The invention patented to Henry A. Adams by letters patent No.
132, 128, dated October lo, 1872, for a new and useful improvement
in cornshellers, is a substantial and meritorious one, well worthy
of a patent, and is infringed by machines manufactured under sundry
letters patent granted to Harvey Packer.
When, in a class of machines widely used, it is made to appear
that, after repeated and futile attempts, a machine has been
contrived which accomplishes the result desired, and a patent is
granted to the inventor, the courts will not adopt a narrow
construction fatal to the grant.
While it is undoubtedly established law that complainants in
patent cases may give evidence tending to show the profits realized
by defendants from use of the patented devices, and thus enable the
courts to assess the amounts which the complainants are entitled to
recover, yet it is also true that great difficulty has always been
found, in the adjudicated cases, in applying the rule that the
profits of the defendant afford a standard whereby to estimate the
amount which the plaintiff is entitled to recover and in defining
the extent and limitations to which this rule is admittedly
subject.
Such a measure of damages is of comparatively easy application
where the entire machine used or sold is the result of the
plaintiff's invention; but when, as in the present case, the
patented invention is but one feature in a machine embracing other
devices that contribute to the profits made by the defendant,
serious difficulties arise.
The record shows that the complainant did not seek to recover a
license fee, nor did he offer any evidence from which his damages
could be computed. He relied entirely on the proposition that the
amount which he was entitled to recover could be based on the
profits realized by the defendant from the sale of the patented
invention, and the amount of such profits he claimed to have shown
by evidence tending to show what certain third companies were
alleged to have made from the sale of similar devices in similar
cornshelling machines.
Held that he could recover only
nominal damages.
On the 14th day of May, 1886, Henry A. Adams filed in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of
Illinois a bill of complaint against the Keystone
Page 151 U. S. 140
Manufacturing Company, a corporation of the State of Illinois,
and Thomas A. Galt, J. B. Patterson, George S. Tracy, and E. L.
Galt, officers and managers of the said company, complaining that
the defendants were infringing his rights as the patentee and owner
of letters patent No. 132,128, granted on October 15, 1872, by the
United States to him as the original and first inventor of a
certain new and useful improvement in cornshellers. The bill
contains the usual averments, and prayed for an account and an
injunction. On August 2, 1886, the defendants filed a joint answer
admitting that letters patent had been issued to the complainant as
alleged, denying that said patent described any new or patentable
invention, alleging that the said alleged invention had been
anticipated in numerous other specified letters patent, and denying
that the machines made and sold by the defendant company were
infringements of any rights possessed by the complainant.
A replication was duly filed, evidence was taken, and argument
had, the result of which was that on June 30, 1888, the court
entered an interlocutory decree sustaining the validity of the
patent, finding an infringement, directing an account, and
appointing a master to state the same. Afterwards, on June 21,
1889, the master filed a report awarding the sum of $27,620 to the
complainant, being the amount of the profits he found to have
accrued to the defendants from their use of the patented machines,
to which report exceptions were filed. On February 5, 1890, a final
decree was entered, overruling the exceptions to the master's
report, decreeing the payment by the defendant company of the sum
of $27,620 and costs, and dismissing the bill for want of equity as
against Thomas A. Galt, J. B. Patterson, George S. Tracy, and E. L.
Galt.
From this decree, an appeal was taken to this Court.
Page 151 U. S. 142
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the court.
Prior to the invention patented in 1872 by Henry A. Adams, a
well known defect in cornshellers consisted in the clogging or
choking of the chute through which the ears of corn descended to
the sheller. As the ears would approach the throat of the machine,
they were liable to stop and wedge against each other. This
sometimes necessitated the stopping of the machine in order to
break the clog in the feed or chute, and usually the services of an
attendant were required to clear the chute and break the clog by
punching the ears with a stick.
The object of the Adams invention was to remedy this defect, and
the device invented is described in the first claim of the patent
in the following terms:
"The combination with a cornsheller of a series of wings,
wheels, or projections so arranged on a shaft as to revolve in the
same direction which the corn is running and so placed relative to
the throat as to force into the machine all misplaced or hesitating
ears, substantially as specified."
Resorting to the specification, we find the following
description of the invention:
Page 151 U. S. 143
"This invention relates to an improvement upon the cornsheller
patented by Augustus Adams, as described in his letters patent No.
54,659, dated May 15, 1866. In said patented cornsheller, a winged
shaft is placed above the openings into the sheller, and is
revolved oppositely to the direction of the entering corn in such a
manner that the said wings strike the upper ear if two ears attempt
to enter the throat at once, and throw said upper ear back into
position to descend properly, but I have discovered that the ear so
thrown back retards the feed, inasmuch as the following ears are
likely to override the ear so thrown back, and the difficulty is
thus continued."
"In the present invention, I propose to overcome this objection
by forcing all the ears, as they approach the throat, to pass
rapidly out of the way into the sheller, and to this end I arrange
a shaft above the throat, with a series of wings, wheels, or
projections, to revolve in the same direction as the entering corn,
so as to force the corn rapidly forward into the sheller, which is
capable of shelling all the corn that can be forced through the
throat. By this means, I avoid any chance of clogging the feed
under ordinary circumstances."
