The invention for winding thread upon spools, patented in Great
Britain to William Weild by letters patent granted January 22,
1858, the specification being filed July 22, 1358, was published by
the filing of the specification before Hezekiah Conaut discovered
and invented the improvement in machines for winding thread on
spools, secured to him by letters patent of the United States, of
December 13, 1859 (but antedated June 22, 1859) and numbered
26,415, and consequently the use of Weild's invention in the United
States does not subject the person using it to liability to pay
damages to the owners of Conant's patent for such use, or to being
restrained in equity from further using it.
A copy of a patent was attached to a deposition as an exhibit,
and the deposition was read at the trial and was returned in the
transcript as part of the record by the clerk of the Circuit Court,
certified under the seal of the court.
Held that although
the deposition contained no express minute that the patent was
offered in evidence, it must be received as so offered.
The evidence of a patentee offered by the owner of the patent in
a suit for an infringement of it, as to the actual day when his
invention was made, when that becomes material, must be taken most
strongly against those who offer it.
When the defendant in a suit for infringement of a patent shows
that the machine which he is using, and which is claimed to be an
infringement, was patented and in use before the date of the
plaintiff's patent, the burden of proof is on the latter to show
that his invention preceded that of the machine which the defendant
is using.
In equity for the infringement of letters patent. Decree for the
complainant. Defendants appealed. T he case is stated in the
opinion.
Page 140 U. S. 482
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit brought by the appellees against the appellant on
a patent issued to Hezekiah Conant for an improvement in machines
for winding thread on spools. The patent was issued December 13,
1859, but antedated 22d June, 1859, and at its expiration was
renewed for seven years from 22d June, 1873, finally expiring in
1880. Its number was 26,415. The bill was filed in February, 1872,
charging the defendants with infringement, and praying for
injunction, damages, etc. The defendants, promptly answered, and
the cause lay until February, 1874, when the complainants filed a
supplemental bill, setting up the extension of the patent and
repeating the charge of infringement. The defendants answered, and
the parties went into proofs. In March, 1879, the circuit court,
held by district judge Nixon, rendered a decree in favor of the
validity of the patent, adjudged that the defendants had infringed
the first and third claims thereof, granted an injunction, and
ordered a reference to a master to take an account of profits and
damages against the defendants. 4 Bann. & Ard. 133. After a
long contest in the master's office, a report was filed in October,
1884, awarding damages to the complainants in the sum of
$159,035.22. The defendants filed exceptions, which were overruled
by the court, and a final decree for the amount awarded was entered
on the 17th of June, 1886, 27 F. 865. The present appeal was taken
from that decree.
One of the principal points of controversy on which the case
turns was indicated by the complainants themselves in their
original bill. They say:
"And your orators further represent that the said defendants
sometimes pretend that they have a right to make use of their said
machines for winding thread on spools, and to make sale of like
machines to others to be used, because they say that such machines
are described in letters patent of Great Britain granted to William
Weild on the 22d day of January, A.D. 1858, upon a specification
filed July 22, 1858, and that the same invention was subsequently
patented to the said Weild in the United States on the second of
January, A.D. 1866;
Page 140 U. S. 483
and they further pretend that said British letters patent
anticipate the invention of said Conant. But your orators aver the
fact to be that the application of said Conant for letters patent
for his invention was made and filed in the Patent Office prior to
the date of the sealing of said British letters patent to said
Weild, and that the invention of said Conant, for which letters
patent were granted to him as aforesaid, was made before the
publication or date of sealing of said British letters patent of
said Weild."
The allegation that Conant's application for his patent was made
and filed in the Patent Office prior to the date of the sealing of
Weild's British patent is not correct. It is not proved, and the
contrary appears to be the truth. Conant's application was first
filed on the 5th or 6th of January, 1859, and was afterwards
withdrawn and renewed on the last of April or first of May in the
same year. The specification annexed to the patent is dated 11th of
April, 1859, and the drawings are marked as received in the office
and filed January 6, 1858 (an evident mistake for 1859), and
received and filed in new application May 2, 1859. There is a
certified copy of the file wrapper and contents in the record,
which shows that the original application was filed in the office
January 5, 1859, and was withdrawn, and a new application filed
April 30, 1859, the papers being received in the examiner's office
a day or two later in each case. But as this copy of the file
wrapper and contents was only introduced on an unsuccessful motion
for a rehearing, and not in the principal case, it may not be
proper to rely upon it in a matter affecting the merits. There is
other evidence, however, sufficient to verify the same facts.
