Atlantio Works v. Brady Brady/Opinion of the Court

This case arises upon a bill in equity filed by Edwin L. Brady against the Atlantic Works, a corporation of Massachusetts, having workshops and a place of business in Boston, praying for an account of profits for building a dredge-boat in violation of certain letters patent granted to the complainant, bearing date December 17, 1867, and for an injunction to restrain the defendants from making, using, or selling any dredge-boat in violation of said letters patent. The bill was filed on the ninth of April, 1868, and had annexed thereto a copy of the patent alleged to be infringed. The following are the material parts of the specification:

'The excavator consists of a strong boat, propelled by one or     two propellers placed in the stern of the boat. I prefer two     propellers, as affording greater power and rendering the boat more      manageable in steering in crooked channels. This propeller is     driven in the ordinary manner by steam-engines of ordinary      construction. Near the bow of the boat I place another     steam-engine, driving what I call the 'mud-fan,' which      projects from and in front of the bow of the boat. This is     formed by a set of revolving blades shown at A, turned, like      the propellers, by a shaft passing through a stuffing-box, D.      The blades are shaped somewhat like those of a propeller, but      they are sharper on their fronts and less inclined on their      faces. These blades should extend, say, two feet below the     bottom of the boat, and their object is by their rapid      revolution to displace the sane and mud on the bottom, and,      stirring them up, to mix them with the water so that they may      be carried off by the current.

'The motion of the 'mud-fan' tends to draw forward the boat,     assisting the propellers.

'All the engines may be driven by one set of boilers, F,     placed amid-ships. In order that the 'mud-fan' may be brought     in contact with the bottom, I construct the boat with a      series of water-tight compartments, E, placed in the bow and      stern, and on each side of the center, amid-ships, into which      the water may be permitted to flow through pipes so as to      sink the vessel to the required depth; the compartments being      so placed and proportioned that the vessel shall sink with an      even keel, by which the effective action of the 'mudfan,' the      propellers, and the steering apparatus is preserved, the boat      being manageable at any depth. A large pump, B, driven by the     engine, is connected by pipes with all the compartments, so      that the water may be pumped out when necessary to raise the      boat.

'I am aware that boats have been constructed with     compartments to be filled with water, to sink the dredging      mechanism to the bottom, by loading the end of the boat in      which such mechanism is placed; but this construction is      subject to the disadvantage of requiring more complicated      machinery for dredging, in order that it may be accommodated      to the inclination of the boat, and to the further      disadvantage that the boats thus inclined are comparatively      unmanageable.

'What I claim as my invention, and desire to secure my     letters patent, is: (1) A dredging-boat, constructed with a      series of water-tight compartments, so proportioned and      arranged that, as they are filled with water, the boat shall      preserve an even keel, and the dredging mechanism be brought into action without any      adjusting devices, substantially as set forth. (2) The     combination of the 'mud-fan' attached to a rigid shaft, and a      boat containing a series of water-tight compartments, E, so      adjusted as to cause the boat to settle on an even keel as      the compartments are filled with water, and a pump, B, for      exhausting the water from all the compartments, substantially      as set forth.'

The defendants, in their answer, denied the validity of the patent, and denied infringement of any valid patent of the complainant. They then stated the circumstances under which they came to construct the dredge-boat complained of, namely: That in October, 1867, the government of the United States advertised for proposals for building a dredge-boat for the mouth of the Mississippi river, according to certain plans and specifications; that the defendants, being manufacturers and builders of marine engines and steam-boats, examined the plans and specifications, and made proposals for building the boat according to the same, which were accepted, and they at once began the construction of the boat and completed it under the inspection and supervision of a United States officer, in conformity with the stipulations, and the boat went in charge of said officer to the mouth of the Mississippi river; that the said plans and specifications were made and furnished by Gen. McAlester, of the engineer corps of the United States, for the use of the government, and were the result of his own study, observations, and experience, and that, so far as they were original, he was the author of them. They further alleged by their answer (as amended) as follows:

