther for a new and improved process for treating oleaginous
seeds was a patent for a process consisting of a series of acts to
be done to the flaxseed and, construed in the light of that
knowledge which existed in the art at the time of its date, it
sufficiently describes the process to be followed; but it is
limited by the terms of the specification, at least so far as the
crushing of the seed is concerned, to the use of the kind of
instrumentality therein described, namely, in the first part of the
process, to the use of powerful revolving rollers for crushing the
seed between them under pressure.
Moistening the flaxseed by a shower of spray in the mixing
machine, produced by directing a jet of steam against a small
stream of water, does in fact "moisten the seeds by direct
subjection to steam," and thus comes within the clause of Lawther's
patent.
A license from the plaintiff in error to the defendants in error
cannot be implied from the facts proved in this case.
Bill in equity to restrain infringements of letters patent.
Decree dismissing the bill. Complainant appealed. 21 F. 811. The
case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 124 U. S. 2
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant, Alfred B. Lawther, filed his bill in the court
below against the appellees, alleging that they were infringing a
patent granted to him on the twenty-eighth of September, 1875, for
certain improvements in processes of treating oleaginous seeds, and
praying for an account of profits and damages, and an injunction.
The circuit court, being of opinion that the patent could not be
sustained as a patent for a process (which it was claimed to be),
dismissed the bill. We are called upon to revise this decision.
In the specification of the patent, the patentee states that the
object of his invention is
"to improve the process of working flaxseed, linseed, and other
oil seeds in such a manner that a greater yield of oil is obtained
at a considerable saving of time and power in the running of the
crushing, mixing, and pressing machines, while also a cake of
superior texture is produced."
The specification proceeds as follows:
"Hitherto it has been the practice to crush the oil seeds
between revolving rollers and completing the imperfect crushing by
passing them under heavy stones known as 'edge-runners' or
'mullers,' under addition of a quantity of water, the crushed and
moistened seed being then taken from the muller stones, and stirred
in a heated steam-jacketed reservoir preparatory to being placed
into the presses for extracting the oil. This process has been
found imperfect in regard to many points, but mainly on account of
the over-grinding of portions of the seed and the husks or bran
when the seeds were exposed for too long a time to the action of
the muller stones, so as to form a pasty mass and produce an
absorption of oil by the fine particles of bran, while, on the
other hand, the under-grinding, by too short an action of the
stones, rendered the
Page 124 U. S. 3
presses incapable of extracting the full amount of oil from the
seed."
"
* * * *"
"My process is intended to remedy the defects of the one at
present in use, and consists mainly in conveying the oil seeds
through a vertical supply tube and feeding roller at such degree of
pressure to powerful revolving rollers that each seed is
individually acted upon, and the oil cells fully crushed and
disintegrated. They are then passed directly, without the use of
muller stones, to the mixing machine, to be stirred, moistened, and
heated by the admission of small jets of water or steam to the
mass, and then transferred to the presses."
"The oil seeds are by my new process first conveyed to a hopper
and fluted seed roller at the top of an upright feed tube of the
crushing machine, by which the seeds are fed, under suitable
pressure, to revolving rollers of sufficient power, which run at a
surface speed of about one hundred and fifty to two hundred feet
per minute."
"The pressure on the seeds in the feed tube is necessary, as the
oil seeds would otherwise not feed readily into rollers revolving
under great pressure. The oil seeds are thereby compelled to pass
evenly and steadily through the rollers, which have therefore a
chance to act on all of them, and break the oil cells uniformly,
without reducing any portion to a pasty condition. The bran is also
left comparatively coarse, so that it shows the nature of the seed
after pressing."
"The muller stones, and their over or under grinding of any
portion of the seeds, are entirely done away with by this mode,
which makes not only the machinery less expensive, but produces
also a saving of power required in running the same. The crushed
seeds are next placed in a steam-jacketed reservoir of the mixing
machine, where they are stirred, moistened, and heated by
perforated revolving stirrer arms, which throw jets of water or
steam into the mass so as to thoroughly permeate and mix the same.
The crushed and moistened mass is transferred to the presses for
the extraction of the oil, which operation requires less power, on
account of the uniformity of the mass, produces a greater yield of
oil, and furnishes an
Page 124 U. S. 4
improved quality of oil cake, or residue, of open-grained, flaky
nature, capable of being split in regular pieces at right angles to
the direction of pressure."
