1. Two suits in which different defendants, charged as
infringers, set up the same ground of invalidity against a patent,
and which were tried by the court below on a joint record, may be
presented to this Court jointly. P.
301 U. S.
218.
2. Patent No. 1,262,860, for a method of hatching eggs,
held invalid because of anticipation.
Cf. Smith v.
Snow, 294 U. S. 1;
Waxham v. Smith, 294 U. S. 20. P.
301 U.S. 219.
3. Oral evidence
held insufficient, in itself, to
establish prior use of a patented method, but corroborated
sufficiently by documentary evidence. P.
301 U. S.
222.
4. Anticipation of a patented method is shown by knowledge of
the method, and its use with operative success, although without
full and precise knowledge of the scientific principles involved,
as outlined in the patent. P.
301 U. S.
226.
5. While, in attacking a patent, a Patent Office file on an
abandoned application may not be relied on as a prior publication,
it may be competent and cogent evidence of the nature and date of
an earlier invention reduced to practice. P.
301 U. S.
227.
6. The Smith patent was sustained in the
Snow and
Waxham cases,
supra, only by establishing that
neither the arrangement of the eggs nor the particular order in
which the propelled air current should reach the eggs, nor the
manner in which it was guided or controlled, is part of the patent
claimed. P.
301 U. S.
231.
7. A patentee who has sought and obtained a broad construction
of his claim cannot narrow it so as to avoid anticipation by
showing that the claimed method was used in a particular form of
structure not claimed. P.
301 U. S.
232.
8. In determining anticipation of a patented method, it is
immaterial that the structure employed in the earlier use was
neither the best possible nor as skilfully designed or used as that
later employed by the patentee. P.
301 U. S.
232.
Page 301 U. S. 217
9. Commercial success is not a necessary element of a prior use
anticipating and invalidating a patent. P.
301 U. S.
233.
83 F.2d 217, 221, affirmed.
Certiorari, 298 U.S. 652, to review two decrees of the court
below holding a patent invalid upon the ground of anticipation, and
thereupon reversing decisions of two district courts which had held
the patent valid and infringed. No. 35 was brought by Smith in
Connecticut for alleged infringement of Claim 1 against defendants
operating a large commercial hatchery in that State. No. 36 was a
like suit by him in New York against a corporation engaged in the
business of manufacturing and selling incubators and a commercial
hatcheries company which it controlled.
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
These cases involve the validity of the Smith patent No.
1,262,860, of April 16, 1918, and more particularly the question
whether Smith was anticipated by the prior use of the patented
invention by Hastings.
Page 301 U. S. 218
In
Smith v. Snow, 294 U. S. 1, we held
the patent valid and infringed. But, in that case, the Hastings
prior use was not presented or considered. At that time, the
present infringement suits brought by petitioner against
respondents Hall and James were pending in the District Courts for
Connecticut and for Western New York, respectively. In view of the
definition given to the patent by our decision, the Hastings
defense assumed an importance in these suits apparently not
attributed to it in earlier litigation, and it has been developed
in the records now before us more fully than in any earlier
case.*
The decrees of the District Courts rejecting the defense were
reversed by the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit,
Smith
v. Hall, 83 F.2d 217,
Smith v. James Mfg. Co., 83
F.2d 221, which found prior use by Hastings. We brought the cases
here on certiorari to resolve the conflict in the result of the
decisions below with that of our decision in
Smith v. Snow,
supra. The two suits came to the court below, as they do here,
upon different records. The court treated the cases as though the
two records constituted a joint record applicable to both cases,
and petitioner presents the cases here jointly.
See Butler v.
Eaton, 141 U. S. 240,
141 U. S.
243-244;
Dimmick v. Tompkins, 194 U.
S. 540,
194 U. S. 548;
Washington & Idaho R. Co. v. Coeur D'Alene Ry. &
Navigation Co., 160 U. S. 101,
160 U. S. 103;
De 233 U. S. S.
219� Bearn v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.,
233 U. S.
24, 233 U. S.
32; West Ohio Gas Co. v. Public Utilities Comm'n,
294 U. S. 63,
294 U. S.
70-71; cf. Reed v. Allen,@
286 U.
S. 191,
286 U. S.
198-199.