'That the plans and specifications by which the said     dredge-boat was constructed were not, and the said      dredge-boat itself was not, a new invention or novel and      original; but the same, and the principle of said      dredge-boat, had been substantially known and publicly used      before, to-wit, at New Orleans, on the mouth of the      Mississippi river, in the year 1859, in the steam dredge-boat      Enoch Train, by Charles H. Hyde, by Thomas G. Mackie, and      William A. Hyde, copartners, under the firm of Hyde & Mackie,      and by Henry Wright, and had also been used and applied in      the construction of light-draught monitors, so called, built      by the United States government during the late rebellion, and long prior to the alleged patent or invention of the said      Brady, and the dates of his patent or caveat, and one of      which said light-draught monitors was built at the works of      these defendants.'

The answer further stated that in 1866 and 1867, prior to the date of Brady's alleged invention, he was acting as agent for one Tyler, in carrying out a contract with the government for the improvement of the mouth of the Mississippi river; that Gen. McAlester was then stationed at New Orleans to supervise and inspect, on behalf of the United States, the execution of the contract; that Brady was fitting and preparing a steam-boat for the purpose on a plan entirely different from that of his alleged invention; that McAlester then detailed and described to him a plan for a dredge-boat identical with that of the boat constructed by the defendants, which plan McAlester communicated to the board of engineers of the army before the date of the alleged invention by Brady; that Brady's boat was a failure, and the contract was annulled; that then Brady made drawings for a boat on the plan described to him by McAlester, and afterwards claimed to be the inventor of it, and made application for his patent, and obtained the same after the defendants had commenced work on the boat complained of.

Evidence was taken, and on a hearing before Mr. Justice CLIFFORD, in September, 1876, a decree was made sustaining the patent, declaring that the defendants had infringed the same, and referring it to a master to take an account of the profits received by the defendants from the infringement. The master reported the sum of $6,604.82. Both parties excepted, but their exceptions were overruled, and a final decree, in accordance with the report, was rendered October 9, 1878, with costs. Both parties have appealed.

The most important question, and first to be considered, is the validity of the patent.

It is obvious, from reading the specification, that the alleged invention consists mainly in attaching a screw (which the patentee calls a mud-fan) to the forward end of a propeller dredge-boat, provided with tanks for settling her in the water. It is operated by sinking the boat until the screw comes in contact with the mud or sand, which, by the revolution of the screw, is thrown up and mingled with the current. The use of a series of tanks for the purpose of keeping the vessel level while she settles is an old contrivance long used in dry-docks, and is shown by the evidence to have been used in many light-draught monitors during the late war. The defendants themselves built one of these vessels-the Casco. Mr. Edwards, the president of the Atlantic Works, in his testimony says:

'The Casco was built double, leaving a water-space on each     side nearly the entire length of the vessel, with an      arrangement of valves for flooding the compartments at      pleasure, for the purpose of sinking the vessel to the      desired draught of water, and with powerful steam-pumps to      pump the water out for the purpose of raising it in the      water. The compartment on the side was divided into several,     and one or all of them could be filed as desired. The object     was to enable them to put her on an even keel, or to raise or      depress one end at pleasure.'

The employment of their screws by propeller ships, driven stern foremost, for the removal of sand and mud accumulated at the mouths of the Mississippi, had frequently occurred years before the patentee's invention is alleged to have been made. Several French steamers, one of which was named the Francis Arago, had used this method there prior to the year 1859. In that year the Enoch Train, a double propeller,-that is, having two screws at her stern,-was used in the same way by certain contractors under the government for dredging the mouth of the Mississippi. Mr. Hyde, one of the contractors and owners, in his testimony describes her construction and operation as follows:

'She was a propeller of burden between three and four hundred     tons, with two propeller screws at her stern, about nine feet      in diameter each; the cylinders were 36 inches in diameter,      and 34 inches stroke; she had one doctor engine; was fitted      also with a large wrecking-pump, with two low-pressure      boilers; engines were also low-pressure engines. Her draught     of water, in ordinary trim, with 300 barrels of coal on      board, was about 13 feet aft, and a little less at the bows. By ordinary trim I mean the usual sailing trim. The propeller     screws were one on each quarter, or each side of the      stern-post. Before going to dredging on the bar, I fitted her     up with a water-tight apartment or tank, at the stern, by a      bulk-head running athwart-ships, say about 20 or 25 feet from      the stern. That space was divided by a fore-and-aft     bulk-head, making two water-tight compartments.

'The mode of filling the compartments was by stop-cocks in     the sides of the vessel opening into the water-tight      compartment; the draught of water could be increased from her      natural draught of water, say to feet to 18 feet, according      to the quantity of water let into the tanks. The more of     operating was by running the vessel up and down over the bar,      and thus stirring up the mud with the propeller screws. When     the water was too shoal for her to pass over, the stern of      the vessel was turned to the bar, and she was run stern on,      the engines being reversed. Whenever we got done working on     the bar there was a valve in the water-tight compartments for      letting the water into the hold of the vessel, from which the      water was pumped out of the vessel by the steam-pumps, and      the vessel would then be left at her ordinary draught.

'Interrogatory 13. Please to state how you happened to employ     this mode of dredging by the Enoch Train.

'Answer. Well, I thought it would be an effectual way of     removing the mud from the bar; that by the screws coming in      contact with the mud and deposit, and the revolutions of the      screws about 60 times a minute, would create a current of      water by which the sediment would be washed way.'

The evidence of Henry Wright, the master of the Enoch Train, under whose charge her operations were conducted, is to the same purport. He says:

'We used to work our propellers in cutting up the mud. The     operation consisted in cutting through the mud with our      propellers. Sometimes we went at the mud stern foremost,     sometimes sideways, and sometimes bows on. When I went to the     bar at first there was about 15 feet of water on it, and when      I quit operating there were 18 feet on it in most places. Where the water was shallow we invariably went at the mud     stern foremost. The stern was always loaded down to 18 feet     when dredging, but the bows were not loaded down. In     dredging, the stern was always several feet lower down than      the bows, say three or four feet.' The boat built by the defendants, which was called the Essayon, was operated in precisely the same way. Being built expressly for dredging, her dredging screw was placed at her stem, it is true; but her mode of operation was the same as that of the Enoch Train. Her master, Putnam, describes it is follows:

'The method we use is to go outside the bar into deep water;     then we sink the dredging end of the vessel by filling up the      tanks at that end with water to any depth required; then we      start the propelling screw at the other end of the vessel,      and go in with that until the vessel grounds; then we stop      the propelling screw and start the dredging screw, and as      that screw revolves it cuts up the mud at the bottom and      drags the vessel after it at the same time. After going as     far as we wish, we stop the dredging screw, lower the rake at      the dredging end, and back out into deep water, using either      or both of the screws to go back with, thus dragging the mud      after us that the dredging screw has cut up from the bottom,      and earrying at out into deep water; or, rather, the      operation is that the dredging screw agitates the mud and      throws it up into the surface current, and the current takes      it out to a large extent, while the rake takes fresh hold of      the bottom and also carries out whatever is broken up by the      screw and settles from the current. After backing out into     deep water, we hoist the rake and go back again and repeat      the operation. When we first arrived at the bar we made     several experiments as to the best mode of dredging, but the      mode above described we found to be the correct one, and have      ever since used.'

Nearly all the witnesses examined on the subject declare that there is no difference in principle between the mode of operation of the Enoch Train and that of the Essayon. The scraping or raking apparatus is not mentioned in the plaintiff's patent at all. This, as will be hereafter seen, is part of the original design of Gen. McAlester, the government officer who had charge of the improvement of the mouth of the Mississippi.