The allegation that the invention of Conant, for which his said
letters patent were granted, was made before the publication or
sealing of Weild's patent requires more careful consideration.
The defendants, in their answer, denied that they had infringed
Conant's patent, and denied that he was the first inventor of what
is claimed to be patented thereby, and averred
"that, on the contrary, the same, under the broad
Page 140 U. S. 484
construction thereof claimed for it by complainants, was, prior
to any invention thereof by said Conant, described in and patented
by letters patent granted by the government of Great Britain to
Archibald Thomson, which were dated the 10th day of November, 1801,
and numbered 25,053; also described in and patented by letters
patent granted by the government of Great Britain to Wm. Young,
which were dated the second day of December, 1848, and numbered
12,353; also described in and patented by letters patent granted by
the government of Great Britain to Thomas Willis, which were dated
the 1st day of June, 1852, and numbered 14, 151; also described in
and patented by letters patent granted by the government of Great
Britain to John Wibberly, which were dated the 4th day of December,
1853, and numbered 2,901."
As to the Weild patent, referred to in the bill of complaint,
the defendants answered as follows:
"And these defendants, further answering, say that letters
patent of the United States for an invention in machines for
winding thread upon spools were granted to William Weild, dated the
second day of January, 1866, and that the only machine which these
defendants have used for winding thread on spools, and those which
they now have in use for that purpose, were purchased by them from
said Weild under said patent, and were made in conformity
therewith, and that they paid said Weild royalty for the use of the
same"
"And these defendants, further answering on information and
belief, say that said letters patent for said last-named invention
were granted by the government of Great Britain to said Weild,
dated January 22, 1858, and sealed April 30, 1858."
"And these defendants, further answering, say that they do not
know and are not informed, save by said bill of complaint, when
said Conant made his application for the letters patent upon which
this suit is brought, or whether or not the same or the invention
of said Conant was made prior to the sealing of the English patent
to Weild, and leave the complainants to make such proof thereof as
they may be advised is material."
"And these defendants, further answering on information
Page 140 U. S. 485
and belief, deny that said Conant made his alleged invention
before the date of said foreign letters patent to said Weild."
"And these defendants say that they are informed and believe
that said Weild made the invention for which said patents were
issued to him and put the same into public use prior to the time of
said Conant's alleged invention."
We have thus adverted to the pleadings for the purpose of
showing that the issue as to the priority of Weild's patent over
the invention of Conant was raised by the complainants themselves
in their bill of complaint, and was accepted by the defendants in
their answer. This should settle all doubt as to the relevancy of
that question in disposing of the case on its merits.
Objection was made that the Weild patent was not duly proved in
the case, but without foundation. It appears by the record that at
an examination of witnesses on the part of the defendants before W.
C. Witter, examiner, by consent, continued from time to time from
June 17, 1875 to April 8, 1876, one Boyd Eliot, being under
examination, was asked, among other things:
"3 Q. Have you read and examined the copy -- Weild patent,
defendants' Exhibit William Weild?"
"A. I have."
"4 Q. Do you find therein described the defendants' machines, of
which Exhibit 5 is a model in part?"
"A. I do; substantially the same."
At the end of the depositions of the witnesses are the exhibits
referred to therein, among which is the copy of the Weild patent in
question, marked "Defendants' Exhibit William Weild, W. C. W.
Ex'r," and at the end of the entire record is the certificate of
the clerk of the circuit court verifying the same, under seal of
the court, as a true transcript of all the proceedings in the cause
on file and of record in his office at Trenton. The patent was
referred to and used in the examination, was marked as an exhibit
in the cause by the examiner, and is actually found in the record,
and returned and certified as a part thereof. Though the
depositions contain no express minute that the patent was offered
in evidence,
Page 140 U. S. 486
we think that it must be received as so offered. Nearly the same
question arose in
Hoskin v. Fisher, 125 U.
