Collins Company v. Coes

The Collins Company of Connecticut, a corporation located at Collinsville, in the county of Hartford and state of Connecticut, brought this suit in equity in the circuit court of the United States for the district of Massachusetts, against Loring Coes and Melvin O. Whittier, partners in business at Worcester, in Worcester county, Mass., in the name and style of Loring Coes & Co., for the alleged infringement of reissued letters patent No. 5,294, dated February 25, 1873, for an improvement in wrenches, issued to the Collins Company as assignee of Lucius Jordan and Leander E. Smith, said reissued letters patent being based upon original letters patent dated October 10, 1865, No. 50,364. There had also been a reissue February 22, 1870. The specification and accompanying drawings of the reissue No. 5,294 are as follows:

'The object of this invention is the prevention of end thrust or back pressure on the wooden handles of wrenches, which has heretofore availed to quickly destroy such wooden handles, and, in destroying the handles, has left the working parts of the wrench which depended upon the handles for support without such support, so as to injure and effectually impair their working qualities and efficiency, and is accomplished by so connecting the step which forms a bearing for the lower end of the screw-rod with the bar which forms the main part of the wrench that the back pressure upon the step by the screw-rod will be directly transmitted to the wrench-bar at the place of connection therewith, and will not be transmitted to and mainly put upon the wooden handle. Fig. 1 is a side view of the whole wrench, the part below the dotted line, x, x, being in section. Fig. 2 is a top or plan view of the step, which forms a bearing for the lower end of the screw-rod.

The letter A indicates the wrench-bar, flat side, d, down to the under side of the step, E, and from thence downward cylindrical, or of other convenient shape, so as to take upon it the wooden handle, G. B is the movable jaw. The letter C indicates the screw-rod, and D the rosette by which it is turned. The letter E indicates the step, in which is the bearing, s, for the lower end of the screw-rod, and also the hole, a, to admit the bar, A, and fitting up against the shoulder, b. On the bar, A, just below the step, E, is cut the screw-thread, i, on which screws the nut, F, forming a projection from the wrench-bar, on which rests the step, E, and thus transmits the back pressure put upon the step directly to the wrench-bar at the place of connection therewith, and thus relieves the wooden handle therefrom; the connection of the step with the bar being made in such manner that the step may be removed or taken off the bar without any cutting or abrasion of parts. The nut not only supports the step, but can be made to rigidly fasten the step to the bar by screwing it firmly up against the step, so as to gripe it between itself and the shoulder, b, thus giving the nut, so to speak, a double office, viz., that of supporting the step, and, also, that of fastening it rigidly to the bar. The nut is interiorly recessed at d, for the purpose of forming a ferrule for the top of the wooden handle. Heretofore the part designed to perform the office of the step, E, has rested directly on the wooden handle, which was secured upon the bar by a light nut, o, at the lower extremity of the bar, which is the present method of fastening on the handle. It is known that, previous to this invention, steps have been forged or otherwise produced solid with the bar, and this became as much a part of it as the solid head at extremity of bar, and also by riveting to reach similar result; but such method, by making a permanent fastening, renders it impossible, or a work of great difficulty, to displace the step in order to remove the sliding jaw for repairs. It will be observed that, while Jordan and Smith's method of fastening is as firm as the permanent fastenings last above referred to, their step can readily be removed and again put in place at pleasure. It is believed that Smith and Jordan were the first to secure easy divisibility of step and bar, together with a fixed or stationary step when in position, and at the same time supporting the step when in position immediately by the bar, and not immediately through the handle, as the manner had been. As a matter of definition, the Jordan and Smith method of fastening and supporting the step when in position is denominated 'removable' hereinafter in contradistinction from a connection and support made by forging or otherwise producing the step in one solid piece with the bar, and therefore a part of it, or by riveting it thereto, or the like.

'CLAIMS.

'(1) The step, combined with the wrenchbar, and supported by the nut, F, or its equivalent, at the place where the step is connected with the bar, in such manner that the step can be removed from the bar without cutting or abrasion of parts.

'(2) The nut, F, combined with the wrench-bar, and interiorly recessed at d, for the purpose set forth.

'(3) The nut, F, combined with the threaded bar, and performing the office of supporting the step, and also of rigidly fastening it to the bar, for the purpose set forth.'

