Action for damages for a violation of a patent for an
improvement on the cotton gin. The charge of the Circuit Court of
Massachusetts upon the facts in the case, was in favor of the
defendants, and the judgment in favor of the defendants on the
verdict of the jury was held to be correct.
The plaintiff in error instituted a suit for the recovery of
damages for the infringement of his patent for an improvement in
the use of cotton gins. The circuit court, on the verdict of the
jury, gave a judgment for the defendants. A bill of exceptions
having been tendered by the plaintiff to the charge of the court,
on the facts, in favor of the defendant, given by the court; the
plaintiff prosecuted this writ of error.
TANEY, CH.J., delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action by the plaintiff in error against the
defendants to recover damages for the infringement of a patent
right obtained by the plaintiff on 16 November 1839. The patent is
in the usual form, and the question before us depend upon the
construction of the specification, which is in the following
words:
"Be it known, that I, Eleazer Carver, of Bridgewater, in the
County of Plymouth and State of Massachusetts, have invented a
certain improvement in the manner of forming the ribs of saw gins
for the ginning of cotton, and I do hereby declare that the
following is a full and exact description thereof. In the cotton
gin as heretofore known and used, the fibers of the cotton are
drawn by the teeth of circular saws through
Page 41 U. S. 514
a grating formed of a number of parallel bars or ribs, having
spaces between them sufficient to allow the saws to pass, carrying
the fibers of the cotton with them (which are then brushed of by a
revolving brush), but not wide enough to let the seeds and other
foreign substances pass through. Above the saws, the ribs come in
close contact, thus forming a shoulder at the top of the space
between them. Various forms have been given to the bars or ribs
with a view to procure a free passage of the cotton, but the cotton
gin as heretofore made has been always subject to the inconvenience
of the grate's becoming choked by hard masses of cotton and motes,
or false seeds, collecting in the upper part of the spaces between
the ribs and impeding the action of the saws and also preventing
the mass of cotton which is drawn by the saws up to the top of the
spaces, but not drawn through them, from rolling back freely so as
to pass again over the saws as it should do."
"My improvement, which I am about to describe, is intended to
obviate these difficulties, and it consists in giving a new form to
the ribs composing the grate. Instead of making the ribs of a bar
of iron of equal thickness throughout so that the upper and under
surfaces shall be parallel, I so form the rib that at the part
where the saws pass through, carrying the cotton with them, the
space or depth between the upper and outer surface and the lower or
inner surface shall be greater than the thickness of the rib in
other parts has heretofore been or needs to be, and so great as to
be equal to the length of the fiber of the cotton to be ginned, so
that the fiber shall be kept extended between the ribs for about
its full length while it is drawn through them by the saws. This
mill of course requires either that the rib should be as thick at
that part as the length of the fiber or that the rib should be
forked or divided about that part so that the upper or outer
surface and the under or inner surface shall diverge to that
distance of each other, instead of being parallel, as formerly,
when the rib was made of one bar of uniform thickness. This under
or inner surface then takes a new direction upwards and slopes
towards the upper or outer surface until the two surfaces meet
above the periphery of the saw. This last-described part of the
under surface is fastened against the framework of the gin. The
operation of this improvement is that those fibers of
Page 41 U. S. 515
the cotton which are so firmly caught by the teeth of the saws
as to be disengaged from the mass of the cotton to be ginned are
drawn out to their full length, and pass clear through the grate,
and are then brushed off by the revolving brush, while the fibers
that are drawn into the grate, but not caught by the teeth of the
saws firmly enough to be carried quite through, are disengaged, and
pass up to where the under surface meets the upper surface, above
the saws, and finding no obstruction there, pass back out of the
grate, without choking it, and roll down again with the mass of
unginned cotton, and are caught below by the saws, and carried up
again, and so on, until all the fibers are drawn through."