S. 217, in relation to a patent marked as an exhibit,
and we held that it was sufficiently authenticated as a part of the
evidence in the case. If the Weild patent was improperly inserted
in the record, the complainants should have moved the court below
to have it excluded before the transcript was sent to this
Court.
As this patent, in our view, has an important bearing on the
questions involved in the case, it is proper that we should examine
with some care the allegation in the bill of complaint that Conant
made his invention before the patent was recorded and published,
which is conceded to have been on the 22d day of July, 1858, six
months after it was granted and after its date. The question is
important, because the law is that any person sued for infringement
of an American patent may show in defense that the invention
claimed was patented or described in some printed publication [not
before the American patent was granted -- nor before the
application for it was filed, but] before the patentee's supposed
invention or discovery thereof. Rev.Stat. § 4920. It is also
important because the defendants proved that the machines used by
them, and charged to be infringements of Conant's invention, were
built in Manchester, England, and obtained from Weild himself, and
constructed in accordance with his patent. It would seem to be very
clear, therefore, that unless the invention of Conant was made and
perfected before the 22d day of July, 1858, the time of publication
of Weild's patent, the defendants had a perfect defense to the suit
either on the ground that the Weild patent anticipated Conant's
invention or that Conant's patent, in view of the state of the art,
must be so construed and restricted as not to embrace any portion
of the Weild patent, in which case the defendants could not be
justly charged with infringement.
The only evidence on the questions as to the time of Conant's
invention is his own testimony, a species of evidence which in
cases of this kind ought to be received with great caution. The
following question was put to him by his counsel:
"Q. 4. Please state when you made the invention which is
Page 140 U. S. 487
described in the aforesaid letters patent granted to you. Give
the date of its conception, and the successive stages of its
development."
His answer was as follows:
"My attention was drawn to this point of the matter of winding
thread automatically by machinery sometime during the year 1857. I
worked at intervals at making drawings and trying to develop
different motions and devices, and, to the best of my recollection,
I fixed upon a definite style of machine, which I proposed to build
some time during that year, and prosecuted the thing so far as to
have some of the patterns made, but was interrupted during the
winter; and, on further reflection, in the spring of 1858 I decided
upon another style of machine, which I thought would be more
certain in its action, and which I completed during the summer of
-- and, to the best of my recollection, in July -- 1858. The part
of my machine called the 'traverse changer' was the same in the
first set of drawings as it is in present use. The various devices
for accomplishing the change required to wind different lengths
were carefully studied over, and I fixed on this present style of
traverse changer, with different lengths of teeth or projections
arranged upon the periphery of the wheel, as the most practical and
best form in which it could be arranged, from the fact that the
wheel is always in a position to wind the first course of thread
upon the spool immediately after the last course on the previous
spool is completed. The first machine, according to the best of my
recollection, was deficient in that it had no way of adjustment by
which I could wind spools of different lengths but having the same
number of courses, and which I considered defective because in such
case I would be obliged to have a different traverse changer for
every different length of spool. So I made my traverse changer long
enough for winding the coarsest number of thread in ordinary
business, and then fixed the adjustment of the lips so that, by
spreading them apart, I could wind as short courses as was
desirable, when by setting the lips close together, I could wind
courses the full length of the traverse changer. It was also a
point in my
Page 140 U. S. 488
study to make the machine as simple as possible, so it could be
readily operated by persons of ordinary ability. The first machine,
as I mentioned, was completed and put in operation in the summer of
1858. After getting the machine completed and testing it to my
satisfaction, I went to work and made a model myself. After that, I
made a set of patent drawings, and drew up my own specification,
and made the first application for a patent myself. In January,
1859, I exhibited my machine at a meeting of the stockholders of
the Willimantic Linen Company, in Willimantic, Connecticut, at
which time they were so well pleased with the machine that they
proposed to purchase one-half of the right; but they ascertained
that I made the application for a patent myself, and, thinking
perhaps, that it was not as perfectly done as it should be,
employed Mr. Henry B. Renwick to redraft the specification. In the
meantime, a Mr. C. N. Spencer invented a self-acting winding
machine, for which he made application for a patent, which the
Patent Office declared interfered with my application. I was
obliged to take testimony, which delayed the granting of the
patent, after which a patent was issued to me."
