The second claim in letters patent No. 333,240, for improvements
in dress forms, issued October 12, 1880, to John Hall, and by him
assigned to Charles A. Morns,
viz.,
"2. In combination with the standard
a and ribs
c, the double braces
e2, the sliding blocks
f1 and
f2, and rests
h1 and
h2,
substantially as and for the purposes set forth,"
when read and interpreted with reference to other and broader
claims which were made by the patentee and were rejected by the
Patent Office, must either be held to be invalid for want of
invention or must be so limited in view of that action by the
Patent Office, and in view of the prior state of the art, as not to
be infringed by a combination leaving out one of the elements of
the patentee's device.
A claim in letters patent cannot be so construed as to cover
what was rejected by the Patent Office on the application for the
patent.
The combination of old elements which perform no new function,
and accomplish no new results, does not involve patentable
novelty.
The end or purpose sought to be accomplished by a device is not
the subject of a patent, but only the new and useful means for
obtaining that end.
In equity to restrain the infringement of letters patent. The
case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
These two causes, which were heard at the same time, are
substantially alike in every particular affecting their proper
Page 150 U. S. 222
determination, and will therefore be considered together,
although they come from different jurisdictions. They are suits for
the infringement of letters patent No. 233,240, for improvements in
dress forms, issued October 12, 1880, to John Hall, and by him
assigned to Charles A. Morss, the appellee. In one cause, the
appellants, William H. Knapp and Charles L. Knapp, are the
manufacturers of the articles alleged to infringe, while the
appellants in the other cause, Samuel N. Ufford & Son, are
merely the selling agents of the manufactured articles. In both
cases, it was decreed below that the second claim (the only one in
controversy) of the patent was infringed. From these decrees the
present appeals are prosecuted.
The invention relates to improvements in dress forms by means of
which every part of the device is rendered adjustable, so that it
may be applied to a dress of any size or style and fill it out
perfectly, in order that trimming may be placed upon it. The device
described in the patent by which this result is to be accomplished
consists of upright ribs of thin, springy material, assembled
around a central standard, which supports the whole structure. The
ribs are connected near their top and bottom extremities to braces
or stretchers, which extend obliquely from the ribs to the
standard, and are there concentrated, and hinged on small, movable
collars, which encircle the standard. There is a single set of
braces at the bottom, while at the top there is a double set. This
double brace consists of a series of arms or stretchers, part of
which radiate from the upper movable collar obliquely downward to
the ribs, to which they are fastened at a point near where the
other part of the arms or stretchers are fastened. The lower series
of stretchers extend obliquely downward from the point on the ribs
where they are fastened to a collar separate from, and independent
of, the upper collar. Following each collar, which is loose, is a
rest which may be secured to the standard at any point desired by a
set screw, thus enabling the whole structure to be adjusted and
revolve upon the standard.
The second claim of the patent reads as follows:
"2, In combination with the standard,
a, and ribs,
c, the double braces,
Page 150 U. S. 223
e2, the sliding blocks
f1 and
f2, and
rests,
h1 and
h2, substantially as and for the
purposes set forth."
The defenses set up by the answer were invalidity in the patent
and noninfringement, and in support of the former defense, the
following patents were relied on: To C. W. Wilson, May 3, 1870, No.
102,638; to F. A. Balch, September 17, 1867, No. 68,831; to S. B.
Ferris, August 27, 1878, No. 207,351; to C. Franke, September 7,
1875, No. 167,394.
The theory of the invention is that as the collar at the bottom
of the standard is raised, the braces will force the ribs to expand
to the circumference limited by the tape or elastic affixed to the
lower extremities of the ribs. Should the collar be pushed above
the mean center of expansion, which is attained when the braces are
at right angles with the standard, the tendency to expand would
cease, and contraction would begin. But the proper degree of
expansion produced by the lower braces is never exceeded in
expanding the dress form. At that point, the skirt hangs loosely on
the form, and the resistance is so slight that this brace is of but
little use. However, the lower brace is not one of the elements of
the combination of the second claim. But at the upper part of the
form, where expansion and opposition to contraction are alike
desired, the mechanical difficulty resulting from pushing the
single brace beyond the mean center of expansion is avoided by
using double braces. If the ribs were unrestrained, either by a
tape or a skirt of any fabric, the double braces would not be
necessary, but as the chief purpose of the invention is to give a
proper contour to what is called the "hip portion" of the dress
form, the double braces are most essential. Inasmuch as the ribs at
their tops are confined by a tape to a circumference corresponding
with the size of the waist, it is reasonably clear that if they
were expanded to their utmost tension at the hip portion, a single
set of braces would afford but slight resistance to contraction.
