This case involves merely questions of fact, and the Court finds
that letters patent No. 106,165, granted Aug. 9, 1870, to William
G. Hyndman, for an "improvement in rotary blowers," infringe the
first, second, third, and fourth claims of reissued letters patent
No. 3570, granted July 27, 1869, to P. H. Roots and F. M. Roots,
for an "improvement in cases for rotary blowers," upon the
surrender of original letters No. 80,010, dated Aug. 11, 1868.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
The drawings of the machines of the respective parties therein
referred to are as follows:
image:a
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image:b
image:c
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image:d
MR. JUSTICE SWAYNE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a case in equity. The bill is founded upon two patents.
One of them is reissue No. 3570. It bears date on the 27th of July,
1869. The original of this reissue -- No. 81,010 -- bore date on
the 11th of August, 1868. The other patent is dated June 21, 1870.
It is numbered 104,585, and was issued to the appellees as the
assignees of Hardy and Wood, the alleged inventors.
The bill was dismissed, as to this latter patent, at the
hearing, and no appeal was taken. It may therefore be laid out of
view, and will not be again adverted to. The other original patent
and the reissue are for improvements in cases for rotary
blowers.
The bill charges infringement, and prays for an injunction and a
decree for profits and damages. The answer denies the novelty of
the alleged invention, denies that the reissue is for the same
thing as the original patent, denies that the complainants were
joint inventors, if inventors at all, and denies infringement.
Such were the issues made by the appellant in the court
Page 97 U. S. 227
below. That court found all of them in favor of the appellees,
and decreed accordingly.
Here the same points have been insisted upon.
In relation to all of them, except the one last mentioned, we
deem it sufficient to say that we concur with the court below. We
think the evidence leaves no room for a reasonable doubt as to
either of them. The questions are questions of fact. No legal
proposition is involved. To analyze the testimony in order to
vindicate our conclusions would serve no useful purpose. Our
further remarks will be confined to the subject of infringement.
That is the hinge of the controversy between the parties.
It is difficult to convey clear ideas of complex machinery by
any description that can be given. Drawings are more effectual, and
models are still more so. If the model be full and accurate, it is
indeed the thing itself in miniature.
The appellees, as the case is before us, confine their claims to
improvements in the shell or case of blowers. The internal
mechanism is in no wise in question. They say the objects of their
invention were to avoid the necessity of boring out the interior
concave surfaces of the case, and of facing off or planing the head
plates, and to render it practicable to cast the entire outside
casing in one piece. They describe two modes of making the blower
heads true. One is to form them into planes at right angles to the
shafts of the abutments, parallel with each other, equidistant from
each other in all their parts, by giving to the inner surface of
each plate a coating of plaster of Paris, hydraulic cement, or
other material having like plastic properties. This is suited to
blowers of the smaller sizes. When this method is used, the plaster
of Paris may be put on while in a plastic condition by means of a
sweep made to turn in the boxes of the blower shafts, so that it
will shape the linings of the ends as may be desired.
The second method is to use inside or secondary metal plates
made in their outlines to conform to the interior of the case, and
to face or plane them off so as to make them perfectly true. A
space is left between these secondary plates and the ends of the
case which is filled with plaster of Paris of the proper
consistency. After the plaster has set, the plates are secured
Page 97 U. S. 228
in their places in any suitable manner. In making the inner
surface of the arcs of the case true, the usual way of the
patentees is to work from the center of the shaft journals as fixed
points.
They give the inner part of the concaves a coating of plaster of
Paris and work it into the proper shape and proportions while it is
setting by means of a sweep attached to a shaft turning in the
journal boxes of the blower, as in the case of the head plates when
plaster is applied to them. While the plaster or other similar
material is becoming set, they slowly move the sweep, so as to give
the coating exactly the required shape and thickness. Sometimes,
instead of using the sweep, they use a cylinder of a diameter
corresponding with the sweep or the circles to be described by the
pistons. The cylinder is hung on a central shaft resting in the
journal boxes. The plaster is then poured into the intervening
space between the cylinder and the case and the "metal guards,"
which are small projections on the inner surface of the case
intended to support the coating. When the plaster is set, the
cylinder is removed, and leaves the required arcs of a circle.
