l. It is the claim, not the specifications, that measure the
grant of a patent. P.
316 U. S.
145.
2. A disclaimer under the Patent Law, R.S. § 4917, which
attempts to add new elements to a claim and thereby changes the
character of the claim, is invalid, even though in other respects
it narrows the claim. P.
316 U. S.
147.
122 F.2d 292 affirmed.
Certiorari, 314 U.S. 604, to review the affirmance of a judgment
dismissing a suit for infringement of a patent.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit brought in the District Court for infringement of
two claims of a patent issued to one Holdsworth and assigned to the
petitioner. One defense pleaded by the respondents was that
Holdsworth was not the original inventor. When a patentee,
"through inadvertence, accident, or mistake, and without any
fraudulent or deceptive intention . . . , has claimed more than
that of which he was the original or first inventor . . . ,"
Rev.Stat. § 4917, 35 U.S.C. § 65, preserves for him or
his assignee
Page 316 U. S. 144
"all that part which is truly and justly his own, provided the
same is a material or substantial part of the thing patented." The
method prescribed for saving the patent in part is "disclaimer of
such parts of the thing patented" as the patentee or his assignee
"shall not choose to claim." After the respondents answered, the
petitioner filed disclaimers in the patent office with respect to
the two claims in suit, purporting to narrow their scope in
accordance with the statutory authorization. The defendants then
moved for summary judgment on the pleadings pursuant to Rules 12(c)
and 56(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Their grounds,
among others, were that the revised claims added new elements not
recited in the original ones, and represented an effort to give the
old patent a new scope not previously contemplated and never passed
upon in the light of the prior art by the patent office. The
District Court found that the disclaimers did import new elements
not included in the original claims, and held that they rendered
the claims invalid, relying upon our decision in
Altoona Publix
Theaters v. American Tri-Ergon Corp., 294 U.
S. 477. Accordingly, it entered summary judgment for the
defendants. The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed. 122 F.2d
292.
As we read the opinion of the court below, it affirms the
proposition that, where a disclaimer attempts to add a new element
to a claim, the disclaimer is invalid even though it may also make
the revised claim narrower than the original. We granted
certiorari, 314 U.S. 604, because of alleged conflict with
decisions on the question in other circuits. [
Footnote 1]
The patent in suit here is for a wall, to be used as a partition
between rooms or on the inner side of the walls of the building
itself. The necessary parts are a piece
Page 316 U. S. 145
of metal to be fastened to the ceiling; another to be fastened
to the floor; upstanding channel iron supports running between the
top and bottom members; metal lathing to be fastened by wires to
the skeleton wall in order that plastering may be supported.
The specifications describe and drawings illustrate (1) a top
angle iron member with a perforated surface or flange hanging
downward so as to fit into slots at the top of the upstanding
irons; (2) recesses in the base member providing a snug fit for the
bottom part of the upstanding channel irons. The two claims in
controversy are printed in the margin. [
Footnote 2] As the courts below pointed out, it is these
claims, not the specifications, that afford
Page 316 U. S. 146
the measure of the grant to the patentee. [
Footnote 3]
"Out of all the possible permutations of elements which can be
made from the specifications, he reserves for himself only those
contained in the claims."
122 F.2d 292, 294. The foregoing features appearing in the
specifications are not set out in the claims themselves; the claims
do not indicate in any way that these features were essential parts
of the combination for which the patent was issued. On the
contrary, Holdsworth asserted that his specifications in general
showed only a "preferred embodiment" of his invention, and, with
respect to the ceiling member in particular, stated: "I do not wish
to be limited to an angle iron for completing the top of the metal
construction."
The disclaimers, however, purported to make these two features
essential parts of the claimed combination. One disclaimer
substituted for part of one of the original general claims a
description of a "ceiling member [which] comprises a vertical
depending perforated flange, one side of which is overlapped by
metal lathing," and the other disclaimer substituted for part of
another original general claim a description of a
"base member . . . composed of a longitudinal strip having
recesses to receive the lower ends of the webs of channel wall
supports, the flanges of the channel wall supports overlapping the
base members adjacent the recesses."
Limiting ourselves, as we must, to the original claims to
determine the nature of the combination covered by the patent when
it was granted, and comparing that combination with the one
purportedly embodied by the claims after the disclaimer, we can
only conclude that the revised patent includes new elements which
were not present in the original.
Page 316 U. S. 147
The petitioner's argument is that the statute authorizes any
disclaimer which actually narrows the claim, and that its
disclaimer would have the requisite narrowing effect because it
would restrict the claims to cover the combination only when the
features described in the disclaimers were present.