But by the use of the double set of braces, with the arms fastened
to the ribs at or near the same point, and diverging obliquely in
opposite directions to collars some distance apart, a triangle is
formed, which is well known to offer the most powerful resistance
to contraction of any device used in the
Page 150 U. S. 224
whole range of mechanics. The opposing force brought to bear by
pushing the lower collar up, and the upper collar down, operates on
the ribs to give shape to the hip portion of the skirt form closely
resembling the human figure, and to oppose all tendency to
contraction, caused either by the ribs being too closely confined
by the tape or by the tight adjustment of the skirt to the contour
of the dress form.
In determining the proper construction to be placed upon the
second claim of the patent, it is necessary to consider the action
of the Patent Office upon the original application of the patentee,
and also examine the prior art. In his original application, the
patentee sought to secure the following claims:
"1. A dress form consisting, essentially, of a central standard,
one or more series of adjustable ribs, and corresponding series of
braces or stretchers hinged to one or more runners or sliding
blocks upon said standard, and having their outer ends connected
with said ribs, whereby the dress form may be expanded and
contracted, substantially as and for the purpose set forth."
"2. In combination with the standard,
a, rest,
h, sliding block,
f, and braces,
e, the
ribs,
c, and elastic band,
d, substantially as
and for the purpose described."
These broad and general claims were rejected by the Patent
Office for the following reasons:
"The first claim is rejected on patents 202,713, Everett, April
23, 1878, and 207,351, Ferris, August 27, 1878, both in dummies and
hangers."
"There is no novelty in the elements of the second claim in view
of the above patents, in connection with the elastic band shown in
75,864, Keffer, March 17, 1868 (blocking and stretching hats),
which band is there used in the same way and for the same purpose
as in applicant's device."
The patentee acquiesced in the rejection, and thereupon accepted
his patent with its specific claims, the second of which is alleged
to be infringed.
It is well settled that the second claim must be read and
interpreted with reference to the rejected claims and to the prior
state of the art, and cannot be so construed as to cover
Page 150 U. S. 225
either what was rejected by the Patent Office,
Shepard v.
Carrigan, 116 U. S. 593;
Sutter v. Robinson, 119 U. S. 530, or
disclosed by prior devices.
A brief reference to the prior state of the art will serve to
show what limitations should be placed upon the claim in
question:
In 1878, a patent was issued to George W. Everett for a skirt
exhibitor in which there was a standard and a waistband, divided
into two segments. These segments were expanded and adjusted by a
slide and socket mechanical device. The standard and adjustable
waistband perform the same function as the standard and tape in the
Hall patent. Vertical ribs were afterwards added to the waistband,
but the owner of the patent did not claim such ribs as a part of
his invention.
In 1870, a patent was granted to C. W. Wilson for an adjustable
form the manufacture of hoopskirts. There is in this device also a
standard and an adjustable waistband, but in addition to these
elements it was said there might be "as many ribs as are necessary
hinged to the waistband." These ribs are hinged near their lower
ends to jointed braces, whose inner ends are hinged to a block
sliding on the standard, and the position of the sliding block is
determined by a set screw. In the specification of this patent, it
is stated that
"in operation, the adjustable band block may be drawn out to
make any size waistband for skirts without its being necessary to
increase the circumference of the bottom of the form, and by simply
moving the sleeve upon the shaft (standard) up or down, the size of
the skirt is uniformly increased or diminished."
This invention contains all of the elements, substantially, of
the Hall patent except the double braces. It has the standard,
ribs, sliding blocks, and rests. It also has the brace-expanding
mechanism for the lower part, which performs the same function as
that in the Hall patent.
It appears so far that all of the elements of the claim have
been shown to have been anticipated except that of the double
braces. But it is manifest that this element is not new. It was the
principal novelty employed in the patent granted to
Page 150 U. S. 226
S. B. Ferris, August 27, 1878, for a corset exhibitor. The
invention consists of a central standard, with a block at the top
and also the bottom. Between these blocks is an umbrella-like
framework the braces of which extend beyond the point of junction
with the outside ends from the standard, and, pressing against the
interior of the corset, impart shapeliness to it. The ribs or
braces are triangulated on the standard the same, in principle, as
the double braces in the Hall patent.