They do not cast very large blowers in a single piece. Those
ordinarily used by blacksmiths and medium sized foundry blowers are
so cast.
If the case of a rotary blower be cast in one piece, it is
necessary that the concave arcs of the case should be of such
dimensions, and so placed on one side of the plane of the axis of
the shafts, as to allow the removal of enough of the head plates of
the case to afford a sufficient opening for the introduction or
removal of the abutments without interfering with any part of the
case otherwise than to remove or replace the boxing which holds the
shafts. By making the concave arcs a little more than a quarter of
a circle and placing them chiefly on one side of the plane of the
shafts, the opening on the opposite side of the plane is
correspondingly increased, allowing ample room for putting in and
taking out the abutments and also allowing the reduction of the end
plates on the open side of the plane, where they would otherwise
interfere. If the concave arcs were materially increased and
divided near equally on the
Page 97 U. S. 229
two sides of the plane of the shafts, the abutments of a case so
made could not be taken out or replaced without taking the case
apart, and the case would need to be made accordingly.
The claims are:
1. A rotary blower case, the interior of which is made true by
means of plaster of Paris, or its equivalent, applied as
described.
2. Such a blower case, the ends of which are made true by the
application of plaster, or a like material, as described.
3. Such a blower case, the concaves of which are made true by
the use of such material, applied as described.
4. Such a blower case, having the concave arcs in combination
with the end plates, so arranged as to admit of the abutments being
introduced or removed without requiring the case to be taken apart,
as described.
5. A rotary blower case, the ends of which are made true by the
use of secondary inside metal plates, as and for the purposes
described.
6. The metal guards in the inside of the concaves, as
described.
The specification sets forth in strong terms the great value of
the invention claimed.
There is a marked difference between a fan blower and a rotary
blower. They operate on different principles. The former makes from
one hundred to three hundred revolutions per minute; the latter
from three thousand to six thousand in the same time. The appellees
are the original inventors of the rotary blower. Such is their
proof, and there is none to the contrary. Its value in the useful
arts is evinced by its tested capabilities and the ardor of this
litigation. No patent of the appellees is in any wise involved in
this controversy but the one we have analyzed.
The appellant has a patent also. It bears date on the 9th of
August, 1870, and is No. 106,165. It covers both the shell or case
and the inner machinery. The claims are for:
"1. The blower case A, made to support the abutting pistons, the
circle or sweep of which in the surrounding case is lined with a
cement of beeswax and resin or brimstone, retained
Page 97 U. S. 230
without the use of guards or ledges; all substantially as herein
set forth."
"2. The pistons B B, composed of the blades C C, guards E E,
concavities D D, with the lining applied in a liquid condition,
while heated, to form a continuous contact of the blade surfaces,
all substantially as herein set forth."
The specification refers three times to the invention of the
appellees. It says with respect to the shell,
"the upper section is cast in one piece, without the ordinary
guards or ridges used to hold a lining, such as is set forth in the
patent of P. H. and F. M. Roots, dated Aug. 11, 1868. . . . I am
aware blower cases have been made, all cast in one piece, such as
are shown in the patents of P. H. and F. M. Roots. I do not,
therefore, claim a blower case broadly. I am also aware that
plaster of Paris has been used in lining blower cases, as described
in the patents of P. H. and F. M. Roots of Aug. 11, 1868. I do not,
therefore, claim the lining of blower cases broadly. What I do
claim is"
&c. He then sets forth his claims as we have quoted
them.
