A greater degree of liberality and a wider range of equivalents
are permitted where the patent is of a pioneer character than when
the invention is simply an improvement, although the last and
successful step in the art theretofore partially developed by other
inventors in the same field.
The patent involved in this case, for the unhairing of seal and
other skins, while entitled to protection as a valuable invention,
cannot be said to be a pioneer patent.
In making his claim, the inventor is at liberty to choose his
own form of expression and, while the courts may construe the same
in view of the specifications and the state of the art, it may not
add to or detract from the claim.
As the inventor is required to enumerate the elements of his
claim, no one is the infringer of a combination claim unless he
uses all the elements thereof.
Where the patent does not embody a primary invention, but only
an improvement on the prior art, the charge of infringement is not
sustained if defendant's machines can be differentiated.
This action was begun in the Circuit Court of the United States
for the District of New Jersey for the purpose of enjoining the
alleged infringement of certain letters patent of the United
States, issued to John W. Sutton, and bearing date of May 22, 1888,
number 383,258, for a certain new and useful invention or
improvement upon machines for plucking furs.
Page 198 U. S. 400
In the circuit court, a decree was rendered granting an
injunction, 120 F. 672; upon appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals
for the Third Circuit, this judgment was reversed and the cause was
remanded to the circuit court with directions to dismiss the bill.
123 F. 869.
The case was brought here upon writ of certiorari to review the
judgment of the circuit court of appeals.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The patent in controversy has been frequently sustained in the
federal courts (95 F. 474, 108 F. 82, 115 F. 498, and 115 F. 507),
and its validity is not contested here. The question presented to
us is one of infringement. The invention which is the subject
matter of the controversy relates to machinery for unhairing pelts,
and particularly, and perhaps, exclusively, so far as practical use
is concerned, sealskins or "coney" skins. The latter are skins of
French or Belgian rabbits which, under the name of "electric"
sealskins, have been put upon the market, and have been largely
sold and used as substitutes for the genuine sealskin. It is said
that only an expert can tell the difference between the finished
coney and the genuine sealskin.
It is disclosed in the testimony that sealskins, before they are
fit for the market, are required to be submitted to a process by
which the long hairs, sometimes called "water hairs," are separated
from the fur and clipped or plucked from the pelt. Up to about the
year of 1881, the removal of such hairs was effected by hand, the
pelt being stretched over the finger, by blowing down on the fur, a
part was made, and the hairs were clipped out by means of scissors.
This was necessarily a slow
Page 198 U. S. 401
and laborious process. An improvement was made in this art by
the Cimiottis, predecessors of the petitioner, by the introduction
of an air blast for the purpose of separating the fur, which
invention was the subject of a patent to them, number 240,007,
under date of April 12, 1881. In 1888, the Sutton patent in suit
was issued, in which was introduced a rotating brush apparatus for
the purpose of separating the fur, as will be hereinafter more
particularly shown. Of his invention, Sutton said in the
specifications;
"This invention relates to an improved machine for plucking
sealskins and other furs so as to remove the stiff water hair
therefrom without injuring the soft hair or wool of the same."
"The machine is more especially designed with a view to overcome
some of the defects and insufficiencies of the plucking machines
heretofore in use, and produce the plucking of the skins at the
lower parts of the neck and shoulders, where the hairs point
outwardly and backwardly and are the most difficult to pluck, as
they lie down close to the skin when the same is drawn over the
stretcher bar."
"My invention is further designed to dispense with a blast fan
or other air-forcing devices, and produce the removing of the water
hairs entirely by mechanical means, which are operated by power, so
that a quick and uniform plucking of the skin takes place."
"The invention consists of a machine for plucking seal and other
skins, which comprises a fixed stretcher bar, means for stretching
and intermittently feeding the skin over said stretcher bar, a
fixed card above the stretcher bar near the edge of the same, a
rotary separating brush that is intermittently moved up in front of
the stretcher bar, an oscillating guard below the stretcher bar, a
rotary cutting knife and a vertically reciprocating cutting knife
working in conjunction with the rotary knife for cutting off the
stiff projecting hairs, said rotary cutting knife being provided
with a card supported back of the knife, all of which parts are
operated from a common
Page 198 U. S. 402
driving shaft, so as to produce for each rotation of the same
the cutting off or plucking of the hairs projecting from that part
of the skin in front of the stretcher bar."