The specification then proceeds to describe the invention more
particularly by referring to and explaining the drawings annexed to
it, showing the advantages of his improvement, the manner of
arranging the ribs in the gin, and the mode of inserting and
fastening them in the framework. This description could not be
comprehended without an extra drawing; nor is it necessary in order
to understand the questions of law in dispute between the parties;
it is therefore omitted. After giving this description, the
specification states the improvement, of which the patentee claims
to be the inventor, as follows:
"Having thus described my improved rib and its advantages, I now
claim as my invention and desire to secure by letters-patent the
increasing the depth or space between the upper or outer surface of
the rib and the lower or inner surface of it at the part where the
cotton is drawn through the grate so that it shall be equal to the
length of the fiber of the cotton to be ginned (whether this be
done by making the ribs thicker at that part or by a fork or
division of the rib or by any other variation of the particular
form), and I also claim as part of the said improvement the sloping
up of the lower or inner surface of the rib so as to meet the upper
or outer surface, above the saws, leaving, when the rib is inserted
into the frame, no break or shoulder between the two surfaces, but
a smooth and uninterrupted passage upwards between the ribs, as
above described."
At the trial in the circuit court, the plaintiff in error, after
having produced his patent with the schedule annexed to it, offered
in evidence, by the testimony of witness skilled in the
Page 41 U. S. 516
art, that the rib described in the plaintiff's specification was
a new and useful improvement; that the fastening of the rib to the
framework in the manner therein stated had nothing to do with the
ginning, but was only necessary to keep the rib firm; that the rib
of the defendants was, substantially in principle, like that of the
plaintiff, and operated in the same manner and produced the same
effect, and that in their opinion it differed from the plaintiff's
rib only by taking away a part which was wholly immaterial in the
operation of ginning.
The defendants then produced witnesses skilled in the art, who
testified that the ribs of the defendants did not substantially
operate in the same manner with the plaintiff's, but were different
in form and principle, and proceeded to state the particulars in
which they differed, and testified that the defendants' ribs were
entirely detached from the breast band and stood out in front of
it, like the bar of the "Edenton grate," which was known and in use
long before the plaintiff's, and that the front and back surfaces
of the defendants' ribs did not slope and meet at the upper end
above the saws as the plaintiff described his to do, and was not
shaped as the plaintiff's was exhibited and described in his
drawings, specification and claim.
"Whereupon, the defendants' counsel insisted that the ribs of
the defendants were, according to the whole evidence, substantially
different from those described and claimed by the plaintiff, not
only because, as the counsel alleged, it appeared by the whole of
said evidence that in the defendants' said ribs, no part of the
under surface sloped upwards, and met the upper surface above the
periphery of the saw, and was there fastened against the framework
of the gin, but also in the other particulars above described. But
the plaintiff's counsel insisted that said ribs were substantially
alike in all respects, and that in the rib of the defendants, the
under surface did, according to said evidence, in fact slope
upwards and meet the upper surface above the periphery of the saw,
but that it was not necessary to the plaintiff's invention as
described and claimed in his said specification, nor was it
essential to the said invention in fact that the under surface of
the rib should be fastened against the framework of the gin, where
the two surfaces meet above the periphery of the saw. "
Page 41 U. S. 517
"And the presiding judge who sat at the trial aforesaid did then
and there declare and deliver his opinion to the jury aforesaid as
follows,
viz., that to entitle the plaintiff to maintain
the action and issue aforesaid, on his part, it was necessary for
the jury to be satisfied that the defendants had substantially
violated and infringed the patent right of the plaintiff as set
forth and described in his patent. That if the defendants used only
such part of the said patented improvement as was known and used
before his supposed invention, it was no violation or infringement
thereof; that the improvement of the plaintiff, as specified and
summed by him, was in the following terms,
viz.,"
"I now claim as my invention and desire to secure by letters
patent the increasing the depth or space between the upper or outer
surface of the rib and the lower or inner surface of it at the part
where the cotton is drawn through the grate, so that it shall be
equal to the length of the fiber of the cotton to be ginned
(whether this be done by making the ribs thicker at that part, or
by a fork or division of the rib, or by any other variation of the
particular form), and I also claim as part of the same improvement
the sloping up of the lower or inner surface of the rib so as to
meet the upper or outer surface above the saws, leaving, when the
rib is inserted into the frame, no break or shoulder between the
two surfaces, but a smooth and uninterrupted passage upwards
between the ribs, as above described."