On a subsequent examination, being questioned with regard to the
disposition of the machine constructed by him, he said:
"I made an exhibition of it in the month of January, 1859, at a
meeting of the stockholders of the Willimantic Linen Company, and I
run it the best part of a half day in their presence. Afterwards I
exhibited it to Mr. Harry B. Renwick, who, I suppose, was employed
at that time as an expert for the Willimantic Linen Company, but
after that it was laid away, and I don't know that it was ever
again used."
No person accustomed to weigh the credibility of human testimony
can fail to perceive the stress under which this evidence was
given. With the most favorable construction, the most that can be
deduced from it is that the invention was not completed until July,
1858. The witness does not say in what part of July, although his
interest strongly suggested that part of the month which preceded
the 22d. The generality of the expression "July, 1858," excites
attention,
Page 140 U. S. 489
and in this case it is not applying too strict a rule to say
that the evidence should be construed most strongly against the
complainants, and this would necessarily lead to the inference that
the invention was completed in the last part of July, subsequent to
the publication of the English patent. We feel bound to put this
strict construction upon the patentee's evidence, because such
testimony, given for the purpose that this was, is necessarily
subject to the gravest suspicion, however honest and well
intentioned the witness may be.
We say that Conant's testimony cannot be construed as showing
that his invention was completed before the month of July, 1858.
According to his statement, it was not until then that he put it in
visible form in the shape of a machine. He had conceived of a
machine in 1857, and made some patterns, but in the spring of 1858
he decided upon another style of machine, which he completed during
the summer -- to the best of his recollection, in July, 1858. The
part of his machine called the "traverse changer" was the same in
the first set of drawings as it is in present use. This is the
substance of the testimony. It is evident that the invention was
not completed until the construction of the machine. A conception
of the mind is not an invention until represented in some physical
form, and unsuccessful experiments or projects, abandoned by the
inventor, are equally destitute of that character. These
propositions have been so often reiterated as to be elementary.
If the result to which we have come as to the date of Conant's
invention is correct, it really determines the controversy, without
any inquiry as to the similarity of Conant's invention to that
shown in Weild's patent, for it is proved beyond all controversy
that the defendants only used Weild's machine, and if they only
used that which antedated Conant's invention, they could not be
guilty of violating his rights.
The only part of Conant's testimony on which any plausible
argument can be raised to show that his invention was prior to the
22d day of July, 1858, is that in which he states that the part of
his machine called the "traverse changer" was the same in the first
set of drawings as it is in present use; but
Page 140 U. S. 490
this is so vague and uncertain that no satisfactory inference
can be drawn from it. The traverse changer, by itself, was not
claimed in the patent as the invention of Conant, but it was
claimed in combination with other things, which may or may not have
been exhibited in his drawings, and traverse changers had been in
use long before Conant had thought of the subject at all. To make
the matter more manifest, it may be proper to give a brief
description of the machine and the invention which related to
it.
In winding thread upon a spool it is necessary to wind it in
layers, one above or around the other, until the spool is filled
flush with the two ends. To do this with a continuous and unbroken
thread, the first layer is commenced at one end of the spool and
carried to the other as fast as the thickness of the thread wound
in a continuous coil will admit. From thence the next layer is
wound in a reverse direction back to the end at which the first
layer commenced, and so on alternately until the spool is filled.
The thread is fed on to the spool by means of a slender finger
called a "thread guide," through and over which the thread is
brought close to the spool, and in order to wind the alternate
layers as above described this thread-guide has to be moved
alternately backward and forward just as fast as the thread is
wound, and just as far as the length of the spool. It receives this
alternate movement by being attached to a slide-bar or
traverse-rod, which is carried backward and forward by means of a
parallel shaft furnished on one-half its length with a right-hand
screw and on the other half of its length with a left-hand screw.