The Hall suit is for an infringement of Claim 1 of the patent,
and the James suit for infringement of Claims 1, 2, 3, and 5.
Claims 1, 2, and 3 are claims for a method of incubation of a
plurality of eggs. Claim 5 is a claim for an apparatus adapted to
the use of the method, and is of significance in the present
litigation only if a method claims is sustained. Claim 1 may be
taken as typical of the other method claims. In
Smith v. Snow,
supra, its essential elements were stated to be (p.
294 U. S. 8):
"(a) The arrangement of the eggs at different levels in staged
incubation in a closed chamber, having restricted openings of
sufficient capacity for the escape of foul air without undue loss
of moisture; (b) the application to the eggs of heated air in a
current created by means other than variation of temperature, and
(c) as marking the boundaries of the claim, the current of air is
to be of sufficient velocity to circulate, diffuse, and maintain
the air throughout the chamber at substantially the same
temperature whereby the air will be vitalized, moisture conserved,
and the units of heat carried from the eggs in the more advanced
stage to those in the less advanced."
Staged incubation is the successive setting of eggs in the same
incubator at brief intervals. At different stages in the course of
the three-week period of incubation, the eggs have different
temperatures, those in the earlier having lower temperatures than
those in the later stages. When subjected to a temperature
approximating that of body heat, the eggs of the earlier stages
absorb heat and those of the later stages give off heat. It was
pointed out in the opinion in the
Snow case that a
demonstrated advantage of the Smith method over that of the earlier
type of incubator, in which there was no propelled current of air,
is that it facilitates the continuous operation
Page 301 U. S. 220
of the incubator through staged incubation, and makes it
possible in the process of incubation to increase the number of
eggs in a single incubator from a few hundred to many
thousands.
To avoid infringement, it was insisted in the
Snow case
that the claim was restricted, by the specifications and drawings
of the patent, to use of the method in an apparatus by which the
propelled current of heated air was first brought in contact with
the more advanced eggs. In rejecting that contention, the opinion
pointed out that neither the claim itself, construed in the light
of the specifications, nor the successful operation of the method
required the arrangement of the eggs in any particular order; that
the continuous circulation of air of appropriate temperature in a
closed chamber, called for by the claim, served to equalize the
temperature at the desired degree by carrying heat units from the
more advanced eggs of high temperature to the less advanced eggs of
lower temperature, regardless of the particular order in which it
passed the eggs of different stages. We said (p.
294 U. S.
14):
"the claim does not call for a particular order or arrangement
of the eggs in staged incubation in the incubator, or that the
propelled current should reach them in any particular order, or
that it should be guided, controlled, or directed by any particular
means, or in any particular manner other than that it should be of
sufficient velocity to produce the results prescribed by the
claim."
Thus construed, infringement of the patented method could not be
avoided nor anticipation of it denied by showing that the
challenged use was with different arrangements of the eggs or with
a different structure, for guiding or controlling the propelled
current of air within the closed chamber, from any exhibited in the
specifications and drawings of the patent.
Page 301 U. S. 221
To establish the Hastings prior use, respondents rely on the
proof of his construction of an incubator in Brooklyn, N.Y., early
in 1911, and its use in the hatching season in the early months of
that year and of 1912, and on proof of his construction of another
in Muskogee, Oklahoma, in 1911, and its use in 1912 and 1913. They
offer documentary corroboration in more or less contemporary
articles in published journals and in a patent application with its
supporting documents, filed in the patent office in 1911.
Without stopping to state the evidence in detail, it is
established by the testimony of Hastings, abundantly corroborated
and not seriously denied, that, apart from the setting of eggs in
staged incubation, which will be presently discussed, these
incubators employed all the elements of the Smith method, and that
their operation was successful in the sense that they were each
used for hatching eggs for two successive seasons, and that the
percentage of the hatches was comparable to that of the smaller
still air incubators then in use. Hastings' incubators were closed
chambers, with restricted openings. A current of heated air was
propelled by a motor driven fan in such manner as to come in
contact with the eggs placed within the chamber in stacks of trays,
and to return to the fan by means of which it was continuously
recirculated.