"That the true construction and interpretation of the
specification and summing is that it claims and states as a
substantial part of the improvement not only the increasing the
depth or space between the upper or outer surface of the rib and
the lower or inner surface thereof at the part where the cotton is
drawn through the grate, so that it shall be equal to the length of
the fiber of the cotton to be ginned, in the manner above stated,
but it also claims and states as a substantial part of the same
improvement the sloping up of the lower and inner surface of the
rib, so as to meet the upper or outer surface above the saws,
leaving, when the rib is inserted in the framework, no break or
shoulder between the two surfaces, but a smooth and uninterrupted
passage upwards between the ribs, as described in the same
specification, and that thereby the fixing or fastening of
Page 41 U. S. 518
the ribs against the framework, in the manner stated in the
specification, is made by the patentee a substantial part of the
said improvement, so that if the defendants do not fix or fasten
the ribs of their machine against the framework, in the manner
stated in the specification, either at all, or substantially in the
same manner as the patentee, or fix or fasten it only in a manner
known and used before the plaintiff's supposed invention, the
defendants are not guilty of any violation or infringement of the
plaintiff's patent, as stated in the declaration, and with this
declaration the said presiding judge left the said cause to the
jury, who thereupon, then and there, returned a verdict for the
defendants."
It will be seen by this statement that the question of law
presented by the exception is a very narrow one, and depends
altogether on the construction of the specification. And it is
difficult to make it understood without the aid of the drawing or
model. The plaintiff considers the invention secured by the patent
to consist of the rib only -- and of that part of the rib which, by
its form, increases the depth between its upper or outer surface
and the lower or inner one at the place where the cotton is drawn
through the grate. He insists that the sloping up of the rib so as
to meet the upper or outer surface of the saw, as well as the
manner of fastening it against the framework of the gin, as
mentioned in his specification, are not substantial or essential
parts of his invention.
The question is whether they are claimed as such by his patent.
The circuit court held that they were so claimed, and we think the
opinion was clearly right. They are expressly stated by the
patentee to be a part of the improvement for which he asks a
patent, and he describes particularly the smooth and uninterrupted
passage upward between the ribs, leaving no break or shoulder
between the two surfaces, when the ribs were inserted in the frame,
as one of the advantages resulting from his improvement. And this
smooth and uninterrupted surface must necessarily depend not merely
on the form of the rib, but also in the manner in which it is
connected with the framework.
Page 41 U. S. 519
The rib in question is not an invention to be used by itself,
but an improvement upon that portion of the cotton gin, and is to
be used in connection with other parts of a machine which has been
publicly known and used a long time. There must therefore be some
mode of fastening and connecting it with the other machinery, and
the effect produced by the rib necessarily depends in a great
degree upon the mode in which it is arranged and connected with the
saw and the other parts of the machine. He specifies the mode and
claims it as part of his invention. According to his statement, his
improvement consisted in the form of the rib which increased the
depth between the upper and lower surface at the part where the
cotton is drawn through the grate in the sloping up so as to meet
the upper or outer surface, above the saws, and in the smooth and
uninterrupted passage produced by the manner in which it was
connected with the frame. These three things he represents as
constituting his improvement, and they are all combined together in
his specification and claim, making together one invention to be
used in connection with the other and old machinery of the cotton
gin. And the drawing which accompanies his patent shows the manner
in which the rib is sloped and arranged with the saw and annexed to
the framework in order to attain the object of the invention.
Now the end to be accomplished is not the subject of a patent.
The invention consists in the new and useful means of obtaining it.
And if the defendant had, by a rib of a substantially different
form or differently arranged with the saw or not fastened at all to
the frame, made an improvement which more effectually secured the
object intended to be accomplished by the plaintiff's patent, it
would be difficult to maintain that it could not be lawfully used
because it produced the same result with the plaintiff's
invention.
The usefulness of the rib depends altogether, as described in
the specification, upon the manner of its connection with the
periphery of the saw and with the framework. And if, therefore, as
was said by the circuit court, the rib made by the defendant was
not fastened at all to the framework or in a manner substantially
different from the plaintiff's or in a manner known and used before
the plaintiff's invention, it was no
Page 41 U. S. 520
infringement of his patent. And whether the manner was the same
in substance or not, was a question of fact for the jury, and as
they found for the defendant, we must assume that it was
substantially different.
The judgment of the circuit court is therefore
affirmed.