Patents Nos. 344,462 and 344,464 have expired since the commencement of this action and before the final hearing, and as to them a reference to a special master to take an account is all the decree can award. The demurrer to the bill for multifariousness is not sustained. The defense as to patents No. 344,464 and No. 344,462 that the assignments of the patents were not recorded as alleged is overruled.
The defendant’s counsel says:
“In defendant’s construction each of the elements, separately considered, are shown to be old; and they are employed in new combinations and arrangements which are not disclosed in complainant’s patents, and which are not subordinated by any of the claims in any of these patents, if they are real, in connection with the previous art.”
That the elements of defendant’s construction are all old is plain, but that we find any new combination or new or different or improved result than that found in complainant’s patents, and disclosed thereby, cannot be found by this court. The field is limited. Almon K. Virgil, the patentee, is entitled to be regarded as a pioneer in the art to which his invention relates. His first patents showed invention and were valid, but they did not prove a success commercially, because of certain defects. He persevered, thought, labored, expended time and money, and succeeded. It was when he succeeded that defendant came in, and, by borrowing, if not abstracting, ideas, etc., began infringement.
The invention is partially described by complainant as follows:
“The object of this new art was instruction in piano playing, for which purpose prior to these inventions only two classes of instruments had been employed, namely, either the piano itself, or a mute keyboard. The mute keyboard, or dumb piano, as it was sometimes called, was employed for the •gymnastic drill or exercise of the fingers and hands of the pupil. It was made mute or dumb so as to entirely eliminate the hearing as a factor in the exercise, and cause the fingers and hands to acquire strength and flexibility without dependence upon the ear, as also to permit the pupil to practice without disturbance of neighbors. It was impossible for the pupil to learn to play a new piece by the mere use of a mute keyboard. To do so, he must needs resort to the regular piano. Mute keyboards were therefore in no sense substitutes for the piano in learning the art of playing, but merely adjuncts or helps in the direction of physical and muscular development, the same as any gymnastic exercise is to a sport for which it may prepare the muscles without instructing the mind. The new art that Virgil invented for the purposes of piano instruction differed from the old in that, whilst it excluded the musical tone of the regular instrument, it still combined the action of the ear and the hands. Virgil conceived the idea that by accompanying each movement of the fingers with a short, distinct, nonmusical sound or click, the pupil and his instructor would gain all the benefit of the combined instruction of ear and hand, without the distracting influences of music; in other words, Mr. Virgil expresses it as ‘getting the mind into the hand.’ ”
Complainant concedes:
“Although this was not Virgil’s first patent in point of time, it was nevertheless the pioneer patent in point of success, and as such is entitled to all of •'the consideration of a pioneer. Virgil says: ‘The Techniphone (patent 344,-464) and Practice Clavier (patent 479,339) introduced a new art of instruction, namely, the art of instructing in piano playing by the aid of nonmusical sounds. The Techniphone was the pioneer instrument in this art, but, like many pioneer machines, it lacked sufficient perfection to make the art a success. I may add that the Practice Clavier is to be credited with the success *899of the art, for the reason that it removed the shortcomings of the Techniphone that stood in the way of the success of the new art.’ The reason why the Practice Clavier of patent 479,339 was thus able to convert failure into success, and to entitle itself to the credit of the pioneer successful machine, was because of the radical changes which it made over patent 344,404 in each of the following respects, each of which constitutes an element of one or more claims of 479,339, and which will be treated under separate heads: (1) In the time of the clicks; placing them at the extremes of the key strokes, instead of at intermediate points. (2) In the separate control of the clicks; enabling either to be used with or without the other. (3) In the ‘touch’; assimilating it to the piano touch. (4) In the quality of click. (5) In the regulation and indication of the tension.”
The defendant is shown to have had knowledge of these patents, and it also appears she was striving to evade infringement; that is, to make such changes and variations as would enable her to plead noninfringement. The purpose and thought displayed was not for the purpose of inventing, but of evading.
The defense of nonpatentability in view of the prior art is not sustained. The complainant is entitled to a decree that its patents are valid, that the named two have expired, that all have been infringed by defendant, for a perpetual injunction as to those still in force, and for an accounting as to all.