1. Walker Patent No. 2,156,519 for an improvement over a past
patent designed to measure the distance from the top of an oil well
to the fluid surface of the oil,
held invalid for failure
of the claims to make the "full, clear, concise, and exact"
description of the alleged invention required by R.S. § 4888, 35
U.S.C. § 33. Pp.
329 U. S.
11-14.
2. A claim which describes the most crucial element in a "new"
combination in terms of what it will do, rather than in terms of
its own physical characteristics or its arrangement in the new
combination, is invalid as a violation of R.S. § 4888.
Holland
Furniture Co. v. Perkins Glue Co., 277 U.
S. 245;
General Electric Co. v. Wabash Appliance
Corp., 304 U. S. 364. Pp.
329 U. S. 8-9.
3. As used in R.S. § 4888, the word "machine" includes a
combination of old elements. P.
329 U. S. 9.
4. The requirement of R.S. § 4888 for a "full, clear, concise,
and exact" description in claims applies to a combination of old
devices. Pp.
329 U. S.
9-11.
5. Under R.S. § 4888, a patentee cannot obtain greater coverage
by failing accurately to describe his invention than by describing
it as the statute commands. P.
329 U. S. 13.
146 F.2d 817 reversed.
Page 329 U. S. 2
Respondent sued petitioner for infringement of Walker Patent No.
2, 156,519. The District Court held the claims in issue valid and
infringed by petitioner. The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit affirmed, 146 F.2d 817, and denied a petition for
rehearing. 149 F.2d 896. This Court granted certiorari. 326 U.S.
705. The case was affirmed by an evenly divided Court. 326 U.S.
696. A petition for rehearing was granted, and the case was
restored to the docket for reargument before a full bench. 327 U.S.
812.
Reversed, p.
329
U. S. 14.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
Cranford P. Walker, owner of Patent No. 2, 156,519, and the
other respondents licensees under the patent, brought this suit in
a federal district court alleging that petitioner, Halliburton Oil
Well Cementing Company, had infringed certain of the claims of the
Walker patent. The district court held the claims in issue valid
and infringed by Halliburton. The circuit court of appeals
affirmed, 146 F.2d 817, and denied Halliburton's petition for
rehearing. 149 F.2d 896. Petitioner's application to this Court for
certiorari urged, among other grounds, that the claims held valid
failed to make the "full, clear, concise, and exact" description of
the alleged invention required by Rev.Stat. § 4888, 35 U.S.C. § 33,
[
Footnote 1] as that statute
was
Page 329 U. S. 3
interpreted by us in
General Electric Co. v. Wabash
Appliance Corp., 304 U. S. 364.
[
Footnote 2] This statutory
requirement of distinctness and certainty in claims is important in
patent law. We granted certiorari to consider whether it was
correctly applied in this case. 326 U.S. 705. [
Footnote 3]
The patent in suit was sustained as embodying an improvement
over a past patent of Lehr and Wyatt (No. 2,047,974) upon an
apparatus designed to facilitate the pumping of oil out of wells
which do not have sufficient natural pressures to force the oil to
gush. An outline of the background and setting of these patents is
helpful to an understanding of the problem presented.
In order to operate a pump in an oil well most efficiently,
cheaply, and with the least waste, the pump must be placed in an
appropriate relationship to the fluid surface of the oil. Properly
to place the pump in this relationship requires knowledge of the
distance from the well top to the fluid surface. At least by the
latter 1920's, problems
Page 329 U. S. 4
of waste and expense in connection with non-gusher oil wells
pressed upon the industry.
See Railroad Comm'n of Texas v.
Rowan & Nichols Oil Co., 310 U. S. 573;
Burford v. Sun Oil Co., 319 U. S. 315. It
became apparent that inefficient pumping, one cause of waste, was
in some measure attributable to lack of accurate knowledge of
distance from well top to fluid surface. Ability to measure this
distance in each separate non-gusher oil well became an obvious
next step in the solution of this minor aspect of the problem of
waste.
The surface and internal machinery and the corkscrew
conformation of some oil wells make it impractical to measure depth
by the familiar method of lowering a rope or cable. In casting
about for an alternative method, it was quite natural to hit upon
the possibility of utilizing a "sound echo time" method. Unknown
distances had frequently been ascertained by this method. Given the
time elapsing between the injection of a sound into an oil well and
the return of its echo from the fluid surface, and assuming the
velocity of the sound to be about 1,100 feet per second, as it is
in the open air, it would be easy to find the distance. Not only
had this sound echo time method been long known and generally used
to find unknown distances, but, in 1898, Batcheller, in Patent No.