Two half nuts, attached by arms to the slide-bar, are so arranged
that by the action of the machine one of them may be engaged with
the right-hand screw for a limited time, and then the other with
the left-hand screw for an equal length of time. The result is that
the slide-bar will be forced first in one direction and then in the
other, according as the right or left-hand screw is engaged with
its corresponding nut. The change of motion is effected by a change
of engagement of the nuts, so that when one nut is withdrawn from
the screw the other may be set up against it. For a constant and
uniform extent or length of alternate
Page 140 U. S. 491
movement, this may be very easily effected by ordinary cam or
stop devices. But a spool has not an invariable length from its
center or barrel to its circumference. The inner surface of the two
ends flare out a little, so that the outside layers of thread are
longer than those beneath them. This renders it necessary that the
length of the alternate movement of the thread-guide and slide-bar
should be slightly and continuously increased from the first or
inside layer to the last or outside layer. The device for effecting
this change of extent of lateral movement is the thing which
requires most inventive skill in the construction, of the machine.
Conant evidently supposed that he was the first to contrive a
device of this kind, which, in his patent, he calls a "pattern
cam," or "traverse changer." But in this he was mistaken;
spool-winders had long been in use in England, with the right and
left hand screw device for giving the thread-guide an alternate
backward and forward movement, both in hand machines and in
automatic machines driven by power, and in two of the latter --
Wibberly's, patented in 1853, and Young's, patented in 1848 --
traverse changers were used for the same purpose as in Conant's
machine.
Besides the regulation of the alternate movement of the
thread-guide to correspond with the variable length of the layers
of thread on the spool, it was also necessary, or at least
desirable, that there should be some device for stopping the
machine, or the winding of the thread, when the spool was full.
This was effected in a certain way by Conant in his machine, and
had been effected in different ways by Wibberly and Young in their
machines. It is unnecessary here to go into a description of the
various devices used. Enough has been said for a general
understanding of the claims made in Conant's patent.
The court below held that the defendants had infringed the first
and third claims of the patent, and it cannot be seriously
contended that any other claims were infringed. The first and third
claims of the patent were as follows:
"First. The combination, substantially in the manner
hereinbefore set forth, of a traverse changer, with right and left
hand screws, and with nuts which are alternately in gear with
Page 140 U. S. 492
such screws, the combination operating as a whole substantially
in the manner and for the purpose herein described."
"Third. I claim a stop motion, substantially such as described
herein, for causing the machine to come to rest when a spool is
filled, in combination with automatic apparatus, substantially such
as set forth, for regulating the length of motion and change of
direction of a motion of a guide through which thread is delivered
onto a bobbin or spool."
These claims are for combinations. The first claim is for a
combination of a traverse changer, right and left hand screws, and
nuts alternately in gear with such screws, the combination
operating substantially in the manner and for the purpose
described. This combination has three elements, and a specific mode
of operation. The third claim is for the stop motion in combination
with the apparatus described and combined in the first claim.
From this review it is apparent how uncertain and unsatisfactory
is the statement made by Conant in his testimony that "the part of
my machine called the
traverse changer' was the same in the
first set of drawings as it is in present use." It fails entirely
to show that prior to the 22d of July, 1858, he ever had or ever
exhibited any drawings of the invention described in the first or
third claim of the patent. We conclude, therefore, that there is no
proof on which reliance can be placed that Conant made his alleged
invention before the publication of Weild's patent in England.
After Weild's patent was introduced into the case, showing with
certainty the date of its publication, and such date anterior to
the issue of Conant's patent, it was incumbent on the plaintiffs,
in rebuttal, to show, if not with equal certainty, yet to the
satisfaction of the court, that Conant's invention preceded that
date. St. Paul Plow Works v. Starling, ante, 140 U. S. 184,
decided at this term.
It is also clear that Conant was not a pioneer in this
department of invention, and that he must be held strictly to the
terms of his patent, and was entitled only to the specific form of
device described and claimed therein, and the evidence is very
clear to the effect that the defendants never used such
Page 140 U. S. 493
device. It is unnecessary for us to enter into an examination of
the evidence on this subject. We are satisfied that the
complainants had no case on which to ground a decree, and that the
bill of complaint ought to have been dismissed.
The decree is reversed, and the cause remanded wit
directions to enter a decree dismissing the bill of complaint, and
taking such further proceedings as may be in conformity with this
opinion.