The invention was illustrated by certain drawings, some of which
are here given, which, together with the description, illustrate
the operation of the machine, so far as necessary for the purposes
of this case.
image:a
Page 198 U. S. 403
Referring to the drawings, the inventor says (in part):
"A represents the supporting frame of my improved machine for
plucking seal and other skins. On the frame A is supported a fixed
transverse stretcher bar, B, which is tapered to a narrow edge,
over which the skin to be plucked is stretched. The skin is applied
by tapes to the rollers B1 B1 which are intermittently actuated by
gear wheels operated by a pawl and ratchet wheel mechanism from the
driving shaft S, as customary in plucking machines of this class.
By the gear wheels and the pawl and ratchet mechanism, the skin is
fed intermittently for a small portion of its length over the front
edge of the stretcher bar, it being unwound from the upper and
wound up on the lower feed roller. Below the edge of the stretcher
bar is arranged a vertically reciprocating knife C, which moves in
slots or ways of fixed guideplates C1 and which is operated by
fulcrumed levers C2, the rear ends of which are engaged by cams C3
on a cam shaft, S1, that is supported above the driving shaft S in
suitable bearings of the frame A."
"In front of and at some distance from the stretcher bar B is
supported a shaft, D1, in bearings of the frame A, said shaft being
provided with radial arms
d d, to which the rotary knife D
is attached, which, in conjunction with the vertically
reciprocating knife C, serves to cut off the water hairs projecting
form that part of the skin in front of the edge of the stretcher
bar B. To the arms of the rotary knife D, and at some distance back
of the latter, is applied a carding brush, D2, which acts on that
part of the skin that is fed forward over the edge of the stretcher
bar immediately after the hairs of the next preceding section of
the skin have been cut off. The shaft D1 of the cutting knife D is
rotated from the cam shaft S1 by means of an intermediate
longitudinal shaft, S2, and two sets of miter wheels, D3, D4."
"Immediately above the stretcher bar B is arranged a stationary
card, E, which is attached to the ends of the stretcher bar B by
means of thumb screws. (Not shown in drawings.)
Page 198 U. S. 404
The points of the teeth of the card E are close to but do not
touch the surface of the skin, so that the hair and fur are both
straightened as the skin is fed forward. The teeth of the card E
hold down the fine fur, but permit the stiff hairs to stand up
between the teeth, owing to the slow forward movement of the skin,
which gives the hairs sufficient time to adjust themselves."
"Below the stretcher bar B is arranged a rotary separating
brush, F, which is supported in oscillating arms F1, that are
guided by pins
f, in arc-shape slots
f1 of fixed
guide plates
f2, as shown clearly in Figs. 1, 2, and 3,
the oscillating arms F1 being pivoted to horizontally reciprocating
connecting rods F2, which are provided with yokes
f3,
having anti-friction rollers at their rear ends, and acted upon by
cams F3 on the cam shaft S1, the cams being so shaped and timed
that the forward and upward motion of the brush F takes place at
the proper time."
"The brush F receives rotary motion from two belts,
f4,
which pass over pulleys
f5 on the shaft S1 and the brush
shaft, and which are kept taut by weighted idlers
f6, as
shown clearly in Fig. 1."
"The brush F is made of soft bristles, and is rotated at a speed
of one hundred and fifty revolutions per minute. The soft bristles
allow the stiff hairs to stand, while the quick motion of the brush
bends the soft hair in downward direction and brushes it below the
stretcher bar, so that it can be taken up and held in position by
the soft rubber wipers
g of an oscillating guard bar, G,
which moves in arc-shaped slots
g1 of the guide plates
C1."
The operation of the machine is thus described.