602,422, had described an apparatus to find a distance in a tubular
space. Obviously, an oil well is such a space. He described a
device whereby the noise from a gun might be injected into a tube;
the returning echoes from obstructions agitated a diaphragm, which,
in turn, moved a stylus. The stylus recorded on a piece of paper a
graph or diagram showing the variant movements of the diaphragm
caused by its response to all the different echo waves.
In the late 1920's, the oil industry began to experiment in the
use of this same sound echo time method for measuring
Page 329 U. S. 5
the distance to the fluid surface in deep oil wells. A product
of this experimentation was the Lehr and Wyatt patent, upon which
the present patent claims to be an improvement. It proposed to
measure the distance by measuring the time of travel of the echo of
"an impulse wave" generated by a "sudden change in pressure." The
apparatus described included a gas cylinder with a quick operating
valve by means of which a short blast of gas could be injected into
a well. It was stated in the patent that the time elapsing between
the release of the gas and the return of the echo of the waves
produced by it could be observed in any desired manner. But the
patentee's application and drawings noted that the wave impulses
could be recorded by use of a microphone which might include an
amplifier and an appropriate device to record a picture of the wave
impulses.
This Lehr and Wyatt patent, it is therefore apparent, simply
provided an apparatus composed of old and well known devices to
measure the time required for pressure waves to move to and back
from the fluid surface of an oil well. But the assumption that
sound and pressure waves would travel in oil wells at open-air
velocity of 1,100 feet per second proved to be erroneous. For this
reason, the time-velocity computation of Lehr and Wyatt for
measuring the distance to the fluid surface produced inaccurate
results.
After conferences with Lehr, Walker undertook to search for a
method which would more accurately indicate the sound and pressure
wave velocity in each well. Walker was familiar with the structure
of oil wells. The oil flow pipe in a well, known as a tubing
string, is jointed, and, where these joints occur, there are
collars or shoulders. There are also one or more relatively
prominent projections on the oil flow pipe known as tubing
catchers.
Page 329 U. S. 6
In wells where the distance to the tubing catcher is known,
Walker observed that the distance to the fluid surface could be
measured by a simple time-distance proportion formula. [
Footnote 4] For those wells in which
the distance to the tubing catcher was unknown, Walker also
suggested another idea. The sections of tubing pipe used in a given
oil well are generally of equal length. Therefore, the shoulders in
a given well ordinarily are at equal intervals from each other. But
the section length, and therefore the interval, may vary from well
to well. Walker concluded that he could measure the unknown
distance to the tubing catcher if he could observe and record the
shoulder echo waves. Thus, multiplication of the number of
shoulders observed by the known length of a pipe section would
produce the distance to the tubing catcher. With this distance, he
could solve the distance to the fluid surface by the same
proportion formula used when the distance to the tubing catcher was
a matter of record. The Lehr and Wyatt instrument could record all
these echo waves. But the potential usefulness of the echoes from
the shoulders and the tubing catcher which their machine recorded
had not occurred to Lehr and Wyatt, and consequently they had made
no effort better to observe and record them. Walker's contribution,
which he claims to be invention, was, in effect, to add to Lehr and
Wyatt's apparatus a well known device which would make the
regularly appearing
Page 329 U. S. 7
shoulder echo waves more prominent on the graph and easier to
count.
The device added was a mechanical acoustical resonator. This was
a short pipe which would receive wave impulses at the mouth of the
well. Walker's testimony was, and his specifications state, that,
by making the length of this tubal resonator one-third the length
of the tubing joints, the resonator would serve as a tuner,
adjusted to the frequency of the shoulder echo waves. It would
simultaneously amplify these echo waves and eliminate unwanted
echoes from other obstructions, thus producing a clearer picture of
the shoulder echo waves. His specifications show, attached to the
tubal resonator, a coupler, the manipulation of which would adjust
the length of the tube to one-third of the interval between
shoulders in a particular well. His specifications and drawings
also show the physical structure of a complete apparatus, designed
to inject pressure impulses into a well, and to receive, note,
record, and time the impulse waves.
The District Court held the claims here in suit valid upon its
finding that Walker's
"apparatus differs from and is an improvement over the prior art
in the incorporation in such apparatus of a tuned acoustical means
which performs the functions of a sound filter. . . ."
The circuit court of appeals affirmed this holding, stating that
the trial court had found
"that the only part of this patent constituting invention over
the prior art is the 'tuned acoustical means which performs the
functions of a sound filter.'"