See Smith v. Snow, supra, 294 U. S. 19-20;
Waxham v. Smith, 294 U. S. 20,
294 U. S. 22.
Both incubators were of large capacity. That in Brooklyn was built
for 6,000 eggs, although it does not appear that it ever contained
more than 2,000 eggs at any one time, and that in Muskogee was for
30,000 eggs. It is plain that Hastings built and operated
incubators suitable for the use of the Smith method, but petitioner
sharply challenges the contention that he did use that method in
either of them. It is said that there is no convincing proof that
eggs were ever placed in the Brooklyn incubator in staged
incubation,
Page 301 U. S. 222
and that the structure of the other and the manner of its use
were such as to show that the Smith method as we have described it
was not employed. These are the crucial issues.
Hastings built and operated the Brooklyn incubator for Davis,
who conducted a poultry farm as the means of supplying chickens for
a restaurant which he also operated. After Hastings left Davis'
employ in May, 1911, the latter operated the incubator during the
season of 1912. Subsequently he went out of the poultry business
and dismantled the incubator. Hastings testified, specifically and
in detail, that the eggs were placed in the Brooklyn incubator in
staged incubation. Davis, corroborated to some extent by his wife,
testified that the eggs were placed in the incubator at twice a
week intervals, when they were delivered at the rate of one or two
crates a week by the poultryman from whom they were purchased. The
eggs were placed in trays in the incubator chamber, where they were
exposed to a current of heated air under thermostatic control. The
air, maintained at a practically uniform temperature, was
continuously circulated throughout the chamber by means of an
electric fan. This oral testimony, if taken at its face value,
would show that the Smith method was used in the Brooklyn incubator
with eggs in staged incubation. But, without corroboration, it is
insufficient to establish prior use.
Barbed Wire Patent,
143 U. S. 275,
143 U. S. 284;
Deering v. Winona Harvester Works, 155 U.
S. 286,
155 U. S. 300;
Eibel Process Co. v. Minnesota & Ontario Paper Co.,
261 U. S. 45,
261 U. S. 60,
and we turn to the documentary evidence that Hastings knew the
method of the patent and used it in his Brooklyn structure.
Before 1908, Hastings had had an extensive experience in poultry
culture. In 1908 and 1909, he was in the service of the Department
of Agriculture, and. in the
Page 301 U. S. 223
course of his duties. he inspected many poultry plants and
experimental stations operating incubators. He was the author of a
book, "The Dollar Hen," published in 1909, in which he described a
procedure for the incubation of eggs. It spoke of an incubator in
which,
"[a]t hatching times, the eggs are spread out in trays in a
special hatching room, which is only large enough to accommodate
chicks in the amount of one-sixth of the incubator capacity, for
twice a week delivering or one-third if weekly deliveries are
desired."
It also described an incubator in which
"[a]ll temperature regulation is by means of air heated (or
cooled as the case may be) outside of the egg rooms and forced in
to the egg rooms by a motor driven cone fan, maintaining a steady
current of air, the rate of movement of which may be varied at
will. The air movement maintained will always be sufficiently
brisk, however, to prevent an uneveness [
sic] of
temperature in different parts of the room."
The reference to an incubator in continuous operation, for
deliveries once or twice a week, and to temperature regulation of
the egg chamber by a propelled current of heated air, moving at a
velocity sufficient to maintain an even temperature, shows that
Hastings had the conception of staged incubation long before he
built the Brooklyn incubator.
On May 3, 1911, while he was in Davis' employ, and when the
Brooklyn incubator was in operation, Hastings filed an application
for a patent, Serial No. 624,885. Documents in support of the
application filed as late as July, 1911, give Hastings' address as
that of Davis in Brooklyn. The application discloses a chamber with
restricted openings in which the eggs are placed and through which
a steady current of air, heated to a uniform temperature, is
propelled by a constantly moving electric fan, so as to circulate
throughout the chamber. Although the application taught the use of
fabric or perforated
Page 301 U. S. 224
partitions for the purpose of causing an even distribution of
the current of air, it specified that the invention was
"not limited to any particular circulation or movement of the
air, and, by the use of the fan, the gravity drafts may be overcome
and the air caused to move in any desired direction."