"The skin is placed in the machine by being attached to the feed
rollers and drawn tightly over the edge of the stretcher bar, so as
to lie close to the upper and lower surface of the same. The skin
is put in in such a manner that the head end is foremost. The stiff
hairs in seal skins point toward the tail, except at the lower part
of the neck and shoulders. These
Page 198 U. S. 405
parts are at the sides of the head end of the skin, as the skin
is split open at the under side. At these parts of the skin, the
hairs point outwardly and backwardly, and are the most troublesome
to cut or pluck, as they lie down close to the skin when it is
drawn over the stretcher bar. A sharp and quick rub over these
parts of the skin from the edge toward the center of the skin is
therefore necessary, so as to straighten up the hairs and present
them to the action of the cutting knives. When the skin is in
place, the stationary card E is drawn backward a few times over
that part of the skin that is upon the stretcher bar B, so as to
card back the fur and hair and produce thereby a parting of the fur
at that part of the skin then covering the edge of the stretcher
bar. One half of the fur upon that section of skin will, by the
parting, be kept above and the other half below the edge of the
stretcher bar. This permits the hair upon that section of the skin
in front of the edge of the stretcher bar to rise through the fur
and keep its place with less trouble than when more fur is acted
upon. When the fur and hair have been carded back by the card E,
the same is fastened to the stretcher bar by thumb screws. The card
is set back from the edge of the stretcher bar to a distance a
little more than one-half of the length of the fur for the purpose
of holding the fur and preventing it from moving forward until the
forward motion of the skin takes place. The card at the back of the
rotary knife passes then over the skin in front of the edge of the
stretcher bar and draws out all the fur and hair on that section,
so that the fur and hairs so drawn out assume their natural
positions -- that is, the positions which they would have if the
skin were drawn over the edge of the stretcher bar without anything
for holding back the fur and hair. As soon as the card at the back
of the rotary knife has passed over the section of the skin in
front of the stretcher bar, the rubbers are quickly moved over the
same toward the center, whereby the hairs that lie down sidewise
are raised and pointed outwardly, causing them to stand upright.
The rotary separating brush is then quickly
Page 198 U. S. 406
moved upward and forward and revolved in front of the skin at
the edge of the stretcher bar, so as to separate the fur from the
hairs, brushing down the former and leaving the stiff hair standing
out. The rotary separating brush is then quickly moved backward and
downward, so as to carry with it the separated fur, which is then
held in position by the oscillating guard that follows the brush
and carries the fur still farther back and holds it in position,
while the vertical knife is raised and shears off, in conjunction
with the rotary knife, the forward-projecting hairs, as shown in
Fig. 1. The separating brush, after it has accomplished its work,
is lowered sufficiently so as not to touch the skin at all, except
when it is in front of the working-edge of the stretcher bar. The
next section of the skin is now moved by the feed rollers over the
edge of the stretcher bar, and the same operation of the parts
produced by the next rotation of the driving shaft, and so on until
the skin is finished."
The great merit of this invention is said to consist in the use
of the brush, applied by means of the mechanism shown, so as to
brush down the fur, and permit the long hairs, which should be
removed, and which rise at the edge of the stretcher bar, when the
pelt is drawn over it, to be acted upon by the knives when the fur
is brushed away, so as not to be injured.
In determining the construction to be given to the claim in suit
which is alleged to be infringed, it is necessary to have in mind
the nature of this patent, its character as a pioneer invention or
otherwise, and the state of the art at the time when the invention
was made. It is well settled that a greater degree of liberality
and a wider range of equivalents are permitted where the patent is
of a pioneer character than when the invention is simply an
improvement, may be the last and successful step, in the art
theretofore partially developed by other inventors in the same
field. Upon this subject, it was said by this Court,
Westinghouse v. Boyden Power Brake Co., 170 U.
S. 537, quoted with approval in
Singer Co. v.
Cramer, 192 U. S. 265:
Page 198 U. S. 407
"To what liberality of construction these claims are entitled
depends to a certain extent upon the character of the invention and
whether it is what is termed in ordinary parlance a 'pioneer.' This
word, although used somewhat loosely, is commonly understood to
denote a patent covering a function never before performed, a
wholly novel device, or one of such novelty and importance as to
mark a distinct step in the progress of the art, as distinguished
from a mere improvement or perfection of what had gone before. Most
conspicuous examples of such patents are the one to Howe of the
sewing machine, to Morse of the electric telegraph, and to Bell of
the telephone. The record in this case would indicate that the same
honorable appellation might safely be bestowed upon the original
air-brake of Westinghouse, and perhaps also upon his automatic
brake. In view of the fact that the invention in this case was
never put into successful operation, and was, to a limited extent,
anticipated by the Boyden patent of 1883, it is perhaps an
unwarrantable extension of the term to speak of it as a 'pioneer,'
although the principle involved subsequently and through
improvements upon this invention became one of great value to the
public."