Having thus described his invention, the patentee states his
claim to be
"the process of crushing oleaginous seeds, and extracting the
oil therefrom, consisting of the following successive steps,
viz., the crushing of the seeds under pressure, the
moistening of the seeds by direct subjection to steam, and finally
the expression of the oil from the seed by suitable pressure, as
and for the purpose set forth."
The purpose and effect of the invention claimed by the patentee
as a new process, and the argument against the validity of the
patent as a patent for a process, cannot be better or more clearly
stated than is done in the opinion of the court below, pronounced
by Judge Dyer, 21 F. 811. We quote therefrom as follows:
"The proofs show, and in fact it is undisputed, that formerly,
in the process of extracting oil from flaxseed, the seed was
subjected to the crushing and disintegrating action of the muller
stones, which consisted of two large and very heavy stone wheels
mounted on a short horizontal axis attached to a vertical shaft. By
the rotation of this shaft, the stones were caused to move on their
edges shortly around in a circular path upon a stone bed plate,
with a peculiar rolling and grinding action, upon a layer of
flaxseed placed on the bed plate. This was the usual mechanical
appliance in connection with the operating movement of the muller
stones. By this means, such portions of the seed as came in contact
with the muller stones were reduced to a complete state of
pulverization. To facilitate the disintegrating action of the
muller stones, the seed was generally first more or less crushed by
passing it through one or more pairs of rollers, thus better
preparing it for the rubbing and grinding action of the muller
stones. The further treatment of the seed required the application
of heat and moisture, and this was accomplished in various ways.
Sometimes the heat and moisture were applied by a steaming device
before the seed was crushed by the muller stones. Sometimes the
seed was moistened when it was under the action of the muller
stones, by
Page 124 U. S. 5
sprinkling water upon the layer of seed beneath the stones, the
heat being applied afterwards by a separate operation. At other
times, both heat and moisture were applied after the seed had been
run through the mullers and was in the form of meal in the heater.
As the last step in the process, the seed thus crushed and
disintegrated, and in moist and warm condition was usually placed
in haircloth mats or bags and subjected to hydraulic pressure, by
which means the oil was extracted. This was the state of the art,
and this the usual process, when the complainant obtained his
patent."
The court then states the process set out in the appellant's
patent, and, after some observations thereon, proceeds to say:
"The crushing of oleaginous seed so that ultimately it may be in
condition for the application of hydraulic pressure was always a
step, and necessarily the first step, in the process of extracting
the oil therefrom. As we have seen, that step was formerly
accomplished by means of rollers and muller stones. The complainant
ascertained by practice that in crushing the seed, the tearing,
pulverizing action of the muller stones was injurious, and so he
dispensed with that mechanical operation in the crushing step of
the process, and employed the rollers alone. He thereby simply
omitted one of the instrumentalities previously used in the first
stage of treatment of the seed. This was undoubtedly a useful
improvement, but it was not the invention or discovery of a new
process. Each step in the process existed and was known before --
namely crushing the seed, beating and moistening it, and finally
the application of hydraulic pressure. What the complainant
accomplished was a change in mechanical appliances and operation by
which an existing process, and each step thereof, were made more
effective in its results. For this he may have been entitled to a
mechanical patent. . . . He discovered that more advantageous
results were attainable by dispensing with the use of muller
stones, and that these results were also promoted by the improved
construction of the rollers and other mechanical appliances for
heating and moistening the seed is quite apparent. The discovery or
invention was not of a new series of acts or
Page 124 U. S. 6
steps constituting a process, but only of certain mechanical
changes in carrying into effect the well known old steps of the
process."
The view thus taken by the court below seems to us open to some
criticism. If, as that court says and we think rightly says, the
omission of the muller stones is a real improvement in the process
of obtaining the oil from the flaxseed, if it produces more oil and
better oil cakes, and it is new, and was not used before, why is it
not patentable discovery?, and why is not such new method of
obtaining the oil and making the oil cakes a process? There is no
new machinery. The rollers are an old instrument, the mixing
machinery is old, the hydraulic press is old; the only thing that
is new is the mode of using and applying these old
instrumentalities. And what is that but a new process? This process
consists of a series of acts done to the flaxseed. It is a mode of
treatment. The first part of the process is to crush the seeds
between rollers. Perhaps, as this is the only breaking and crushing
of the seed which is done, the rollers are required to be stronger
than before; but if so, it is no less a process.