It is difficult to read the specifications of the parties in the
presence of the models and resist the conviction that the appellant
has carefully studied the invention of the appellees as described
in their reissue, not with any view to its improvement, but solely
for the purpose of evasion. It is not, however, what the appellant
has said in his specification with which we have to do in this
controversy. What he has done affecting the rights of the appellees
is the material point, and we pass to the consideration of that
subject. His patent is not without value as an auxiliary in that
process.
The appellees' first, second, and third claims with respect to
the alleged infringement may be considered together. They are for
truing the interior of the case by means of plaster of Paris or its
equivalent, applied as described; for truing the end plates in the
same way, and for truing the concaves or arcs of the circles by the
same means. The material to be used is "plaster of Paris, hydraulic
cement, or other material having the properties referred to." These
properties are plasticity when the material is applied and firmness
and brittleness afterwards. The reducing or truing process is also
included
Page 97 U. S. 231
in these claims. The appellant did all that is embraced in these
claims. What was done differs in nothing from the process and other
means employed by the appellees except that he used a compound of
glycerine and litharge instead of plaster of Paris. The former is a
mere equivalent for the latter. Both are plastic when applied. Both
become indurated afterwards. No chemical change takes place in
either, and time alone is necessary to produce the desired hardness
of the substance. The compound used by the appellant is clearly
within the alternative terms of the specification of the appellees
in this respect. The proofs in the record on all these points are
so conclusive that it would be a waste of time to pursue the
subject further. The appellant is guilty of infringing these
claims.
The essence of the fourth claim is a combination of the arcs
with the end plates, so arranged as to permit the abutments to be
put in or taken out without taking the case apart. The peculiar
features and advantages of what is embraced in this claim are
clearly set forth in the testimony in the record.
The end plates have no contraction at the opening for the
admission of air. They therefore permit, without further change so
far as they are concerned, the removal of the pistons. The concave
arcs are reduced to less than half a circle, and so provide at the
air entrance a space sufficient to permit the introduction or
withdrawal of the pistons without disturbing the case. The
introduction of the sweep, and its necessary operation upon the
plastic material, are also thus provided for. The air entrance,
which is bounded by the ends of the arcs and the end plates,
permits the lining to be renewed at pleasure. The case, by reason
of the contraction of the arcs and the configuration of the end
plates, permits the requisite shaping of the plastic material by
sweeps or otherwise so as to make the arcs perfectly true and the
end linings exactly at right angles with them. All the difficulties
previously experienced in the construction of double cylinder
rotary blowers are thus obviated. This is regarded as an important
result.
Turning now to the appellant's shell or case, the evidence
Page 97 U. S. 232
shows that the concaves or arcs are less than half a circle in
extent. The revolving pistons act against them in combination with
the end plates, which have no interior projections. The entire case
is such as to admit of its being cast in one piece and to admit
also of the introduction and removal of the pistons without the
case's being taken apart. It is of such a character as to permit in
its complete state the introduction of the sweep, and its full
operation upon the plastic material intended to be applied to the
arcs and the end plates. This is regarded as one of the most
valuable features of the appellees' invention. The appellant's case
is cast in two parts. There is a joint or division on the axial
plane through the journal boxes. It is in proof that this is
neither reasonable nor necessary. Where the case is large and too
heavy for convenient handling, it may be useful, and for such cases
it is suggested in the patent of the appellees. The patent of the
appellant prescribes it for all his cases, and he so makes them.
Why is this, and what are his object and purpose? We can imagine
none but to gather where another had sown, and escape by simulation
and subterfuge the consequences which the act of Congress has
prescribed for the unlawful appropriation of such property. There
is scarcely a thought expressed in the work of the appellees, so to
speak, that is not found substantially transferred or closely
copied in that of the appellant.
The points of identity are palpable and conclusive. The proofs
leave no doubt in our minds that the appellant is guilty of the
infringement of this claim as well as of the first, second, and
third. This controversy does not concern the appellees' fifth and
sixth claims.
Decree affirmed.