April 16, 1841, a patent issued to Loring Coes for what has since always been known as the 'Coes Wrench,' and this was reissued June 26, 1849. The specification and drawings of the reissue are as follows:

'Fig. 1 is an elevation of my improved wrench, and Fig. 2 an elevation of a wrench previously known, but not of my invention. In my improved wrench the inner jaw slides on the bar of the permanent jaw and handle, and is moved by a screw at the side of the bar, operated by a head or rosette, which always remains in the same position relatively to the handle, whereby the moveable jaw can be adjusted with the thumb of the hand, which grasps and holds the handle. The principle or character of my invention, and that which distinguishes it from all other things before known, consists in moving the adjustable jaw by means of a screw placed at the side of and parallel with the bar of the permanent jaw and handle, when the required rotation for sliding the jaw is given by a rosette or head, or the equivalent thereof, which retains the same position relatively to the handle; and my invention also consists in retaining the required position of the rosette, or its equivalent, by which the required motion is given to the sliding jaw, by having its periphery to work in a notch or recess in the bar of the permanent jaw and handle, or vice versa. In the accompanying drawings A represents a quadrangular bar of metal with a permanent or hammer jaw, C, at one end; the other end being reduced in size to pass through a handle, L, secured to it by a nut, M. Between the ferrule of the handle and the shoulder of the bar an iron plate, I, is griped by the securing of the handle onto the bar, and this plate extends out sufficiently beyond the bar to receive the journal, K, (see dotted lines,) of a screw, F, which is placed parallel

with, and by the side of, the bar. The screw is tapped into a tubular piece, D, that projects from the back face of the adjustable jaw, B, which is fitted to slide on the bar from or towards the permanent jaw, C, the rear end of the tubular projection, D, being provided with, and sustained by, a bridle, E, which embraces and slides on the bar. At the rear end the screw is provided with a head or rosette, G, the periphery of which turns in a notch or recess, H, made in the edge of the bar, as shown by dotted lines, by which the position of the said rosette is retained relatively to the handle. The hand, represented by dotted lines, indicates the manner in which my improved wrench is operated. The handle is grasped by the fingers, and the rosette is operated by the thumb of the same hand, so that, without any change in the position of the hand, the movable jaw can be moved towards or from the permanent jaw, to set the wrench to any size required, with one hand. By means of my improvement the bar can be made of any desired form best adapted to the sliding jaw and to strength. The rosette, or its equivalent, employed for operating the jaw is always retained in the same position relatively to the hand that gripes the handle. At the same time, the use of two bearings for the screw is avoided. The advantages of my improved wrench over other methods of construction will be seen by comparison with the wrench represented by figure 2 of the accompanying drawings. What I claim as my invention and desire to secure by letters-patent is moving the sliding jaw by a screw, combined with and placed by the side of and parallel with the bar of the permanent jaw and handle, substantially as described, when the required rotation for sliding the jaw is given by the head or rosette, (or its equivalent,) which retains the same position relatively to the handle during the operation, substantially as described. And I also claim moving the sliding jaw by a screw, combined with and placed by the side of, and parallel with, the bar of the permanent jaw and handle, substantially as described, in combination with the rosette, or its equivalent, retained in its position relatively to the hand in the manner described.'

It appears from the evidence that during the years 1851 to 1854, E. F. Dixie was manufacturing, to the extent of from 200 to 400 wrenches per week of various sizes, a wrench known as the 'Hewitt Wrench,' which wrench contained a recessed nut screwed upon the wrench-bar just above the wooden handle, for the purpose of relieving the handle from back pressure put upon the step, and of serving as a ferrule for the upper end of the wooden handle. It had an adjusting screw-sleeve, instead of the adjusting screwrod of the Coes wrench, but was otherwise substantially the same. The following diagrams give the various wrenches referred to on the argument: On the 9th of August, 1880, the Collins Company filed a disclaimer in the patentoffice, stating: 'Further, that said the Collins Company has reason to believe that through inadvertence and mistake the second clause of claim made in said last-mentioned reissued letters patent, in the following words, to-wit: '(2) The nut, F, combined with the wrench-bar, and interiorly recessed at d, for the purpose set forth,'-is too broad, including that of which said Jordan and Smith were not the first inventors. Said the Collins Company therefore hereby enters its disclaimer to 'the nut, F, combined with the wrench-bar, and interiorly recessed at d, for the purpose set forth,' except when said recessed nut and wrench-bar are in combination with the handle, G, the step or stepplate, E, the screw-rod, C, and the movable jaw, B, of the wrench, substantially as is shown and described in said last-mentioned reissued letters patent,'-being the reissue in question.

