
    HAMMOND BUCKLE CO. v. GOODYEAR RUBBER CO. et al.
    (Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
    October 17, 1893.)
    ¡Patents for Inventions — Infringement—Improvement in Shoe Clasps.
    In view of the prior state of the art, the first claim in letters patent No. 301,8S4, granted July 15, 1881, to Hammond & King, for improvement in shoo clasps for arctic shoes, viz.: “In combination, the catch plate, the tongue pivoted directly to the tongue plate, and the tongue plate extending rearward of the pivot, and in contact with the catch plate when the parts are engaged,” can only he sustained by reading inlo it the limitations that the tongue should be pivoted directly to the tongue plate, below its face, and between its bifurcated ends, and that the tongue should have a broadened position to combine with the elastic arms of the bifurcated ends, and, as thus modified, the invention is described in claim 4 of the same patent; and the patent is not infringed by a shoo clasp which has no broadened tongue, the lock of the tongue being secured by the use of flattened, laterally projecting pivots.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Connecticut.
    In Equity. Ilill by the Ilammond Bnclde Company against the Goodyear Rubber Company and others to restrain the infringement of letters patent No. 301,884, issued July 15, 1884, to Ilammond & King, for an improvement in shoe clasps for arctic overshoes. Decree for complainant. Defendants appeal.
    Reversed.
    C. II. Duell, for appellants.
    George W. Hey, for appellee.
    Before WALLACE and LACO-MBE, Circuit Judges.
   LACOM BE, Circuit Judge.

The patent is for an improvement In shoe clasps of the kind used to fasten together the flaps of arctic overshoes. The particular claim is as follows;

“(I) In combination, the catch plate, the tongue pivoted directly to the tongue plate, and the tongue plate extending rearward of the pivot, and in. contact with the catch, plate when the parts are engaged, all substantially as described."

The patent contains three other claims, but they are not in question in this suit

The defendants’ clasp is made under letters patent No. 418,924, January 7, 1890, to John Nase.

The patent sued upon was construed by Judge Shipman in Hammond Buckle Co. v. Hathaway, 48 Fed. Rep. 305, 834, and the validity of this claim sustained. Application for a preliminary injunction in the suit at bar was made before the same judge. It was denied for the reason that infringement was not plain, but the validity of the claim was again sustained. Subsequently, when the case came before Judge Townsend at final bearing, be followed tbe decision of Judge Sbipman in tbe Hathaway Case, construing tbe patent, finding in sucb new evidence of anticipation as was not before tbe court in tbe earlier case no reason for reaching a different conclusion. He also found defendants’ clasp to be an infringement of tbe claim, as thus construed.

Tbe testimony shows a great variety of shoe clasps very similar in character. There has been much litigation between tbe owners of competing devices, (32 Fed. Rep. 791; 38 Fed. Rep. 602, 604; 41 Fed. Rep. 519, and 47 Fed. Rep. 452,) and an examination of tbe various patents introduced in proof, and of tbe opinions above cited, shows beyond a doubt that at tbe time tbe patent in suit issued tbe field of invention in that art was an extremely narrow one, and that a patent for a new combination of tbe well-known mechanical elements which went to make up shoe clasps of that kind, viz. tbe tongue plate, tbe tongue, and the catch plate, could only be sustained under a construction which would restrict its claims to tbe precise form and arrangement of parts described in tbe specification. Tbe claim, as finally granted by the patent office, is broader than tbe state of tbe art would warrant. Tbe parts of tbe combination, — “tbe catch plate,” tbe tongue pivoted directly to tbe tongue plate, “the tongue plate extending rearward of tbe pivot, and in contact with tbe catch plate,” — were not only all old devices, but bad already been combined in a patent granted to Samuel G. Blackman, (No. 244,534,) July 19, 1881. Tbe circuit court, however, found in ibe specification an, improvement, with enough of invention in it to sustain a patent; limited tbe claim, by construction, to that particular invention; and, as thus limited, held it to be valid. Tbe mechanical details of the complainant’s clasp are very fully and clearly set forth in tbe opinion referred to. 48 Fed. Rep. 307:

“The tongue plate was a single piece of metal doubled upon itself, and was forked at its .rear end, i. e. the end next the catch plate. The tongue swung in this bifurcation, the pivot of the tongue being located underneath the tongue plate. Indentations in the underfold of the tongue plate partially embraced the ends of the pivot pin, which was held between the two folds. The specification says:
“ ‘It will be observed that this construction of the tongue plate causes the tongue plate, or a portion of it, to extend rearward of the tongue, forming there a bearing surface for the catch plate; the result of which is, in use, that the whole structure is caused to move together when movement of the catch plate is had, which unity of motion in the parts of the shoe, clasps preserves the two flaps of the shoe in a better relation to each other than in the case where the catch plate can be tilted downward independently of the tongue.’
“When the tongue pivots are formed solely underneath the tongue plate, the face of the plate may be made smooth. A crossbar or projection on the tongue plate back of the tongue made a stop which limited the backward play of the tongue. * * * The improvement consisted in having the, body of the tongue plate extended on both sides of the tongue beyond the pivot so as to form a bifurcation at the inner end of the plate, in which the tongue plays; these extensions being for the purpose of forming supports upon which the catch plate is drawn as the tongue is closed, and which prevent the catch plate from changing its position. The pull of the tongue and the catch plate upon each other is more efficient when the pivot is below the fold of the tongue plate. It is plain that this' buckle is a different thing, in the way in which and the means by which the catch plate is made to he an efficient member of the buckle, from the preceding patents which have been described. [It may be noted, .in passing, that the patents referred to by the learned judge as “before described” did not include the Blackman patent, which, more perfectly than any other, shows a rearward extension of the tongue plate, forming a support upon which the catch plate is drawn as the tongue is closed.] The difference consists in the efficient support of the catch plate, and this is accomplished by the bifurcated extensions of the tongue plate, which project rearwardly beyond Ü10 pivots. The question of importance is whether this improvement has the element of patentable Invention. I do not think that the mere elongation of the tongue plate would have been patentable, but I am of opinion lliat the way in which lengthening was accomplished, and the support was given to the catch plate, viz. by the bifurcated extensions of the body of the tongue plate on both sides of the tongue beyond tbe pivot, in which extensions the tongue plays, and upon which the catch plate is supported in iiosition, did show patentable invention. There was no invention in the production of smoothness of surface upon the face of the tongue plate. IS * * Neither was there any patentability, in the stop.”

We concur with. the learned judge in the conclusions that there was no invention in the clasp above-described, aside from the rearward extension, and that the mere elongation of the tongue plate* rearwardly would not have been patentable. Such rearward extension, combined with a tongue pivoted below the tongue plate, already existed in the Blackman patent But we do not agree With him in the conclusion that there was patentable invention in extending rearwardly by bifurcation, when the only function of the* bifurcated extensions was to afford a sujiport or resting place for the catch plate. The “efficient support” spoken of comes not at ail because of the bifurcation, but because of the rearward extension. All the advantages derived from such an arrangement of the two plates — the prevention of the cloth of the overshoe being caught in the bight of the tongue while being fastened, and the “unity of motion in the parts of the shoe clasps,” when once fastened — are, so far as the testimony shows, equally secured by an exlension of the whole tongue plate, which was old in the art. The substitution of the bifurcations for the unbifurcated tongue plate, rearwardly extended, as in the Blackman patent, was a mere change of form; and unless such change of form accomplishes something, — introduces á new function, or a new method of performing the old function with greater excellence or economy, — it is not patentable invention. The bifurcation does not accomplish anything new 'in the way of more efficient support. The function of supporting the catch plate, and' the inode of supporting, are entirely unaffected by the diversity of shape. The bifurcation does, however, subserve a useful purpose, which is described in the patent as follows:

“The bifurcations a.t the rear end of the tongue plate have a slight lateral elasticity, and the tongue is made, at the point, a, slightly broader than elsewhere; and its breadth is such that it must, in locking and unlocking the tongue, pass through said bifurcation, by springing the forks thereof apart. This insures a slight locking action, both when the tongue is oponed, and when it is closed.”

This additional element develops a function in the bifurcations which may be said to involve an exercise of the creative faculties, and thus the entire combination, being apparently new in the art, may be patentable. It seems quite plain from the language of the patent, that the inventor selected a bifurcated, rather than the un-bifurcated, extension, to accomplish that very result, — the locking of the tongue. And we are of the opinion that, if the first claim is to be sustained at all, it can only be by reading into it, not merely the limitations suggested by the circuit court, viz. that the tongue should be pivoted directly to the tongue plate, and below its face, and between its bifurcated ends, but also the further limitation that the tongue should have the broadened position to combine wi'h the elastic arms. As thus modified, however, the invention is described in claim 4 of the patent:

“(4) In combination, the catch plate, the tongue plate provided with the laterally elastic bifurcations extending rearward of the pivot, and the tongue swinging in the bifurcations, with a broadened portion which passes between the elastic arms as the tongue is swung, all substantially as described, and for the purpose set forth.”

—Which is really all that the inventor was entitled to claim. The defendants’ clasp, however, has no such broadened tongue — the locking of the tongue being secured by the use of flattened, laterally projecting pivots, — and does not infringe complainant’s patent, as it must be construed to sustain its validity.

The decree of the circuit court is reversed, and cause remanded, with 'instructions to dismiss the bill, with costs of both courts.  