The application was prepared by Hastings, but, upon its
rejection by the examiner, he sought the aid of counsel who, on May
24, 1912, amended the claim and filed a statement in explanation of
it, stating that they had derived data and information from a
practical hatchery of large capacity then being operated by the
applicant.
In this statement, it was pointed out that
"the temperature of the eggs themselves varies in accordance
with the stage of their development, and the gaseous emanations
tend to produce vitiated conditions which exert a marked influence
upon the eggs themselves, and especially upon the adjacent eggs, if
the eggs are at different stages of their development;"
that,
"in a large hatchery where many hundreds and even thousands of
eggs are being continually advanced in the process of incubation,
the ordinary means for causing the circulation of air by convexion
currents through and in the incubating chamber has been
demonstrated as being totally inadequate, and this is believed to
be one of the principal reasons why, up to the present time,
hatcheries of large capacity have proven to be practical
failures."
And finally it was stated that Hastings had
"discovered that the temperature and gaseous stratification in
the incubating chamber must be overcome by a mechanically forced
circulation of the air which will insure a correct and uniform
influence of the air upon all of the eggs in the incubating
chamber, and this forced circulation must be such as to overcome
the counteracting influence of the eggs upon the air when said eggs
are in the different stages of incubation. "
Page 301 U. S. 225
In the brief of counsel on appeal to the Board of
Examiners-in-Chief, dated December 30, 1912, these points were
elaborated and explained. It was stated:
"The problem has been to enable the incubating operations to be
carried on continuously, if so desired, with eggs at all stages of
development, and with all of a vast number of eggs subjected to the
same temperature and atmospheric conditions best adapted for the
development of the embryo."
It was pointed out that,
"during the initial stage of incubation, the eggs absorb heat
whereby their temperature is raised, but, during the final stages,
the vital processes generate heat, and in practice it is found
that, with vast numbers of eggs assembled in a single compartment
and with eggs at all stages of incubation, but very little
extraneous heat need be supplied, because the eggs, in the later
stages of development, supply the necessary heat for the eggs in
the earlier stages of development. In practice, however, a source
of heat is always maintained in order to permit of proper
regulation."
It was then explained that the "temperature stratification in
the egg chamber" is overcome
"through the provision of a mechanically operated air forcing
means which would force a rapid circulation of air through the
whole collection of eggs in the chamber and past the heater. The
mechanical air forcing means is an essential factor if heat is to
be conserved and the conditions maintained uniform."
And later it was said:
"It is through the instrumentality of these elements that the
temperature and gaseous stratification of the air in the chamber is
overcome and the eggs are uniformly subjected to the influence of
air of the same temperature and composition."
The brief also quoted from a statement of Hastings which, after
observing that temperature stratification may be overcome in a
hatching chamber holding many
Page 301 U. S. 226
thousands of eggs by applying to them a mechanically impelled
blast of air, says:
"In the Hastings hatchery, a current of air is blown past each
and every egg at the rate of thirty feet per minute, and this
rapidly moving air quickly bringing the temperature of the egg to
approximately that of the air. This method of heating keeps the
temperature of the eggs in the advanced state of incubation down
within a few degrees of that of the air, the exact difference being
regulated at will by adjusting the speed of the fan. When properly
adjusted, the same blast of air used to heat fresh eggs does
equally well for eggs in the advanced stages, just as the same
temperature of the body of the hen incubates the eggs at all stages
of development, without recourse on the hen's part to the 'hatching
fever,' erroneously supposed to explain the high temperature of
eggs at a more advanced stage of development. Owing to this fact,
eggs at all stages may be handled simultaneously, with uniformly
good results."
He also mentioned the introduction of moisture into the current
of air by the use of a spray or the introduction of outside air at
the fan.
We think it plain that, at the time these documents were filed,
the essential elements for hatching eggs in staged incubation, as
they were later claimed in the Smith patent, were known to
Hastings, and that he was familiar with a structure capable of
employing that method. They afford convincing corroboration of the
oral testimony that the incubator in use in Brooklyn immediately
preceding the filing of the application, and both incubators in use
during its pendency, employed the method of the Smith claim.