The evidence shows that although the crushing of the seed by two
horizontal rollers and then passing it, thus crushed, under the
muller stones was the old method commonly used, yet that, for
several years before Lawther took out his patent, a more thorough
crushing had been effected by the employment of four or five strong
and heavy rollers arranged on top of on another in a stack, still
using the muller stones to grind und moisten the crushed seed after
it was passed through the rollers. The invention of Lawther
consisted in discarding the muller stones and passing the crushed
seed directly into a mixing machine, to be stirred, moistened, and
heated by jets of steam or water and then transferring the mass to
the presses for the expression of the oil by hydraulic or other
power.
The machinery and apparatus used by Lawther had all been used
before. His only discovery was an improvement in the process. He
found that by altogether omitting one of the steps of the former
process -- the grinding and mixing under the muller stones -- and
mixing in the mixing machine
Page 124 U. S. 7
by means of steam, a great improvement was effected in the
result.
Why should it be doubted that such a discovery is patentable? It
is highly useful, and it is shown by the evidence to have been the
result of careful and long continued experiments and the
application of much ingenuity. By the omission of the mullers,
greater care may be necessary on the part of the workman in
carrying on the operations, especially in watching the moistening
and mixing process so as to produce the proper moisture and
consistency of the mass before subjecting it to hydraulic pressure.
But though it be true that the new process does require greater
care, and even greater skill, on the part of the workman than was
formerly required, this does not change its character as being that
of a process, nor does it materially affect its utility.
The only question which in our view raises a doubt on the
validity of the patent is whether it sufficiently describes the
process to be followed in order to secure the beneficial results
which it promises. The patentee, when on the witness stand, stated
that the invention was perfected on the second day of June, 1874;
that it was the result of a long series of experiments, which were
not entirely successful until that date. His account of it is thus
elicited, on his cross-examination:
"57. When did this invention, as you claim it, as you describe
it in this patent, first take tangible and practical shape in your
mind as a whole process?"
"A. Complete and perfect in 1874."
"58. What time?"
"A. Between the thirty-first of May and the second of June."
"59. What was the particular improvement that produced the
change in results at that time?"
"A. It was the perfecting of all of the improvements, the
harmonious working of all the changes, that we had made in the
matter. Most of the changes had taught us something, and when we
learned it all, we knew it."
"60. What particular thing brought about that change at that
time?"
"A. I don't know that I could locate any particular thing of any
importance or magnitude. "
Page 124 U. S. 8
"61. What did you do different on the first or second of June,
or thereafter, from what you had done on the thirtieth of May, or
theretofore?"
"A. I have answered that before, as near as I can. I only know
it was the culmination of all previous efforts, our knowledge, and
our apparatus."
"62. Was the change caused by anything more than your men's
increased practical skill and experience in working seed in that
new way?"
"A. Added to the apparatus, yes, sir, that was just it exactly.
We couldn't have done it without the proper appliances, and with
the proper appliances we couldn't have done it without the
knowledge; the two things come together. The whole thing was a
series of infinitely small steps."
"63. Wasn't the apparatus the same on the thirtieth of May and
after the second of June?"
"A. I have no record of any experiment or change having been
made during that time, nor do I recollect of any changes. It is
possible that it was precisely similar."
"64. Isn't that your best recollection -- that it is
similar?"
"A. I have no recollection about it one way or the other. One of
our greatest difficulties was the uniform moistening of the seed.
We changed the moistening apparatus in a great many different ways.
Some of them involved the delay of a day, some of them an hour,
some of them a few minutes. Some such changes as that might have
been made in the time spoken of."
"65. No change was made in the rolls in that time, was
there?"
"A. Not that I know of."
"66. Nor in the heater apparatus or in the presses at that
time?"
"A. No, we didn't change the body of that heater; probably not
the presses."
"67. On the thirtieth day of May, and sometime previously,
didn't you crush the seed under rolls as the first step?"
"A. Yes."
"68. And then moisten it?"
"A. Yes. "
Page 124 U. S. 9
"69. And then heat it?"
"A. Yes."
"70. And then extract the oil by pressure in the presses?"
"A. Yes; some of it; all that we did extract."
"71. Are not those the same steps in the process of making oil
that you used on the second of June and ever since?"
"A. That is the process today."
From this statement it is apparent that the beneficial result is
due not only to a proper degree of crushing of the seed in the
rolls, but to a proper and uniform moistening of the crushed
material in the heating machine before it is subjected to pressure.
The question is whether the patent sufficiently describes the
operation to be performed in order to accomplish these results.