In the patent issued to F. A. Balch, in 1867, for a winding reel
are shown the double braces, the standard, the sliding collars, and
the rest with a set screw, comprising all of the expanding
mechanism of the Hall patent. The outer ends of the braces are
hinged on a blade which may be made as long as desired, and it
would require only mechanical skill to adapt this reel to the
device patented by Hall. Such an adaptation, produced by simply
lengthening the ribs, would have secured the accomplishment of the
same result in exactly the same way.
But aside from these prior patents, the state of the art is
perhaps more clearly illustrated in the device used for opening and
shutting a common umbrella. In this device are found all the
elements of the combination of the second claim. There are the
standard, the collar with the rest, the double braces, and the
ribs. Because the upper ribs are elongated so as to hold the fabric
which covers them, it cannot be said that the double braces are
different in principle and operation from those used in the patent
in controversy. It would require but ordinary mechanical skill to
convert a skirt form into an umbrella, or an umbrella into a skirt
form like that described in the Hall patent.
It is conceded by the appellee that all of the elements of the
second claim are old except ribs,
c, which, it is claimed,
constitute the new and patentable feature of the Hall invention;
but from the foregoing brief review of the prior art, we think it
clearly shown that the ribs,
c, do not constitute any new
feature. They are shown in the Everett invention; in the Wilson
patent, where it is said there may be as many as necessary,
Page 150 U. S. 227
and in the common umbrella; also, in the Ferris device for a
corset exhibitor, where the functions performed by the ribs
constitute the chief feature of the invention, and in the Balch
reel short ribs are used, which might be lengthened to adapt the
device to the dress form patented by Hall.
But it is urged on behalf of the appellee that the Hall patent
differs from all previous devices in presenting a structure which,
as an entirety, is radially expansible in all directions from a
common center, so as to preserve the symmetry of the form, whatever
its diameter may be, and by the combination of the patent a new and
useful result is thus attained, which involves patentable novelty.
In support of the validity of the patent, the principle stated in
Loom Co. v. Higgins, 105 U. S. 591,
is invoked. In that case, it was laid down by the court as a
general rule, though not an invariable one, "that if a new
combination and arrangement of known elements produce a new and
beneficial result never attained before, it is evidence of
invention." But we do not consider the Hall patent as coming within
the principle there laid down, for the reason that the standard,
the double braces, sliding blocks on the standard, and the rests to
hold the blocks, as well as the ribs, which constitute the
combination of the second claim, were not only found in the prior
devices, but they separately, and in combination with such devices,
performed the same function, and operated in substantially the same
way, as in the Hall patent. The combination of old elements which
perform no new function and accomplish no new results does not
involve patentable novelty.
Mosler Safe Co. v. Mosler,
127 U. S. 361;
Hailes v. Van
Wormer, 20 Wall. 353,
87 U. S. 368;
Reckendorfer v. Faber, 92 U. S. 347;
Pickering v. McCullough, 104 U. S. 310,
104 U. S. 318;
Peters v. Hanson, 129 U. S. 541.
The use and purpose sought to be accomplished by the Hall patent
was the radial expansion of the dress form, but it is well settled
by the authorities that the end of purpose sought to be
accomplished by the device is not the subject of a patent. The
invention covered thereby must consist of new and useful means of
obtaining that end. In other words, the subject of a patent is the
device or mechanical means by which the desired
Page 150 U. S. 228
result is to be secured.
Carver v.
Hyde, 16 Pet. 519;
Le Roy v.
Tatham, 14 How. 156;
Corning v.
Burden, 15 How. 252;
Burr v.
Duryee, 1 Wall. 531;
Fuller v. Yentzer,
94 U. S. 299.
Tested by these authorities, the validity of the patent in
question must be ascertained not from a consideration of the
purposes sought to be accomplished, but of the means pointed out
for the attainment thereof, and if such means, adapted to effect
the desired results, do not involve invention, they can derive no
aid or support from the end which was sought to be secured. All
that Hall did was to adapt the application of old devices to a new
use, and this involved hardly more than mechanical skill, as was
ruled in
Aron v. Manhattan Railway Co., 132 U.
S. 85, where it was said:
"The same device employed by him [the patentee] existed in
earlier patents. All that he did was to adapt them to the special
purpose to which he contemplated their application by making
modifications which did not require invention, but only the
exercise of ordinary mechanical skill, and his right to a patent
must rest upon the novelty of the means he contrived to carry his
idea into practical application."
There is another test as to the validity of the second claim: if
the Balch, Everett, Wilson, or Ferris patents, or even the
umbrella, were subsequent in date to that of the Hall patent, they
would constitute an infringement thereof, for the rule is well
established "that which infringes, if later, would anticipate, if
earlier."
