Suit for tbe infringement of patent No. 986,698, issued to John W. Doster for a tie plate.
The claims relied on are 1, 2, and 5, and are as follows:
“1. A railway tie plate having a con-caved lower face for bearing upon a tie and with a plurality of ribs spaced apart and depending from the concaved face for embedding in a tie.
“2. A railway tie plate having a con-caved lower face for bearing upon a tie and with a plurality of ribs spaced apart and depending from the concaved face near the edges, and a rib depending from tbe con-caved face and at right angles to the spaced ribs, said ribs being adapted to be embedded in a tie.”
“5. A railway tie plate having a con-caved lower face and a stop rib upon its upper face, and a plurality of ribs spaced apart and depending from the curved face and adapted to be embedded in the upper face of a tie.”
The court below held each of the claims invalid for lack of invention and that they were not infringed. In the view we take of the case, it is only necessary to consider the first question.
Appellee insists that the claims show a combination of elements, each of which is old, and that they do not show patentable combination but a mere aggregation of old elements. Tbe elements are all old and well known in the art, and the only question is, Does the bringing together of these old elements in the maimer and for the purposes stated amount to a combination which involves invention, or does it show merely an aggregation of old elements performing their well-known functions? Tie plates having a concaved lower face for bearing upon a tie, tie plates with a plurality of ribs desponding from the lower face for embedding in the tie, and tie plates with a stop rib upon the upper face, are all old. The patentee simply put these elements together into or rather onto one tie plate. Each element in this so-called combination performs tbe same function in the same way as it did when used alone. There is no mutuality of action, no interaction, no co-operation, between them. Each acts just as it did when used alone. The result comes, not from the coaction of the elements, but from collecting tbe three elements together. This is mere aggregation, and does not involve invention.
Decree affirmed.