Whether Hastings knew fully and precisely the scientific principles
involved in the procedure thus outlined is immaterial. It is enough
if he knew and used the method with operative
Page 301 U. S. 227
success.
De Forest Radio Co. v. General Electric Co.,
283 U. S. 664,
283 U. S. 686. He
did know the method of setting eggs in staged incubation in a
closed chamber and continuously circulating through them a current
of moistened air at an appropriate temperature, and he knew that
the advantages of the use of this method over the type of incubator
in which there were no mechanically propelled currents of air were
that it facilitated the continuous operation of the incubator and
the simultaneous incubation in a single chamber of a greatly
increased number of eggs.
The disclosures made in the Hastings brief were so complete that
they might well have been used in support of the Smith claim.
Pressed to their conclusion, they would have warranted award of the
patent later granted to Smith.
See Smith v. Snow, supra,
294 U. S. 14-16.
While the Patent Office file on the abandoned claim is not relied
on as a prior publication,
See The Corn Planter
Patent, 23 Wall. 181,
90 U. S.
210-211;
cf. Alexander Milburn Co. v.
Davis-Bournonville Co., 270 U. S. 390,
270 U. S.
400-402, it is competent and cogent evidence to
determine the nature and date of the invention which the inventor
claims to have embodied in working form,
see The Corn Planter
Patent, supra, 90 U. S. 211;
United States Blind Stitch Mach. Corp. v. Reliable Mach. Works,
Inc., 67 F.2d 327, 328; Walker, Patents (6th Ed., 1929), §§
97, 98.
In 1911, Hastings induced Lieber, a local lawyer and businessman
of Muskogee, Oklahoma, and another to organize a corporation for
the promotion of the Hastings method of incubation. Under its
auspices, Hastings constructed there an incubator of 30,000-egg
capacity in the latter part of 1911, and directed its operation
during the 1912 hatching season. Its operation was continued by an
associate in the season of 1913. The general plan of its
construction and mechanical operation, as testified to by
Page 301 U. S. 228
Hastings, is abundantly corroborated by disinterested witnesses
and contemporary photographs and publications describing it. The
principal witnesses are Lieber, who furnished the money for the
enterprise, Peabody, the electrical contractor who installed the
fan and other electrical equipment of the incubator, and Hickox,
manager of the local electric light company which supplied the
current for the incubator. In 1912, Hickox took photographs of the
incubator in operation and prepared a written description of it.
These were produced at the trial.
The uncontradicted evidence is that the incubator consisted of a
large room in which there were a series of stacks of egg trays with
wire mesh bottoms. Each stack, having a capacity of 5,000 eggs, was
placed in a separate compartment. There was a corridor in front of
the trays, giving access to the stacks, which, in operation, were
closed on the corridor side by removable shutters. A motor-driven
fan, placed at one end of the incubator, propelled a current of air
over a moisture pan, thence through a passage at the back of the
egg trays into contact with a heating pipe under thermostatic
control. From that point, it passed into a passageway directly
above the stacks of egg trays, thence downward through the trays to
a passage beneath them, through which the current was returned to
the fan in continuous circulation. A number of other witnesses,
having no connection with the Hastings enterprise, including three
called by petitioner, saw the incubator in operation and
corroborate the testimony as to its main features; the presence
within the incubator of thousands of eggs, placed in stacks or
trays, hatched by the circulation through them of a fan-propelled
heated current of air.
An article giving some account of the Hastings incubator,
prepared by an editor of Poultry Culture and published in that
journal for February, 1912, mentions the
Page 301 U. S. 229
use of two flumes carrying the current of air from the fan, only
one of which brought the air into contact with the heater. It
speaks of a use of a means for controlling temperature of the air
passing to each egg compartment by mixing in proper proportions the
flow of air from the two flumes. The existence of such a double
conduit is not corroborated by any witness or any document, and is
explicitly denied by Lieber, testifying in behalf of petitioner in
the
Snow case, made a part of the present record, and by
Hastings. Peabody, who installed the electrical equipment, and
Hickox, who prepared a contemporary written description of the
incubator, make no mention of it. Drawings showing a single
passageway carrying the current of air to the egg stacks were
identified as accurate by Hastings, Lieber, and Peabody. We
conclude that, whatever experimental proposals or installations may
have been made, the incubator was used with a single air passage
above the egg compartments.