For our purpose in passing upon the sufficiency of the claims
against prohibited indefiniteness, we can accept without ratifying
the findings of the lower court that the addition of "[a] tuned
acoustical means" performing the "functions of a sound filter"
brought about a new patentable combination, even though it advanced
only a narrow
Page 329 U. S. 8
step beyond Lehr and Wyatt's old combination. [
Footnote 5] We must, however, determine
whether, as petitioner charges, the claims here held valid run
afoul of Rev.Stat. § 4888 because they do not describe the
invention, but use "conveniently functional language at the exact
point of novelty."
General Electric Co. v. Wabash Appliance
Corporation supra, at
304 U. S. 371.
Walker, in some of his claims,
e.g., claims 2 and 3,
does describe the tuned acoustical pipe as an integral part of his
invention, showing its structure, its working arrangement in the
alleged new combination, and the manner of its connection with the
other parts. But no one of the claims on which this judgment rests
has even suggested the physical structure of the acoustical
resonator. [
Footnote 6] No one
of these claims describes the physical relation of the Walker
addition to the old Lehr and Wyatt machine. No one of these claims
describes the manner in which the Walker addition will operate
together with the old Lehr and Wyatt machine so as to make the
"new" unitary apparatus perform its designed function. Thus, the
claims failed adequately to depict the structure, mode, and
operation of the parts in combination.
A claim typical of all of those held valid only describes the
resonator and its relation with the rest of the apparatus as
"means associated with said pressure responsive device for
tuning said receiving means to the frequency of echoes from the
tubing collars of said tubing section to clearly distinguish the
echoes of said couplings from
Page 329 U. S. 9
each other. [
Footnote
7]"
The language of the claim thus describes this most crucial
element in the "new" combination in terms of what it will do,
rather than in terms of its own physical characteristics or its
arrangement in the new combination apparatus. We have held that a
claim with such a description of a product is invalid as a
violation of Rev.Stat. § 4888.
Holland Furniture Co. v. Perkins
Glue Co., 277 U. S. 245,
277 U. S.
256-257;
General Electric Co. v. Wabash Appliance
Corporation, supra. We understand that the circuit court of
appeals held that the same rigid standards of description required
for product claims is not required for a combination patent
embodying old elements only. We have a different view.
Rev.Stat. § 4888 pointedly provides that,
"in the case of a machine, he [the patentee] shall explain the
principle thereof, and the best mode in which he has contemplated
applying that principle so as to distinguish it from other
inventions, and he shall particularly point out and distinctively
claim the part, improvement, or combination which he claims as his
invention or discovery."
It has long been held that the word "machine" includes a
combination.
Corning v.
Burden, 15 How. 252,
56 U. S. 267.
We are not persuaded that the public and those affected by
patents
Page 329 U. S. 10
should lose the protection of this statute merely because the
patented device is a combination of old elements.
Patents on machines which join old and well known devices with
the declared object of achieving new results, or patents which add
an old element to improve a preexisting combination, easily lend
themselves to abuse. And, to prevent extension of a patent's scope
beyond what was actually invented, courts have viewed claims to
combinations and improvements or additions to them with very close
scrutiny.
Cf. Lincoln Engineering Co. of Illinois v. Stewart
Warner Corporation, 303 U. S. 545,
303 U. S.
549-551. For the same reason, courts have qualified the
scope of what is meant by the equivalent of an ingredient of a
combination of old elements.
Gill v. Wells,
22 Wall. 1,
89 U. S. 28-29.
Fuller v. Yentzer, 94 U. S. 288,
94 U. S.
297-298. It is quite consistent with this strict
interpretation of patents for machines which combine old elements
to require clear description in combination claims. This view,
clearly expressed in
Gill v. Wells, supra, is that,
"[w]here the ingredients are all old, the invention . . .
consists entirely in the combination, and the requirement of the
Patent Act that the invention shall be fully and exactly described
applies with as much force to such an invention as to any other
class, because, if not fulfilled, all three of the great ends
intended to be accomplished by that requirement would be defeated.
. . . : (1) [t]hat the Government may know what they have granted
and what will become public property when the term of the monopoly
expires; (2) [t]hat licensed persons desiring to practice the
invention may know, during the term, how to make, construct, and
use the invention; (3) [t]hat other inventors may know what part of
the field of invention is unoccupied."