The defendants contend that the patent in suit did not disclose a patentable invention in view of the prior state of the art; that the reissue described and claimed a different invention from that for which the original patent was granted; that the reissue was taken too long after the date of the original patent to be permitted upon equitable grounds; and that there was no infringement.

The circuit court originally granted an interlocutory decree in favor of the plaintiff, in accordance with the opinion of Judge LOWELL, reported in 5 Ban. & A. 548, and 3 Fed. Rep. 225. But a rehearing was afterwards moved for and granted, the interlocutory decree vacated, and the bill dismissed, for the reasons stated in the opinion of Mr. Justice GRAY, presiding in the circuit, in a similar suit by the plaintiff against other defendants, which opinion was as follows, (21 Fed. Rep. 38:) 'This is a bill in equity for the infringement of the first claim in the specification of the second reissue to the complainant, dated February 25, 1873, of letters patent originally issued to Lucius Jordan and Leander E. Smith, on October 10, 1865, for an improvement in wrenches. The wrench, as described, both in the original patent and in the reissue, has the following parts: The wrench-bar, A, the upper part of which is of the usual shape, and has attached to it the movable jaw, B, and the lower part of which is of convenient form to receive upon it the wooden handle; a screw-rod, C, parallel to the main bar; a rosette, D, at the lower end of the screw-rod, by means of which the movable jaw is worked; a ferrule, or step, E, having a hole through it for the admission of the bar, and a recess in its upper face as a bearing for the lower end of the screw-rod; a nut, F, screwed on a thread in the bar, under the step, and having a recess in its under face to receive the top of the wooden handle, G; and the wooden handle secured at its lower end to the main bar by a nut in the usual way. Both the original patent and the reissue state that the object of the invention is to make the strain come upon the nut, F, instead of coming upon the wooden handle. The original patent states that the nut, F, is, and the reissue states that it may be, screwed up firmly against the step, E. The reissue affirms and repeats that the distinguishing characteristic of the invention is that the step can be readily removed and replaced at pleasure. There is no hint of such a distinction in the original patent. The first claim of the original patent is for 'the step, E, made substantially as described, and for the purpose set forth.' The corresponding claim in the reissue is for 'the step, combined with the wrench-bar, and supported by the nut, F, or its equivalent, at the place where the step is connected with the bar, in such manner that the step can be removed from the bar without cutting or abrasion of parts.' The parallel screw-rod, with a rosette thereon to work the movable jaw, and resting upon a ferrule or step, had been introduced in the original Coes wrench, patented in 1841; and, long before the issue of the patent to Jordan and Smith in 1865, large numbers of the Hewitt or Dixie wrench had been made and sold, in which there was no separate screw-rod, and the screw that worked the movable jaw revolved on the main bar, but that screw rested on a ferrule or step, which was secured sometimes by driving it on under heavy pressure, and sometimes by a nut screwed under it on the bar. The application to the bar of the Coes wrench, for the purpose of securing and supporting the step, and resisting the strain, of a nut already in use for the same purpose, on the Hewitt or Dixie wrench, lacks the novelty of invention requisite to support a patent, within the decisions of the supreme court at the last term, which have, in effect, overruled the earlier decision of this court in the suit of this complainant against Loring Coes and others, reported in 5 Ban. & A. 548, 3 Fed. Rep. 225; Railroad Co. v. Truck Co., 110 U.S. 490, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 220; Bussey v. Manufacturing Co., 110 U.S. 131, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 38; Tack Co. v. Manufacturing Co., 109 U.S. 117, 3 Sup. Ct. Rep. 105; Phillips v. Detroit, 111 U.S. 604, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 580. The complainant's patent being void for want of novelty, it becomes unnecessary to consider the other defenses. Bill dismissed, with costs.'

W. E. Simonds, for appellant.

George L. Roberts, for appellee.

Mr. Chief Justice FULLER, after stating the facts as above, delivered the opinion of the court.