It is further noticeable that the Essayon, as is abundantly established by the evidence, always worked with her stern sunk and depressed, and never with an even keel, upon which special emphasis is placed by the patent in suit. It may well be asked, at this point, where was there any invention in the device described in the patent? Was it invention to place a screw for dredging at the stem of the boat? Nothing more than this was in reality suggested by the patentee. And that was substantially what was done with the French steamers prior to 1859, and with the Enoch Train in that year. They were curned end for end, and the stern was used as the stem, and the screws went forward, working in the bottom deposit in advance of the vessels. When the Enoch Train was procured for the service which she performed, she was ready-made, and the contractors, to save time and expense, simply supplied her with a tank, in order to settle her to the proper depth, and they found her very serviceable. Had she been built for a dredge-boat, with the design of using screws for dredging, (as she did use them,) can it be doubted that her dredging screw would have been placed forward instead of turning her stern forward? Would not this have been suggested by ordinary mechanical skill? The plan and mode of operation would have been precisely the same. When, after this, the government proceeded to build a boat expressly for dredging the mouths of the Mississippi, we should naturally expect to find it built as the Essayon was built, with her dredging screws at the stem instead of the stern. The making of them with longer blades than those of the propelling screw, and sharpened at the points, would be a matter of course. No invention would be requisite for any of these arrangements. It seems to us that the whole principle of the Essayon's construction and furnishment, as well as that of the patent in question, was anticipated by the Enoch Train, if not by the French steamers, and that a patent for that principle, though qualified by the natural incidents and adjuncts of its application, ought not to be sustained.

The process of development in manufactures creates a constant demand for new appliances, which the skill of ordinary head-workmen and engineers is generally adequate to devise, and which, indeed, are the natural and proper outgrowth of such development. Each step forward prepares the way for the next, and each is usually taken by spontaneous trials and attempts in a hundred different places. To grant a single party a monopoly of every slight advance made, except where the exercise of invention somewhat above ordinary mechanical or engineering skill is distinctly shown, is unjust in principle and injurious in its consequences.

The design of the patent laws is to reward those who make some substantial discovery or invention, which adds to our knowledge and makes a step in advance in the useful arts. Such inventors are worthy of all favor. It was never the object of those laws to grant a monopoly for every trifling device, every shadow of a shade of an idea, which would naturally and spontaneously occur to any skilled mechanic or operator in the ordinary progress of manufactures. Such an indiscriminate creation of exclusive privileges tends rather to obstruct than to stimulate invention. It creates a class of speculative schemers who make it their business to watch the advancing wave of improvement, and gather its foam in the form of patented monopolies, which enable them to lay a heavy tax upon the industry of the country, without contributing anything to the real advancement of the art. It embarrasses the honest pursuit of business with fears and apprehensions of concealed liens and unknown liabilities to lawsuits and vexatious accountings for profits made in good faith.

But the Enoch Train did not exhibit all that was done in the matter of dredge-boats anterior to the alleged invention of Brady. If the application of dredging screws to the stem of a boat, driven by a propeller or otherwise, was not formerly exhibited in the Enoch Train, it was certainly exhibited in the invention of one Ephraim B. Bishop, which was patented in April, 1858, and was applied by Brady himself to a dredge-boat called the Wiggins Ferry, fitted up and operated by him at the mouth of the Mississippi in 1866. This boat was propelled by an ordinary center paddle-wheel, and to the bow was fixed two revolving conical-shaped screws, which, on being let down to the river bottom, cut and stirred up the mud and sand, and caused it to float away in the current. Each screw was driven by a separate steam-engine. Bishop was examined as a witness, and testified that the idea occurred to him from seeing a stern-wheel boat on the Arkansas river make a channel for herself by turning stern foremost and removing the sediment by the revolution of her propeller. He says:

'About 1852 or 1853, I was then keeping store at Van Buren,     Arkansas. The difficulty of getting goods up the Arkansas     river, in consequence of sandbars, was very great-so great      that we had a cargo of goods, nearly a whole boat-load, that      was detained in consequence of sand-bars for at least eight      months before she could reach Van Buren from Pine Bluffs,      Arkansas. Seeing this necessity of removing these     obstructions, and knowing all about the usual machines up to      that date that had been invented, and their capacity, and      knowing of the very great amount of sediment that must be      removed to do any good, it appeared to me absolutely      necessary that machinery of greater capacity and strength      should be invented, and, thinking upon this subject, I      thought of and planned out one or more spirally-flanched      screws, to be rotated by machinery on deck of a boat or in      her hull, with the large ends of the spiral screws down, with      sharp-cutting corners or points, the screws to revolve right      and left powerfully, intended to elevate the sediment up the      inclination of the drum by reason of the powerful motion of      those drums. The water, being comparatively still, would     necessarily force the sediment up the inclination of the      screws, and throw the sediment off to the right and left into      the water, which would carry it to harmless localities. This     was the first plan that was afterwards developed into my      patent.'

In the fall of 1866 Brady and several other persons associated with him, Bishop himself being interested, made a contract with the government to dredge the South-west pass of the Mississippi, and procured for the purpose the Wiggins Ferry, and fitted up her bow with Bishop's apparatus. Brady had the superintendence of her fitting up, and of operating her after she was ready for work. They commenced upon her in November, 1866, but did not get her started until the nineteenth of March, 1867. After working with her for several months, and finding that she was not strong enough for the work required in the South-west pass, and that the sediment would fill up again when she was taken off for repairs, (although they often succeeded in deepending the channel three or four feet,) the contract was abandoned. For a common river bottom she would have answered well enough. Mr. Roy, one of the parties interested in her, and who was on her for several days at the commencement of her operations, says that in the pass, before trying the bar, she worked very successfully. If her machinery was not strong enough for accomplishing the hard work to be done on the bar, she was nevertheless well fitted for lighter dredging, and exemplified in her construction the use of screws at her stem.

It is true that Bishop's patent was not set up by way of defense in the answer; but there is no dispute as to the time it was issued, and that fact, together with Bishop's testimony, makes it clear that his invention, which was exemplified in the Wiggins Ferry, was made as far back as 1858, anticipating Brady, according to his own showing, for at least seven or eight years.

It is clear, then, that Brady did not invent the furnishing of vessels with water-tanks, so arranged as to sink them on an even keel; for these had been used long before in the light-draught monitors; he did not invent the use of revolving screws on a dredging-boat, for cutting and stirring up the mud and sediment; for these had been used for that purpose on the French steamers, and on the Enoch Train, in and prior to 1859; he did not invent the use of water-tanks in a dredging-boat for sinking the screws down to the bottom or bar to be dredged; for this plan had been adopted in the Enoch Train; he did not invent the application of screws to the forward end of a dredge-boat, so as to work in advance of the boat; for this had been virtually done on the Enoch Train, and was formerly done on the Wiggins Ferry, the plan of which had been invented by Bishop in 1858. What, then, did he invent? Did he make a selection and combination of these elements that would not have occurred to any ordinary skilled engineer called upon, with all this previous knowledge and experience before him, to devise the construction of a strong dredge-boat for use at the mouth of the Mississippi? We think not. We think that there is no reasonable ground for any such pretension.