Peters v. Active Mfg. Co., 129 U.
S. 530,
129 U. S. 537;
Thatcher Heating Co. v. Burtis, 121 U.
S. 286,
121 U. S. 295;
Grant v. Walter, 148 U. S. 554;
Gordon v. Warder, 150 U. S. 47.
If, however, the patent could be sustained at all, it would have
to be restricted and confined to the specific combination described
in the second claim, as indicated by the letters of reference in
the drawings, and each element specifically pointed out is an
essential part thereof.
Duff v. Sterling Pump Co.,
107 U. S. 693;
Newton v. Furst & Bradley Co., 119 U.
S. 373;
Bragg v. Fitch, 121 U.
S. 478;
Crawford v. Heysinger, 123 U.
S. 589;
Dryfoos v. Wiese, 124 U. S.
32.
Page 150 U. S. 229
For, if not so restricted by the letters of reference, the
effect would be to make the claim coextensive with what was
rejected in the Patent Office.
If any validity could be conceded to the patent, the limitation
and restriction which would have to be placed upon it by the action
of the Patent Office, and in view of the prior art, would narrow
the claim, or confine it to the specific structure therein
described; and, as thus narrowed, there could be no infringement on
the part of appellants if a single element of the patentee's
combination is left out of the appellants' device.
Sargent v.
Hall Safe & Lock Co., 114 U. S. 63;
Eddy v. Dennis, 95 U. S. 560;
McCormick v.
Talcott, 20 How. 402.
The appellants' dress form, which is alleged to infringe the
combination of elements particularly described in the second claim
of the Hall patent, does not contain several of the specific
elements of said claim. It has a tubular standard within which is a
loose, vertical, rotatable shaft, extending above the end of the
standard. Surrounding this shaft are several ribs. The shaft is
screw-threaded at one portion with a left-hand thread, and at a
portion above the left-hand thread there is a right-hand
screw-thread. On each of these portions is a corresponding nut, so
that the shaft, being rotated in one direction, will cause the nuts
to approach each other, or, rotated in the opposite direction, the
nuts will separate. Above the screw-threaded nuts is a fixed and
immovable collar. To this collar and the movable nuts are hinged
the braces, which are similar to those described in the Hall
patent. By turning the top of the standard either to the right or
to the left, the whole form is adjusted by one movement.
Comparing this device with the combination described in the Hall
patent, it is found that there is a standard, double braces, and
ribs, but there are no sliding blocks or rests, and the function of
the standard is doubled. There is no sliding block whatever at the
top of the upper braces, and the lower collar is a screw-threaded
nut resting upon corresponding screw-threads in the standard. It is
clear that the sliding blocks and the rests -- two of the five
elements specifically described in the Hall patent -- are not
employed in the dress form of the appellants.
Page 150 U. S. 230
If the Hall patent was a valid pioneer invention, the doctrine
of equivalents might be invoked with regard to the sliding blocks
and rests, and thus a different question would be raised; but,
being confined to the specific elements enumerated by letters of
reference, it is neither entitled to a broad construction nor can
any doctrine of equivalents be invoked so as to make the
appellants' device an infringement of the second claim in
controversy.
Our conclusion, therefore, is that the Hall patent is invalid,
and, further, if it could be sustained at all, it would have to be
in the most restricted form, and, thus restricted, it is not
infringed by the appellants. It follows, therefore, that in each
case, the judgment of the courts below must be
Reversed, and the cause remanded, with direction to dismiss
the bill.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, with whom was MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS,
dissenting.
In the construction of his device, Hall took the principle of
the common umbrella and of an adjustable reel for unwinding yarn,
and, by adding to it ribs and elastic bands, adapted it to an
entirely different purpose -- namely to the construction of an
adjustable dress form which has largely supplanted those previously
in use. While the changes made were not radical in their character,
I think they were such as to involve invention within the rule
stated in
Loom Co. v. Higgins, 105 U.
S. 580,
105 U. S. 591;
The Barded-Wire Patent, 143 U. S. 275;
Gandy v. Main Belting Co., 143 U.
S. 587,
143 U. S. 12
Sup.Ct. Rep. 598, and Topliff v. Topliff,
145 U.
S. 156, and that the change made by the defendants in
using a collar fixed to the standard for the upper sliding block,
and a nut and threaded standard for the lower sliding block and
rest of the Hall patent, was in fact the substitution of well known
equivalents, and does not exonerate them from the charge of
infringement.