While it may be admitted that the Sutton patent was a distinct
step in the art, and is entitled to protection as a valuable
invention, nevertheless it cannot be said to be a pioneer patent in
any just sense. In the English Lake patent of 1881, of which more
will be said hereafter, there is doubtless a suggestion of the use
of brushes for the purpose of separating the fur from the long hair
to be removed. And so in Covert patent of 1884, which was the
subject of consideration by Judge Wheeler in the case of
Cimiotti Unhairing Co. v. Mischke, 98 F. 297. In that
case, it was said that Covert's patent had been mechanically, but
not commercially, successful, and that, in lieu of a rotating
separating brush, shown in Sutton's patent, Covert used a revolving
cloth-covered cylinder, and it was held that this was not
equivalent to the separating brush, and Sutton's invention was an
advance upon anything
Page 198 U. S. 408
theretofore shown. Of the Covert patent, Judge Coxe, in the
course of an able opinion sustaining the Sutton patent,
Cimiotti Unhairing Co. v. American Unhairing Machine Co.,
115 F. 498, 502, said:
"Covert came nearer than anyone else to a successful machine. He
had but one more step to take, and here he became bewildered and
went astray. He missed the apparently simple arrangement of the
rotary brush, which alone was necessary. It will not do to say that
the prior art showed such a brush. Every element of the combination
in controversy was unquestionably old, but there was nothing in the
prior art to suggest a rotary brush working in the environment
shown in the Sutton patent. There was nowhere a rotary brush making
a 'part' on a keen-edged stretcher bar and brushing the fur down
and out of the reach of the cutting knives during the moment
necessary to the removal of the stiff hairs. It is the presence of
this element in the combination which produces a new result and
entitles its originator to protection."
In the same case, Judge Wallace (p. 505), in his concurring
opinion, says:
"I do not think the machine of the Sutton patent a prodigious
advance upon that of the prior Covert patent, and I think a higher
degree of merit has been attributed to it than it deserves; but it
was enough of an advance to be patentable, and to deserve
protection against an infringing machine which appropriates
it."
Furthermore, it appears that, while the Cimiottis acquired an
exclusive license under the Sutton patent in 1888, the same was not
put into commercial use until the introduction of coney skins as a
substitute for sealskins, about the year 1890. During this time,
the Cimiottis were unhairing a large number of skins, and preferred
to continue to use the air-blast machine of their own invention
while paying tribute to Sutton. It was the introduction of the
coney industry in 1890 that gave stimulus to the use of such
mechanisms as those used by the Cimiottis and the respondent in
this case. We think it fair
Page 198 U. S. 409
to say that this record discloses an invention of merit,
entitled to some range of equivalents in determining the question
of infringement, but it is not one of those broad, initiative
inventions where original thought has been embodied in a practical
mechanism, which the courts have been ever zealous to protect, and
to which a wide range of equivalents has been accorded.
Due weight is given to the Sutton patent when it is given credit
for dispensing with the plate which Covert had in addition to the
brush, and which he supposed would carry down the fur away from the
cutting mechanism, but which Sutton has accomplished in giving, in
a measure at least, this added function to the brush of not only
parting the fur, but carrying it down and away in preparation for
the clipping by the knives. Anyone who accomplishes the same
purpose by substantially the same mechanism, using the elements
claimed in Sutton's patent, may be held to be an infringer.
Sutton has taken the step which marks the difference between a
successfully operating machine and one which stops short of that
point, and that advance entitles him to the protection of a
patent.
The argument here is confined, as to the alleged infringement,
to the eighth claim of the Sutton patent, which is as follows:
"8. The combination of a fixed stretcher bar, means for
intermittingly feeding the skin over the same, a stationary card
above the stretcher bar, a rotary separating brush below the same,
and mechanism, substantially as described, whereby the rotary brush
is moved upward and forward into a position in front of the
stretcher bar, substantially as set forth."