But, in
Altoona Publix Theaters v. American Tri-Ergon Corp.,
supra, 294 U. S.
489-490, the test which the petitioner argues for here
was rejected. Although this Court recognized that an effect of the
disclaimer in controversy in the
Altoona case was "in one
sense to narrow the claims," it concluded that the disclaimer
statute
"does not permit the addition of a new element to the
combination previously claimed, whereby the patent originally for
one combination is transformed into a new and different one for the
new combination."
The Holdsworth patent was for a structure composed of a
combination of familiar elements. If there was novelty, it
consisted in the combination.
"A combination is always an entirety. In such cases, the
patentee cannot abandon a part and claim the rest, nor can he be
permitted to prove that a part is useless, and therefore
immaterial. He must stand by his claim as he has made it. If more
or less than the whole of his ingredients are used by another, such
party . . . has not used the invention or discovery patented. With
the change of the elements, the identity of the product
disappears."
Schumacher v. Cornell, 96 U. S.
549,
96 U. S. 554.
This Court has explicitly recognized that the disclaimer statute
cannot be invoked to justify such a change.
Vance v.
Campbell, 1 Black 427,
66 U. S. 429.
And here, as in the
Altoona case, the revised claims
change the combination set out in the original claims. The
disclaimers do more than delete a "distinct and separable matter .
. . without mutilating or changing what is left standing;" they
change the character of the claimed invention, and are therefore
unauthorized
Page 316 U. S. 148
by the disclaimer statute.
Hailes v. Albany Stove Co.,
123 U. S. 582,
123 U. S.
587.
If an alteration of one of the essential elements of a claimed
combination were permissible at all, it would be under the reissue
statute, Rev.Stat. § 4916, 35 U.S.C. § 64, which grants
rights only from the date of reissue and after consideration by the
patent office.
Altoona Publix Theaters v. American Tri-Ergon
Corp., supra, 294 U. S. 491.
To permit such substantial alterations under the disclaimer
statute, which, where applicable, gives effect to the revised
claims from the date of the original issue without any
consideration by the patent office, would be contrary to the policy
of the patent laws. In the words of Mr. Justice Bradley, it would
permit "a man . . . by merely filing a paper drawn up by his
solicitor, [to] make to himself a new patent."
Hailes v. Albany
Stove Co., supra, 123 U. S. 587.
Cf. 56 U. S.
Fiske, 15 How. 212,
56 U. S. 219.
It would also retroactively create possibilities of innocent
infringement where no one would reasonably have suspected them to
exist.
The courts below properly decided that the attempted disclaimers
here invalidated the claims in controversy. Accordingly, the
judgment is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
See, e.g., Payne Furnace & Supply Co. v.
Williams-Wallace Co., 117 F.2d 823;
Cincinnati Rubber Mfg.
Co. v. Stowe-Woodward, Inc., 111 F.2d 239.
[
Footnote 2]
"6. A wall construction for a room having a floor and a ceiling,
said wall construction including a base member and a ceiling
member, said wall construction also including upstanding wall
supports whose height is less than the maximum vertical distance
between said base member and said ceiling member, said upstanding
wall supports being located between said base member and said
ceiling member, said wall supports being vertically movable
relative to said base member and to said ceiling member when said
wall supports are assembled with said base member and said ceiling
member,
and means operative to prevent any substantial tilting
movement of said wall supports from their predetermined upstanding
position."
"7. A wall construction for a room having a floor and a ceiling,
said wall construction including a base member and a ceiling
member, said wall construction also including upstanding wall
supports whose height is less than the maximum vertical distance
between said base member and said ceiling member, said upstanding
wall supports being located between said base member and said
ceiling member, said wall supports being vertically movable
relative to said base member and to said ceiling member when said
wall supports are assembled with said base member and said ceiling
member,
said base member and said ceiling member being shaped
to provide means which are operative to prevent any substantial
tilting of said wall supports from their predetermined upstanding
position."
Italics have been added to mark those portions in which the two
claims differ from each other.
[
Footnote 3]
Rev.Stat. § 4888, 35 U.S.C. § 33, requires that the
applicant for a patent "shall particularly point out and distinctly
claim the part, improvement, or combination which he claims as his
invention or discovery."
See Paper Bag Patent Case,
210 U. S. 405,
210 U. S. 419;
Mahn v. Harwood, 112 U. S. 354,
112 U. S.
360-361.