All the witnesses agree that the incubator was commercially
operated during the hatching seasons of 1912 and 1913, and that it
hatched different batches of eggs placed in it with varying
success. The hatches of the eggs furnished by some customers were
failures. Others were successful. One of petitioner's witnesses
testified that the hatches never exceeded 50 percent. Lieber
estimated that 50 percent was the average, with some people getting
none and others getting 80 percent. Hastings, who in the Canadian
suit testified that the average was 40 percent, stated that some
settings ran up to 70 percent. There is no testimony of any
mechanical failure of the incubator after the initial trials of it,
as a result of which an electric blower was substituted for the fan
of lesser power. In 1912, Hastings departed for Texas, where he
started another incubator. After operating the incubator through
another hatching season, Lieber, his financial backer, abandoned
the enterprise.
Page 301 U. S. 230
As with the Brooklyn incubator, the critical issue is whether
that in Muskogee was used with eggs in staged incubation in the
manner of the Smith claim. It is established beyond doubt that eggs
in different stages were in process of incubation there at the same
time. The incubator was used in large measure for "custom
hatching." At frequent intervals, patrons brought their eggs in
relatively small quantities to be placed in the incubator for
hatching, and received at the end of the hatching period their
share of the newly hatched chicks.
The testimony of Hastings that staged incubation was employed in
the Muskogee structure is corroborated by this course of business
and by the contemporaneous statements and brief filed with his
patent application. He testified that eggs of different stages were
sometimes, though not always, placed in the same compartment of the
incubator. The Poultry Culture article of February, 1912, states,
after describing the use of the fan-propelled current of heated air
in the incubator:
"Eggs at all stages can be placed in the same trays of the
Hastings hatchery, with little or no injury. Mr. Hastings hatched
several thousand eggs under such conditions in his Brooklyn plant
last year."
Petitioner stresses the point that, in the Muskogee incubator,
the stacks of egg trays were concededly placed in separate
compartments, with openings at the top having slide doors which
could be used like a valve for regulating the volume of air flowing
into each compartment. Hastings testified that the slide doors were
used to cut down the supply of air when there were few or no eggs
in a compartment, and that they were left open when the compartment
was substantially full of eggs. Petitioner points to this and to
some testimony by Hastings and Lieber that the slide doors could be
used to regulate the temperature in each compartment through
control of the
Page 301 U. S. 231
volume of air passing through them, and to testimony by Lieber
that the eggs, as received, were first placed in one compartment
and then at intervals, as other eggs came in, were moved from one
compartment to another, and that the doors were used to control
variations of temperature in the different compartments.
From this, the inference is drawn that only eggs of the same
stage were placed in any one compartment, and from the inference it
is argued that they were not set in staged incubation. But, even if
the inference is correct, it establishes only that a special method
or device to guide and control the air current was used, not that
staged incubation was wanting. The presence or absence of a device
for controlling the current of air within the incubator is no part
of the Smith claim. Our opinions in
Smith v. Snow, supra,
and
Waxham v. Smith, supra, were careful to point out that
infringement of the method could not be avoided by using it in
conjunction with such a device. The presence of the device in the
Muskogee incubator did not foreclose anticipation if the method was
used. Since the circulating current of air passed repeatedly into
the compartments in the Muskogee structure and came in contact with
the heating pipe and with the eggs in the several stacks of trays,
the tendency of the operation was to equalize the temperature and
to carry heat units from the more advanced to the less advanced
eggs. This is the method of the patent, and it was employed in the
Muskogee structure whether the trays of eggs of different stages
were placed in the same or different compartments.