That the patented device is useful, and successfully overcomes
the choking or clogging that interfered with the operation of
cornshellers as previously constructed is clearly made out in the
case. The evidence is positive as to this point, and also to the
effect that the application of the invention dispensed with the
extra attendant, whose duty it was to remove the clog by using a
stick or fork, and increased the ordinary capacity of the machines.
It is also made to appear that the invention has gone into general
use.
While it is true that the mere fact that a device has gone into
general use and has displaced other devices which had previously
been employed for analogous uses does not establish in all cases
that the later device involves invention within the meaning of the
patent laws, yet such fact is always of importance, and is entitled
to weight when the question is whether the machine exhibits
patentable invention.
Smith v. Goodyear Dental Vulcanite
Co., 93 U. S.
495.
We therefore agree with the court below that
"the change
Page 151 U. S. 144
was a substantial and meritorious one, and one which was well
worthy of a patent by reason of the improvement which it produced
in the operative effect of the cornsheller."
We also concur in the reasoning and conclusion of the court
below respecting the novelty of the invention. While it is true
that the device patented by Augustus Adams, the father of the
present patentee, in May, 1866, was intended to effect the same
purpose, and used likewise a revolving shaft with wings or
protuberances, yet the mode of operation was entirely different.
The theory of the earlier machine was to prevent the clogging of
the ears of corn in the throat of the sheller by driving back some
of the ears and thus keeping them from entering the sheller
simultaneously. But it seems that this interrupted the continuous
flow of the ears into the sheller, and retarded the operation of
shelling.
Another patent alleged as an anticipation was that granted to
Augustus Adams August 6, 1861, No. 1861, and which is asserted to
contain a rotating shaft with little wheels fastened thereon having
teeth or prickers on their faces. This shaft, however, is located
underneath the chute down which the ears of corn descend, and the
evidence shows that this device did not operate so as to prevent
clogging. On the contrary, the clogging of the feed in this machine
required the attention of one man all the time. This was the defect
which the same patentee, Augustus Adams, sought to obviate by the
device patented by him in 1866.
It must be admitted that both of these patents granted to
Augustus Adams -- one in 1861, the other in 1866 -- describe
mechanical contrivances closely resembling the invention in
question, patented by H. A. Adams, October 15, 1872. There is
present in all three machines a rotating shaft with spurs or wings,
and the purpose sought to be effected is the same.
But as we have seen, when the test of practical success is
applied, the conclusion is favorable to the last patent.
Where the patented invention consists of an improvement of
machines previously existing, it is not always easy to point out
what it is that distinguishes a new and successful machine from an
old and ineffectual one. But when, in a class of
Page 151 U. S. 145
machines so widely used as those in question, it is made to
appear that at last, after repeated and futile attempts, a machine
has been contrived which accomplishes the result desired, and when
the Patent Office has granted a patent to the successful inventor,
the courts should not be ready to adopt a narrow or astute
construction fatal to the grant.
The question of infringement is readily disposed of. The
defendant, the Keystone Manufacturing Company, manufactures and
sells machines made under certain patents granted to Harvey Packer,
and it is claimed that because in these machines the ears of corn
do not drop down a chute to the point where they pass into the
throat of the sheller, but are brought directly to the shelling
devices by carriers, such difference in the mode of bringing the
corn to be operated on by the shelling devices distinguishes the
machines. But we agree with the court below that there is nothing
in the H. A. Adams patent which restricts his device to
cornshellers where the ears are fed into a chute through which they
drop to the throat of the sheller. It is equally well adapted to be
used in that form of machine where the chute is dispensed with and
where the ears of corn are brought by other means to the throat of
the machine. What we have to compare is the forcing device in the
respective machines, and as we find that the defendant uses a
spiked shaft at the entrance to the throat of his machine,
revolving in the same direction in which the corn is running, for
the purpose of urging or compelling the ears to enter the sheller,
we cannot hesitate to hold it an infringement of the complainant's
device.
It may be proper to say that there is a feature of the Packer
machines, having reference to its operation after the corn has
passed beyond the reach of the picker shaft, not found in the
Adams, which seems to be a further improvement in the art of
cornshelling and which may have justified the granting of a patent
for such improvement, though, of course, such a question is not now
before us.
These views justify the decree of the court below so far as it
declares the validity of the patent sued on and its infringement by
the defendant. But we are unable to sustain that
Page 151 U. S. 146
decree in overruling the exceptions to the master's report and
in adjudging, in accordance with the finding of the master, the
payment by the defendant company to the plaintiff of the sum of
twenty-seven thousand six hundred and twenty dollars.
The record shows that the complainant did not seek to recover a
license fee, nor did he offer any evidence from which his damages
could be computed. He relied entirely on the proposition that the
amount which he was entitled to recover could be based on the
profits realized by the defendant from the sale of the patented
invention, and the amount of such profits he claimed to have shown
by evidence tending to show what certain third companies were
alleged to have made from the sale of similar devices in similar
cornshelling machines.