The elements of this claim are five in number: 1, a fixed
stretcher bar; 2, means for intermittently feeding the skin over
the same; 3, a stationary card above the stretcher bar; 4, a rotary
separating brush below the same; 5, mechanism whereby the rotary
brush is moved upward and forward into a position in front of the
stretcher bar, "substantially as set forth."
Page 198 U. S. 410
In making his claim, the inventor is at liberty to choose his
own form of expression, and while the courts may construe the same
in view of the specifications and the state of the art, they may
not add to or detract from the claim. And it is equally true that,
as the inventor is required to enumerate the elements of his claim,
no one is an infringer of a combination claim unless he uses all
the elements thereof.
Shepard v. Carrigan, 116 U.
S. 593,
116 U. S. 597;
Sutler v. Robinson, 119 U. S. 530,
119 U. S. 541;
McClain v. Ortmayer, 141 U. S. 419,
141 U. S. 425;
Wright v. Yuengling, 155 U. S. 47;
Black Diamond Co. v. Excelsior Coal Co., 156 U.
S. 611,
156 U. S. 617;
Walker, Patents § 349. This principle is particularly
important when we come to consider the "stationary card above the
stretcher bar" -- an element of the eighth claim.
The anticipating mechanism set up in this case is the so-called
English Lake patent of October, 1881. This patent has been the
subject of much adverse comment in the cases involving a
consideration of it. And it appears to have lapsed for nonpayment
of taxes in June, 1885, and not to have been a successful machine.
It may be the fact that the patent is not distinctly worded, and
that the drawing and specifications are somewhat confused. It does
appear, however, without contradiction in the record, that the
machine now used by the respondents was made in a large measure
from the drawings of the Lake patent. Mischke, one of the
respondents, was put upon the stand by the petitioners, and
testified that he made the changes in a short time from the Lake
patent, which resulted in the alleged infringing machine. The Lake
patent showed two brushes, whereas the respondents' machine has
dispensed with one and changed the position of the other. He also
admits to have changed the position of the cam and shortened the
crank arm as shown in the Lake machine. It seems to be the position
of the petitioners' expert that Mischke made the changes in the
Lake patent necessary to convert it into an operative machine by
adopting the controlling features of the Sutton patent. But,
whatever are the defects of the
Page 198 U. S. 411
Lake patent, the question here is, does the machine of the
respondents infringe the eighth claim of the Sutton patent? One of
the respondents' machines is in evidence, and we have carefully
examined it. Its general outline may be seen in the annexed copy of
the photograph in evidence:
Page 198 U. S. 412
image:b
Page 198 U. S. 413
The operation of the alleged infringing machine is such that,
when the power is applied for moving the stretcher bar, it is
carried forward to the revolving brush, and after the brush has
separated the fur from the hair, carried upwardly, to be acted upon
by the cutting knives. The reciprocating motion of the stretcher
bar from the brush to the knives is produced by the action of the
crank (operating with the cam) on the main shaft, as shown in the
photograph. At the same time, the mechanism for feeding the machine
is in operation, actuated by the same application of power. This
mechanism (shown in the photograph at the side of the respondents'
machine) consists of the pawl (attached to the main frame) and the
ratchet wheel (attached to the moving frame), turning when the pawl
engages therein, and acting with the worm gearing shown, to turn
the roll which is part of the feeding mechanism. The operation is
such that, when the stretcher bar is carried from the knives to the
brush in the return motion, the action of the pawl upon the ratchet
wheel, with the worm gearing, causes the roll to turn and the pelt
to be carried forward, the extent of the feed being regulated by
the adjustment of the pawl. By this means, the necessity of an
independently acting mechanism for the feeding apparatus is
avoided, and the operation simplified.
The Sutton device, as we have seen, has a stationary stretcher
bar; the respondents' mechanism has a movable stretcher bar. The
fixed stretcher bar, about which the other mechanism acts, is made
a distinct feature of the eighth claim. It is not present in the
respondents' mechanism, unless it is true, as argued, that the one
is substantially the equivalent of the other. It is said to make no
difference whether the knife and brush are carried to the stretcher
bar or the stretcher bar is carried to the knife and brush. This
might be true if the mechanisms were substantially the same, and
there was a mere transposition or substitution of parts. Such
changes would amount to an infringement. But, in determining
infringement, we are entitled to look at the practical
operation
Page 198 U. S. 414
of the machines. The other elements of the eighth claim are to
be used in connection with the apparatus shown in the Sutton
patent, substantially as described. If the device of the
respondents shows a substantially different mode of operation, even
though the result of the operation of the machine remains the same,
infringement is avoided.
