(after stating the facts). The first claim of tlie reissue is not for a process or method, but for a product, a new article of manufacture — a garment stay. This stay has the following-features : First. A stiffening blade. Second. Two sheets of rubber, one lying on each side of the blade and projecting over its edges and ends. Third. Covering fabrics similar in dimensions to the rubber sheets and adhering thereto. Fourth. Projections sufficient to provide a stitching edge entirely around the blade. Such a stay, no matter how produced, would infringe, and such a stay, made prior to March, 1886, would anticipate.
■ The prior art shows a very large variety of stays. In January, 1883, Austin Kelley made a dress stay by covering a capped blade, precisely like the blade of the patent, with “gutta-percha tissue” which is concededly the equivalent for the “very thin" rubber strips of the patent. Kelley’s stay was also covered with a textile fabric which was wrapped round the gutta-percha, the parts being made to adhere by heat and pressure. "Kelley’s object, like Bowling’s, was to cover the stay so “as to exclude moisture,” and provide means for fastening if securely to the garment to be stayed. Although the Kelley patent says that "'a line of stitching is run near the edge of the busk, so as to pass through the four-fold outer covering, as well as the inner layer of muslin and gutta-percha,” it is not contended that this is the means of attachment shown in tin; patent at bar. On the other hand, it can hardly be disputed that the Kelley patent shows all of tlie features of the Bowling’ stay, except the stitching edge’ The complainant’s brief admits this, by implication, when it says: “The Kelley stay has been brought into use only by adding- the stitching edges of Bowling.” In other words, if the former had shown the edges of the latter it would have been an anticipation. Other patents might he cited showing, substantially, the same combination. For instance, Brown, in 1863, described a thin strip of steel covered with a woven fabric “the inner faceof which is coated with India-rubber,” and the Smith specification describes the corset stay of that patent (1879) as follows:
•‘A is tlie stay; a, tlie interior steel portion; b, tlie rubber coating between tlie steel and the outer cloth covering, c.”
References might be multiplied, but it is unnecessary. There can be no doubt that at the date of Bowling’s application it was old to cover a steel busk with India-rubber, or equivalent materials, and an outer covering of cloth completely enveloping the busk, adhesion of the parts being produced by heat and pressure. It cannot, then, be disputed that the prior art shows all the features of *280the claim as enumerated above except the fourth, viz.: "A stitching edge entirely around the blade.”
Starting with the Kelley patent, which;, for present purposes, is as pertinent a reference as any, the question of patentability may be reduced to the simple proposition, did) it involve invention to provide a stitching edge for Kelley’s stay?*<''Ít is obvious that with no assistance from the prior art the problem which Bowling had to solve was not particularly difficult. Before him was a waterproof dress stay designed to be attached to garments. The garment was there, the stay was there. How shall the stay be attached? Did it require any severe strain upon the “intuitive faculty of the mind” to suggest sewing? But it is said that not only was it necessary to think of sewing, but also to provide projections to hold the stitches. This is true, but in view of the ordinary expedients resorted to when it is desired to sew one article, through which a needle will not penetrate, to another, did it involve invention? It would seem that the weight of authority would require a negative answer. Thus far we have proceeded on the hypothesis that the prior art furnished no hint as to the manner in which rubber and cloth covered stays might be attached to the garment by sewing, but it will be found, on examination, that the way adopted by Bowling was well known as applicable to this particular art. The Brown patent, before alluded to, describes “a selvedge of woven fabric on each side of the crinoline” by means of which it “may be sewed onto any fabric by merely stitching down the sides instead of sewing over the metallic strands.” The fact that the Browi patent relates to stays for ladies’ skirts instead of dress or corsee stays is immaterial as they both belong to the same art. The record abundantly proves that in the eye of the patent law they are one and the same thing.
The patent to Van Orden, 1877, contains the following statement:
“The impervious covering is, preferably, made of the substance known as ‘celluloid,’ which is very strong and tough as well as elastic, and is sufficiently soft, or may be made so, as to permit of its being stitched through or sewed onto the cloth portion of the corset.”
The patent also says, that vulcanized rubber or other plastic compound may be used, and that the stay is attached to the corset “by sewing through one or both edges of the impervious covering.”
Nettleton, in 1885, described a stay having the covering material projecting at the ends. He says:'
“The stitches in seams H, which pass through the portions E of the stays, are thus made to perform the additional function of securing the stays in place.”
The “German stay,” which was on the market long prior to 1886, shows a steel stay with a cloth covering projecting on both sides so that it may be sewn to the garment by a line of stitches through these projecting edges. It is true that this is not a waterproof stay and that the stitching edges do not extend around the ends, but it certainly shows that there was nothing new in sewing a dress stay to a garment by stitching through edges projecting at *281the sides, and Neíüeton shows the same through end projections. The question may, therefore, he still further narrowed to the inquiry, did if require invention to provide the Kelley stay with the (Jerman and Kettleton projections? Tlx: court is constrained to answer this question in the negative. Bowling did not invent, a new stay or a new means of attaching an old stay. His stay is, very likely, more convenient than any which preceded it, but the features of which it is composed were ready at his hand in the prior art. ' To put them together did not require the genius of the inventor, but the skill of the mechanic. The ideas were all old, their application obvious, and the result the same.
In Cluett v. Claflin, 140 U. S. 180, 11 Sup. Ct. 725, the court had before it a patent for an improvement in shirts. One of the claims was as follows:
“In combination .with a shirt body, a shirt bosom bound on the outer edge with a folded and stitched binding, and attached to the shirt body by a separate line of stitching through such binding.”
The court says, after stating the facts:
“What then was left for Oluett to invent? Nothing, apparently, hut a separate line of stitches through the binding attaching the bosom to the shirt. But whether a separate line of stitches shall be used for this purpose, or whether such stitches shall pass through the binding or inside of it, is obviously a question of mere convenience, involving nothing which, under a most liberal construction, could be held to be an exercise of the inventive faculty. * >s * \y(i think this- case must be added to the already long list of those reported in the decisions of this court wherein the patentee has sought to obtain the monopoly of a large manufacture by a trifling deviation from ordinary and accepted methods.”
The applicability of this language seems obvious. If it be not invention to bind a bosom and sew it to a shirt, it is not invention to bind a dress stay so that it may be sewn to a dress.
The popularity of the complainant’s stay has been abundantly demonstrated by the proof, but, of course, invention cannot be predicated of this alone. McClain v. Ortmayer, 141 U. S. 419, 428, 12 Sup. Ct. 76; Walk. Pat. (3d Ed.) § 40. Sufficient reason for the success of the complainant’s stays is found in the attractive manner in which they are displayed, their superior workmanship and the ability with which they have been introduced to the market.
Patent Ko. .178,080 requires but a passing comment. It seems too plain for discussion that there is no patentable novelty in adding end caps to the steel of the former patent, especially when it is conceded that end caps identical in structure had been attached to similar steels as shown in at least seven different prior patents.
The bill is dismissed