The patent was sustained in the
Snow and
Waxham cases,
supra, only by establishing that
neither the arrangement of the eggs, nor the particular order in
which the propelled current should reach the eggs, nor the manner
in which it was guided or controlled is part of the
Page 301 U. S. 232
patent claimed. It was this construction of the claim which gave
a new significance to the Hastings incubators, different from any
recognized by previous decisions. The petitioner, having sought and
obtained a broad construction of his claim, cannot now narrow it so
as to avoid anticipation by showing that the claimed method was
used in a particular form of structure not claimed. It was the
method thus defined which Hastings used, regardless of the
particular structure which he devised to guide and control the
current of air in his incubator or the order in which it came into
contact with the heater and eggs of different stages. It is
immaterial that his structure for using the method was neither the
best possible nor as skillfully designed or used as that later
employed by Smith.
Pickering v. McCullough, 104 U.
S. 310,
104 U. S. 319;
cf. Telephone Cases, 126 U. S. 1,
126 U. S. 531,
126 U. S.
536.
In view of this conclusion, it is unimportant whether Hastings
used the method in his Brooklyn incubator. But we think the
testimony of its use there is sufficiently corroborated. His
statement in "The Dollar Hen," already quoted, published before the
Brooklyn structure was erected, shows clearly that he contemplated
the continuous operation of an incubator with the eggs set in
staged incubation so that they would be hatched for deliveries once
or twice a week, by a procedure substantially that of the Smith
claim. The circumstances attending the Brooklyn use, which called
for the setting of eggs at frequent intervals in an incubator of
large capacity, the structure exhibited in Hastings' patent
application, the subsequent course of the application in the Patent
Office, and finally the renewed effort at Muskogee embodying the
same principles, although with an immaterial variation in
structure, and the fact that both incubators functioned, are
convincing evidence that Hastings knew and used in appropriate
combination, both in
Page 301 U. S. 233
Brooklyn and in Muskogee, the essential elements of the Smith
claim. They support the heavy burden of persuasion which rests upon
one who seeks to negative novelty in a patent by showing prior use.
See Radio Corporation v. Radio Engineering Laboratories,
293 U. S. 1,
293 U. S. 7, and
cases cited.
Petitioner urges, and we have considered, numerous other
objections to the sufficiency of proof of the Hastings prior use.
The only one calling for any comment is the suggestion that the
Brooklyn and Muskogee enterprises were not commercially successful.
Commercial success may turn the scale when invention is in doubt,
Paramount Publix Corp. v. American Tri-Ergon Corpo.,
294 U. S. 464,
294 U. S. 474;
De Forest Radio Co. v. General Electric Co., supra,
283 U. S. 685,
and the want of it may, in some circumstances, be evidence of want
of operative success. But here, Hastings, by the use of a method
which we have sustained as an invention,
Smith v. Snow,
supra, has attained the particular results described by the
patent. He knew the method and used it in a device capable of
employing it. In such circumstances, want of commercial success,
which the record suggests may have been due to lack of technical
and business skill, is not an indication that there was no prior
use.
Upon the records now before us, we must conclude, as did the
Supreme Court of Canada upon a similar record (footnote **,
supra), that Hastings antedated Smith. The Smith method
was "known or used by others in this country before his invention
or discovery thereof." 35 U.S.C. § 31.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER took no part in the consideration or
decision of these cases.
* Together with No. 36,
Smith, Executor v. James
Manufacturing Co., also on certiorari to the Circuit Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit.
** Before the decision in
Smith v. Snow, 294 U. S.
1, the Hastings defense had been considered and rejected
in
Buckeye Incubator Co. v. Wolf, 291 F. 253,
aff'd, 296 F. 680, in
Buckeye Incubator Co. v.
Cooley, 17 F.2d 453, and in
Buckeye Incubator Co. v.
Stone, a suit in the District Court for Oregon, by a special
master's report, which does not appear to have been reviewed by the
court. In the numerous other litigations of the Smith patent which
preceded the decision in
Smith v. Snow, supra, see 294
U.S. at
294 U. S. 3, Note
1, the Hastings defense was not urged. Since the decision in the
Snow case, the defense has been interposed in suits in the
District Courts,
Smith v. Street (Dist.Ct. for Minn.),
Smith v. Sims (Dist.Ct. for Indiana), and it has recently
been sustained by the Supreme Court of Canada, in
The King v.
The Smith Incubator Co., (1937).