"Purposes such as these are of great importance in every case,
but the fulfillment of them is never more
Page 329 U. S. 11
necessary than when such inquiries arise in respect to a patent
for a machine which consists of a combination of old ingredients.
Patents of that kind are much more numerous than any other, and
consequently it is of the greatest importance that the description
of the combination, which is the invention, should be full, clear,
concise, and exact."
Gill v. Wells, supra, at
89 U. S. 25.
These principles were again emphasized in
Merrill v.
Yeomans, 94 U. S. 568,
94 U. S. 570,
where it was said that,
". . . in cases where the invention is a new combination of old
devices, he [the patentee] is bound to describe with particularity
all these old devices, and then the new mode of combining them, for
which he desires a patent."
This view has most recently been reiterated in
General
Electric Co. v. Wabash Appliance Corp., supra, at
304 U. S.
368-369. Cogent reasons would have to be presented to
persuade us to depart from this established doctrine. The facts of
the case before us, far from undermining our confidence in these
earlier pronouncements, reinforce the conclusion that the statutory
requirement for a clear description of claims applies to a
combination of old devices.
This patent, and the infringement proceedings brought under it,
illustrate the hazards of carving out an exception to the sweeping
demand Congress made in Rev.Stat. § 4888. Neither in the
specification, the drawing, nor in the claims here under
consideration was there any indication that the patentee
contemplated any specific structural alternative for the acoustical
resonator or for the resonator's relationship to the other parts of
the machine. Petitioner was working in a field crowded almost, if
not completely, to the point of exhaustion. In 1920, Tucker, in
Patent No. 1,451,356, had shown a tuned acoustical resonator in a
sound detecting device which measured distances. Lehr and Wyatt had
provided for amplification of their waves. Sufficient amplification
and exaggeration of all the different
Page 329 U. S. 12
waves which Lehr and Wyatt recorded on their machine would have
made it easy to distinguish the tubing catcher and regular shoulder
waves from all others. For, even without this amplification, the
echo waves from tubing collars could, by proper magnification, have
been recorded and accurately counted had Lehr and Wyatt recognized
their importance in computing the velocity.
Cf. General
Electric Co. v. Jewel Incandescent Lamp Co., 326 U.
S. 242.
Under these circumstances, the broadness, ambiguity, and
overhanging threat of the functional claim of Walker become
apparent. What he claimed in the court below, and what he claims
here, is that his patent bars anyone from using in an oil well any
device heretofore or hereafter invented which combined with the
Lehr and Wyatt machine performs the function of clearly and
distinctly catching and recording echoes from tubing joints with
regularity. Just how many different devices there are of various
kinds and characters which would serve to emphasize these echoes we
do not know. The Halliburton device, alleged to infringe, employs
an electric filter for this purpose. In this age of technological
development, there may be many other devices beyond our present
information -- or, indeed, our imagination -- which will perform
that function and yet fit these claims. And, unless frightened from
the course of experimentation by broad functional claims like
these, inventive genius may evolve many more devices to accomplish
the same purpose.
See United Carbon Co. v. Binney & Smith
Co., 317 U. S. 228,
317 U. S. 236;
Burr v.
Duryee, 1 Wall. 531,
68 U. S. 568;
O'Reilly v.
Morse, 15 How. 62,
56 U. S.
112-113. Yet, if Walker's blanket claims be valid, no
device to clarify echo waves, now known or hereafter invented,
whether the device be an actual equivalent of Walker's ingredient
or not, could be used in a combination such as this, during the
life of Walker's patent.
Page 329 U. S. 13
Had Walker accurately described the machine he claims to have
invented, he would have had no such broad rights to bar the use of
all devices now or hereafter known which could accent waves. For,
had he accurately described the resonator together with the Lehr
and Wyatt apparatus, and sued for infringement, charging the use of
something else used in combination to accent the waves, the alleged
infringer could have prevailed if the substituted device (1)
performed a substantially different function; (2) was not known at
the date of Walker's patent as a proper substitute for the
resonator; or (3) had been actually invented after the date of the
patent.
Fuller v. Yentzer, supra, at
94 U. S.
296-297;
Gill v. Wells, supra, at
89 U. S. 29.
Certainly, if we are to be consistent with Rev.Stat. § 4888, a
patentee cannot obtain greater coverage by failing to describe his
invention than by describing it as the statute commands.