The reasoning of the master and of the court below on this
subject can be made clearly to appear by the following extracts
from the opinion of the learned judge:
"The complainant, to establish the extent of the defendant's
profits, called witnesses familiar with the cost and selling price
of the Sandwich, Joliet, and Marseilles machines, and showed what
the profits of these manufacturers were on the different sizes of
machines made by them, and what proportion of these profits were
fairly attributable to the defendant's device. No proofs were
introduced by either party as to the actual profits realized by the
defendant company, but it was evidently assumed by the master that
the machines of the defendant were so near like those of the other
companies in their material, form, and cost of construction that
the profits of defendant on machines made and sold by it must have
been substantially the same as the profits made by these other
manufacturers."
"Here are competing manufacturers making the same kind of
machine for the same market, and the natural conclusion is that
they would pursue substantially the same business methods and
realize about the same profits."
While it is undoubtedly established law that complainants in
patent cases may give evidence tending to show the profits realized
by defendants from use of the patented devices, and thus enable the
courts to assess the amounts which the complainants
Page 151 U. S. 147
are entitled to recover, yet it is also true that great
difficulty has always been found, in the adjudicated cases, in
applying the rule that the profits of the defendant afford a
standard whereby to estimate the amount which the plaintiff is
entitled to recover and in defining the extent and limitations to
which this rule is admittedly subject.
Such a measure of damages is of comparatively easy application
where the entire machine used or sold is the result of the
plaintiff's invention, but when, as in the present case, the
patented invention is but one feature in a machine embracing other
devices that contribute to the profits made by the defendant,
serious difficulties arise.
It is unnecessary in this opinion to review the numerous cases
-- some at law, others in equity -- wherein this Court has
considered various aspects of this question. It is sufficient to
say that the conclusions reached may be briefly stated as follows:
it is competent for a complainant who has established the validity
of his patent and proved an infringement to demand, in equity an
account of the profits actually realized by the defendant from his
use of the patented device; that the burden of proof is on the
plaintiff; that where the infringed device was a portion only of
defendant's machine, which embraced inventions covered by patents
other than that for the infringement of which the suit was brought,
in the absence of proof to show how much of that profit was due to
such other patents, and how much was a manufacturer's profit, the
complainant is entitled to nominal damages only.
Seymour v.
McCormick, 16 How. 450;
Rubber Co.
v. Goodyear, 9 Wall. 788;
Mowry v.
Whitney, 14 Wall. 620;
Elizabeth v. Pavement
Co., 97 U. S. 126.
In the case last named, it was said:
"It is unnecessary here to enter into the general question of
profits recoverable in equity by a patentee. The subject as a whole
is surrounded with many difficulties which the courts have not yet
succeeded in overcoming. But one thing may be affirmed with
reasonable confidence -- that if an infringer of a patent has
realized no profit from the use of the invention, he cannot be
called upon to respond for profits. The patentee in such case
Page 151 U. S. 148
is left to his remedy for damages. It is also clear that a
patentee is entitled to recover the profits that have been actually
realized from the use of his invention."
In
Garretson v. Clark, 111 U.
S. 120, this Court quoted with approval the statement of
the rule made in the court below by Mr. Justice Blatchford:
"The patentee must in every case give evidence tending to
separate or apportion the defendant's profits and the patentee's
damages between the patented feature and the unpatented features,
and such evidence must be reliable and tangible, and not
conjectural or speculative."
Tilghman v. Proctor, 125 U. S. 136, is
an important case, in which many of the earlier cases were
reviewed, and it was there said:
"The infringer is liable for actual, not for possible, gains.
The profits, therefore, which he must account for are not those
which he might reasonably have made, but those which he did make by
the use of the plaintiff's invention -- or in other words the
fruits of the advantage which he derived from the use of that
invention over what he would have had in using other means then
open to the public and adequate to enable him to obtain an equally
beneficial result. If there was no such advantage in his use of the
plaintiff's invention, there can be no decree for profits, and the
plaintiff's only remedy is by an action at law for damages."
In the light of these decisions, there was error in the court
below not in any formal disregard of the rule restricting the
plaintiff's recovery to the profits actually realized, but in
permitting the plaintiff to prove not the defendant's profits, but
those realized by other companies. This was in effect showing what,
in the opinion of the master and the court, "he might reasonably
have made, and not those which he did make."
The fallacy of this application of the rule is obvious, for
nothing is more common than for one manufacturing concern to make
profits where another, with equal advantages, operates at a
loss.
The learned judge seems to have thought that the course of the
defendant in not himself disclosing the condition of his business
justified the master in estimating his profits upon
Page 151 U. S. 149
the basis of those of other similar establishments. But, as we
have seen, the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff. He relied,
notwithstanding defendant's objections, on incompetent and
irrelevant evidence, and the decree in his favor, insofar as it
awards more than nominal damages, cannot be sustained.
The decree of the court below is
Reversed, the costs in this Court to be paid by the
appellee, and this cause is remanded, with directions to enter a
decree for nominal damages, with costs.