But if a different conclusion could be reached, to our minds it is as certain as any fact depending on conflicting testimony can be, that Brady derived the ideas embraced in his patent from Gen. McAlester, the government officer, who in 1866 and 1867 had charge of the improvements at the mouth of the Mississippi river, and that he never conceived these ideas till they were communicated and explained to him by Gen. McAlester during the fitting up of the Wiggins Ferry at New Orleans, and during the progress of her operations at the South-west pass. It is proved by overwhelming evidence that during the whole period of her fitting up, and until it was developed by her working on the bar that she was incapable of performing the work required of her at that place, that Brady regarded and spoke of Bishop's plan as the best possible plan that could be devised, and that, although deeply interested in the success of the operations, he never alluded to or hinted at any plan of his own devising different from it. His whole conduct for months, as well as his total silence on the subject of any prior invention made by himself, in all his intercourse with his associates in the contract, with the government officers in charge, and with the superintendents and owners of the foundry where the Wiggins Ferry was fitted up, is the strongest possible proof that no such invention as he claims had been projected by him. The witnesses who speak of his conversations and sketches in December, 1865, and early in 1866, as communicated to them with the utmost freedom, with no apparent object so far as they were concerned, must either be mistaken as to the time, or as to the devices described. Interested as he is in the result of the suit, his own testimony cannot be allowed to prevail against a course of conduct so utterly at variance with it. It may be true; but we cannot give it effect against what he himself did, and did not do, without disregarding the ordinary laws that govern human conduct.

During the operation of the Wiggins Ferry on the bar, it is true, he did make divers plans and drawings for an improved dredge-boat. The first, made, as Lieut. Payne says, a week or 10 days after the vessel arrived at the South-west pass, (therefore the last of March or first of April,) was merely a modification of Bishop's plan, placing the cones parallel to each other instead of being pointed together in a salient angle, and providing the boat with water-tight compartments by which she could be raised or lowered. He worked at these drawings for some time, and Lieut. Payne helped him to make tracings of them. In one corner of the drawings on the same sheet two or three screws were exhibited, intended to be used in place of the cones, if thought best or desired. It is stated in the bill that on the seventeenth of May, 1867, Brady filled a caveat in the patent-office describing his invention; but the patent was not obtained till the seventeenth of December following. No copy of the caveat appears in the record, so that we cannot tell what it contained.

Now, where was it that Brady, who had been so enthus astic upon the superlative merits of Bishop's plan as applied to the Wiggins Ferry, obtained the new light which resulted in the filing of his caveat the seventeenth of May, and in the obtaining of his patent in December? The story is told by Lieut. Payne, who appears to he, not only an intelligent, but an entirely disinterested witness. He says:

'In the latter part of February 1867, at the engineer office. New Orleans, Gen. McAlester told Brady that he had doubts of     the sucessful working of the Wiggins, and in the case of her      proving a failure, he should suggest to the engineer      department a plan of his own for doing that work, which plan      he then explained to Brady in my presence. He said he should     recommend the building of a strong vessel provided with      propellers at each end and arranged with water-tight      compartments, so that the vessel could be raised or lowered      at pleasure. She was also to be provided with scrapers, which     could be attached at either end, and raised or lowered at      will by machinery. She was to have rudders at each end, and     be able to move in either direction, either head or stern,      equally well. He proposed to try the scrapers first, and, if     they were not found to work satisfactorily, to try any other      device which might be thought practicable. Brady seemed to be     much pleased with the idea, but seemed confident of the      success of the Wiggins.'

It further appears that Gen. McAlester, in pursuance of his idea, communicated his plans to the government board of engineers, and during the spring and summer of 1867, commencing as early as April, prepared the plans and specifications according to which the Essayon was afterwards built. It is very strange that the copy of Gen. McAlester's letters to the department, and several other important exhibits that were put in evidence, have not been inserted in the record used on this appeal. Where the fault lies, it is not for us to say. Sufficient appears, however, notwithstanding the evidence adduced to the contrary, consisting mostly of the testimony of the complainant himself, to convince us that Brady derived his those idea from the suggestions of Gen. McAlester; and that the plans for the construction of the Essayon originated entirely with that officer.

Our conclusion is that the patent sued on cannot be sustained, and that the decree of the circuit court must be reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to dismiss the bill of complaint.

Decree reversed accordingly.