It is urged that our conclusion is in conflict with the decision
of
Continental Paper Bag Co. v. Eastern Paper Bag Co.,
210 U. S. 405. In
that case, however, the claims structurally described the physical
and operating relationship of all the crucial parts of the novel
combination. [
Footnote 8]
Page 329 U. S. 14
The court there decided only that there had been an infringement
of this adequately described invention. That case is not authority
for sustaining the claims before us, which fail adequately to
describe the alleged invention.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER concurs with the Court's opinion insofar
as it finds this claim lacking in the definiteness required by
Rev.Stat. § 4888, 35 U.S.C. § 33, but reserves judgment as to
considerations that may be peculiar to combination patents in
satisfying that requirement.
[
Footnote 1]
"33. APPLICATION FOR PATENT; DESCRIPTION; SPECIFICATION AND
CLAIM. Before any inventor or discoverer shall receive a patent for
his invention or discovery, he shall make application therefor, in
writing, to the Commissioner of Patents, and shall file in the
Patent Office a written description of the same, and of the manner
and process of making, constructing, compounding, and using it, in
such full, clear, concise, and exact terms as to enable any person
skilled in the art or science to which it appertains, or with which
it is most nearly connected, to make, construct, compound, and use
the same, and, in case of a machine, he shall explain the principle
thereof, and the best mode in which he has contemplated applying
that principle, so as to distinguish it from other inventions, and
he shall particularly point out and distinctly claim the part,
improvement, or combination which he claims as his invention or
discovery. . . ."
[
Footnote 2]
Other alleged errors were urged in the application for
certiorari and have been argued here, but, since we find the
question of definiteness of the claim decisive of the controversy,
we shall not further advert to the other contentions.
[
Footnote 3]
This case was previously affirmed by a divided court, 326 U.S.
696, and, upon petition for rehearing, was restored to the docket
for reargument. 327 U.S. 812.
[
Footnote 4]
The known distance from well top to the tubing catcher is to the
unknown distance from well top to the fluid surface as the time an
echo requires to travel from the tubing catcher is to the time
required for an echo to travel from the fluid surface.
Walker's patent emphasizes that his invention solves the
velocity of sound waves in wells of various pressures in which
sound did not travel at open-air or a uniform speed.
Mathematically, of course, his determination of the distance by
proportions determines the distance to the fluid surface directly
without necessarily considering velocity in feet per second as a
factor.
[
Footnote 5]
See Hailes v. Van
Wormer, 20 Wall. 353;
Knapp v. Morss,
150 U. S. 221,
150 U. S.
227-228;
Textile Machine Works v. Louis Hirsch
Textile Machines, Inc., 302 U. S. 490;
Lincoln Engineering Co. v. Stewart-Warner Corp.,
303 U. S. 545,
303 U. S.
549-550.
[
Footnote 6]
Halliburton does not challenge the adequacy of the description
of any other features of the "new combination." The elements of
Walker's apparatus other than the filter are so nearly identical to
what Lehr and Wyatt patented that we can speak of these other
elements as the "Lehr and Wyatt machine."
[
Footnote 7]
Both parties have used Claim 1 as a typical example for purposes
of argument throughout the litigation. Other claims need not be set
out. Claim 1 is as follows:
"In an apparatus for determining the location of an obstruction
in a well having therein a string of assembling tubing sections
interconnected with each other by coupling collars, means
communicating with said well for creating a pressure impulse in
said well, echo-receiving means including a pressure responsive
device exposed to said well for receiving pressure impulses from
the well and for measuring the lapse of time between the creation
of the impulse and the arrival at said receiving means of the echo
from said obstruction, and means associated with said pressure
responsive device for tuning said receiving means to the frequency
of echoes from the tubing collars of said tubing sections to
clearly distinguish the echoes from said couplings from each
other."
[
Footnote 8]
The typical claim there in suit was as follows:
"2. In a paper bag machine, the combination of the rotating
cylinder provided with one or more pairs of side-folding fingers
adapted to be moved toward or from each other, a forming plate also
provided with side-forming fingers adapted to be moved toward or
from each other, means for operating said fingers at definite times
during the formative action upon the bag tube, operating means for
the forming plate adapted to cause the said plate to oscillate
about its rear edge upon the surface of the cylinder during the
rotary movement of said cylinder for the purpose of opening and
forming the bottom of the bag tube, a finger moving with the
forming plate for receiving the upper sheet of the tube and lifting
it during the formative action, power devices for returning the
forming plate to its original position to receive a new bag tube,
and means to move the bag tube with the cylinder."
Continental Paper Bag Co. v. Eastern Paper Bag Co.,
210 U. S. 405,
210 U. S. 417,
n. 1.