After a careful consideration of the specification of the
patent, and in view of the principle of law that it is to be
construed in the light of that knowledge which existed in the art
at the time of its date, we are satisfied that it does sufficiently
describe the process to be followed. Every step of this process was
already understood, although not connected in the manner pointed
out in the patent. The following things were known and used before
the granting of the patent, to-wit
First, the crushing of the seed between powerful
revolving rollers, fed thereto by a supply tube and feeding roller,
so as to pass in a sheet of uniform thickness between the
rollers
Secondly, the moistening, mixing, and heating of the
crushed mass by means of steam and water in a mixing machine.
Thirdly, the pressure of the material thus prepared, in
moulds, by means of hydraulic power. These several steps being well
known in the art when the patent was applied for, required no
particular explanation. The patentee had only to say to the oil
manufacturers of the country what he did say, namely:
"Crush your seed evenly and sufficiently between powerful
rollers as heretofore, and then, instead of passing it under the
muller stones, as you have heretofore done, transfer it immediately
to the well known steam mixing machine, and moisten and mix it
equably and sufficiently for pressing."
Every oil manufacturer in the country would understand him.
They
Page 124 U. S. 10
would also understand that it might require additional care and
skill to make the new process work successfully. It is evident that
they did understand him, and that the manufacture of linseed oil
and oil cakes has ever since been greatly improved and facilitated
by the invention.
But while we are satisfied that the invention is that of a
process, it is nevertheless limited by the clear terms of the
specification, at least so far as the crushing of the seed is
concerned, to the use of the kind of instrumentality described --
namely, in the first part of the process, to the use of powerful
revolving rollers for crushing the seed between them under
pressure. The claim cannot have the broad generality which its
terms, taken literally, might at first sight seem to imply; but,
limited as suggested, it seems to us sustainable in law.
It is true that the description also calls for the use of a
vertical supply tube and feeding roller. The latter is probably
essential as a means of distributing the flow of the seed in a
sheet of even thickness to the rolls. But the vertical supply tube
is evidently an incidental arrangement, suited to one position of
the rollers -- namely where a pair of rollers are set side by side.
Where they form a pile, on top of one another, a vertical tube
would be inapplicable. In such case, the equivalent would be a
slanting tube or inclined plane. The vertical tube is clearly not
an essential part of the instrumentality used, and constitutes no
limitation of the process.
The appellees also contend that they do not (in the words of the
claim) "moisten the seeds by direct subjection to steam." It is
proven, however, that they do moisten the seeds by a shower of
spray in the mixing machine, produced by directing a jet of steam
against a small stream of water. This is within the claim of the
patent. The specification describes the process of moistening the
seeds as follows:
"They are then passed [after being crushed] directly, without
the aid of muller stones, to the mixing machine, to be stirred,
moistened, and heated by the admission of small jets of
water
or steam to the mass."
Again:
"The crushed seeds are next placed in a steam-jacketed reservoir
of the mixing machine, where they are stirred, moistened, and
heated by perforated revolving stirrer
Page 124 U. S. 11
arms, which throw jets of
water or steam into the
mass,"
etc. Then the claim is for three successive steps,
viz., the crushing of the seeds under pressure, the
moistening of the seeds by direct subjection to steam, and the
expression of the oil by suitable pressure. These words are to be
read in the light of the explanations in the descriptive part, and,
thus read, it is apparent that the meaning of the claim is that the
crushed seeds are to be moistened and heated by the use of steam,
or steam and water, immediately after coming from the rollers,
without any aid from muller stones. This is precisely what the
appellees do.
One of the defenses set up is an implied license. It seems that
Lawther has another patent for some improvement in the stack of
rollers now commonly used for crushing the seed, and supplies them
to order through a foundryman by the name of McDonald. The
appellees purchased a set of these rollers from McDonald with the
knowledge and consent of Lawther. These rollers were returned on
account of some imperfection in the material, but the frame was
retained, and the appellees procured similar rollers made
elsewhere. They contend that by this transaction Lawther gave his
consent to their use of this process. We do not think that there is
sufficient evidence of any such consent. The use of the rollers did
not necessarily involve the use of the process, and there is no
proof that anything was said about the process.
Other points were raised which we do not deem it necessary to
discuss. We cannot but think that Lawther discovered a new process
of manufacturing oil from seeds, and that he was entitled to a
patent therefor, and we are of opinion that the patent in suit,
construed as we have suggested, is a good and valid patent. We are
also of opinion that the appellees infringe the patent and that
they have not shown any legal defense to the suit. It follows that
the appellant is entitled to a decree for an injunction and an
account of profits and damages, as prayed in the bill.
The decree of the circuit court is therefore reversed, and
the cause remanded with instructions to enter a decree for the
appellant and take such further proceedings as may be in conformity
with this opinion.