Brooks v.
Fiske, 15 How. 212,
56 U. S. 221;
Union Steam Pump Co. v. Battle Creek Steam Pump Co., 104
F. 337, 343. In the latter case, Judge Severens, who delivered the
opinion of the court, after recognizing the doctrine that mere
change of the location of parts, if the parts still perform the
same function, did not take the structure without the bounds of the
patent, said:
"If, however, such changes of size, form, or location effect a
change in the principle or mode of operation such as breaks up the
relation and cooperation of the parts, this results in such a
change in the means as displaces the conception of the inventor,
and takes the new structure outside of the patent."
And see Kokomo Fence Co. v. Kitselman, 189 U. S.
8, in which case it was held that, where the patent does
not embody a primary invention, but only an improvement on the
prior art, and the defendant's machines can be differentiated, the
charge of infringement is not sustained.
In the case under consideration, the respondents have dispensed
with the fixed stretcher bar and have adopted a movable one,
operated by an entirely different mechanism, capable of
accomplishing a much larger amount of work within a given time. In
the circuit court of appeals, it was said to result in a double
working capacity and product. It does not seem to us to be a mere
transposition or substitution of parts; in the Sutton patent, the
stretcher bar being stationary, there are several mechanisms used
for operating the movable brushes and the clipping knives; a
different mechanism is used for operating the different parts which
are to be brought to the fixed stretcher bar in carrying out the
operation intended. In the respondents' machine, the same
application of power moves the stretcher bar and, by the
cooperation of the feeding apparatus
Page 198 U. S. 415
as above outlined, feeds the machine by bringing the pelt
forward at the same time actuating the knives, in practically one
operation. This seems to us to be a distinct mechanical departure,
as well as an advance upon the Sutton machine, when considered in
view of the results accomplished.
Moreover, if infringement could be otherwise sustained, the
decree must be affirmed because the eighth claim has made the
stationary card, shown at "E" in the drawing, an essential part of
the mechanism described. It may be that this card is unnecessary,
and that it was dropped from the later patents issued to Sutton;
but it is in this claim, and as was said by Judge Wallace in his
dissenting opinion in
Cimiotti Unhairing Co. v. Nearseal
Unhairing Co., 115 F. 507, 509, "the patent industriously
makes the stationary card, substantially as described, an element
of the claim." Of this card, the inventor said:
"Immediately above the stretcher bar B is arranged a stationary
card, E, which is attached to the ends of the stretcher bar B by
means of thumb-screws. (Not shown in the drawings.) The points of
the teeth of the card E are close to but do not touch the surface
of the skin, so that the hair and fur are both straightened as the
skin is fed forward. The teeth of the card E hold down the fine
fur, but permit the stiff hairs to stand up between the teeth,
owing to the slow forward movement of the skin, which gives the
hairs sufficient time to so adjust themselves."
He also says:
"The card is set back from the edge of the stretcher bar to a
distance a little more than one-half of the length of the fur, for
the purpose of holding the fur and preventing it from moving
forward until the forward motion of the skin takes place."
While it is said that the card does not touch the surface of the
skin, so that the hair and fur are both straightened as the skin is
fed forward, it is true that the teeth of the card in some measure
hold down the fine fur, and it is insisted that the mechanical
equivalent of this card is found in respondents'
Page 198 U. S. 416
machine in the compression bar, which also acts to hold down the
fur before it is carried to the separating brush. But this bar has
no carding feature to it, and cannot be made to perform the
functions of a card; it has no separate teeth, and is not a card or
the mechanical equivalent of one shown and described and made a
part of the eighth claim.
We think the circuit court of appeals was right in the
conclusion that the mechanism of the respondents was so materially
different from the Sutton patent as to avoid the infringement
alleged, and that an essential element of the eighth claim of the
Sutton patent was not used by the respondents.
Decree affirmed.