The By water patent in suit is for a new manufacture, namely, a knitted fabric whose face is matted and curly, presen ting the appearance of Astrakhan cloth. To produce this knitted fabric, the face yarn must be of mohair or a curly, crinkly wool, and the yarn must be put in in long floats, so that it will mat and curl, thus imparting to the face of the fabric an Astrakhan like appearance. The specification and drawings of this patent seem to be perfectly intelligible to skilled knitters, giving them all needed directions. Ho witness has testified, nor is it *650alleged, that the patent fails to give to any practical knitter such full and clear information as will enable him to make the patented fabric. This fabric has become a well-known article of commerce, and is now extensively used.
Infringement of the second claim of the patent is here conlplained of. That claim is as follows:
“(2) A knitted fabric, composed of face and back yarns of different materials, the face yarn being locked at regular intervals, and on alternate stitches of adjacent rows of the back yarn, and being matted and. curly, and having a smooth back, whereby the said fabric has the appearance of looped or Astrakhan cloth, as described.”
It appears from the brief of the appellees (the defendants below) that four defenses are relied upon, viz.: (1) “Anticipation of the patent in suit by the patents set up”; (2) “public use and sale in the United States of the patented fabric more than two years prior to the application for the patent in suit”; (3) “abandonment”; and (4) “noninfringement.” All these defenses were overruled by the court below, except the single defense of anticipation by the British patent of 1881, to James Booth.
Now, taking up the defenses in an order the reverse of the above enumeration, and first dealing with the question of infringement, we find in this record positive evidence showing the manufacture by the defendants of the fabric described in the patent in suit, and covered by its second claim. The evidence is certainly sufficient to sustain the allegation of infringement made in the bill.
With respect to abandonment, a careful examination of the proofs leads to the conviction that that defense is not well founded. Bv-water’s application for the patent in suit was filed on December 22, 1883. If he abandoned his invention to the public, it must have been prior to that date. Under all the circumstances shown, it would be going a great length to impute to him the intention to relinquish his invention. Then, we do not perceive any just ground for an estoppel against him. It does not appear that he misled any one by what he did or by what he omitted to do. Moreover, the court below found that the proofs did not carry back Bywater’s perfected invention beyond the date of his application for this patent. That position was taken in the court below by the defendants, who thus successfully met the attempt of the plaintiff to antedate Booth. But, if Bywater’s invention was not in a completed form until the date of his application, it is very hard to see how an abandonment is to be ascribed to him. The court below did not err in disallowing this defense.
The defense of two years’ prior use and public sale in the United States rests upon the importation by H. Herman Sternbach & Co., at the port of New York, in May, 1881, of certain pieces of “kyrle” cloakings. We agree, however, with the learned judge of the court below, that there is “room for very grave doubt” whether those goods were the knitted Astrakhan of this patent; and we also concur in his view that there is a failure of satisfactory evidence to show that they passed into public use, or were put on sale. The evidence of prior use or sale did not reach the standard of cér-*651tain proof required to sustain sucb defense. Cantrell v. Wallick, 117 U. S. 689, 695, 6 Sup. Ct. 970.
We have carefully considered the British patent of 1849 to Henry Dunnington, the British patent of 1857 to Ball & Wilkins, the United States patent of 1875 to Kent & Leeson, and the United States patent of 1883 to S. N. Levy, which are insisted upon by the defendants as anticipating Bywater. In out- judgment, these patents, taken singly or together, do not embody or disclose the Bywater invention. We adopt the views of the court below as expressed in its opinion touching this branch of the defense, and we concur in its conclusion that none of the four above-named patents are anticipatory of the invention of the patent in suit.
This brings us to a consideration of the British patent of 1881 to James Booth. The case, we think, turns upon the question whether the Booth patent disclosed the Bywater invention. Now, it is a well-settled and familiar doctrine that an invention patented here is not to be defeated by a prior foreign patent unless its de-' seriptions or drawings contain or exhibit a substantial representation of the patented invention in such full, clear, and exact terms as to enable any person skilled in the art or science to which it appertains, without the necessity of making experiments, to practice the invention. Seymour v. Osborne, 11 Wall. 516, 555; Cahill v. Brown, 3 Ban. & A. 580, 587, Fed. Cas. No. 2,291.
Mr. Robinson, in Ms work on Patents (volume 3, § 329), discussing the kindred defense of prior publication, states the rule thus:
“The invention described in the publication must be identical in all respects wiui that whose novelty it contradicts. The same idea of means, in the same stage of development, as that which the inventor of the later has embodied, must be thereby communicated to the public.”
Again, the same learned author (section 335), in treating of the defense of a prior patent, says:
“So. when the inventor of the patented invention has included in his art or instrument some act or pail, without perceiving its significance, and thus, in patentin»; jt, fails †0 specifically describo such part or act, although, if his invention had been practically employed, such act or part might have become known to the public, his patent does not place it in their reach.”
Applying these principles here, can it fairly be said that Booth’s patent disclosed the Bywater invention, or brought it within the reach of the public? If any such disclosure was made, it must be found in the following cited clauses of Booth’s specifications. After stating that his invention relates “to means whereby a novel description of fabric is produced ou that class of knitting machinery known as the circular or French frame,” Booth proceeds thus:
“For this purpose I form the back of the fabric of the ordinary looping threads, using ordinary wool yarn for such purpose, and I form the face of the fabric on that part which has usually been considered the back. For this purpose, I employ worsted or long filtered yarn for the face, which is laid in between the needles in a.ny desired order; such face yarn being tied to the looping thread by (he tie thread usually employed in the manufacture of fleecy hacked hosiery. The fabric, after removal from the machine, is subjected to the process known as ‘fulling,’ or ‘felting,’ whereby the back *652or knitted portion of the fabric becomes considerably shrunk, and the fibers thereof felted together, whilst the face yarn, being laid in straight, and tied to the body o-r back at longer or shorter intervals, is caused to project from the back or body 'of the fabric in the form of loops, thereby producing a very ornamental appearance.”
Booth’s claim reads thus:
“The manufacture of a novel description of fabric on that class of knitting machinery known as the circular or 'French frame, by employing woolen (felting) yarn for the body or back of the fabric, and longer fibered (unfelt-ing) yarn for the top or face of the fabric, which is made on that side usually considered the back, and afterwards fulling or felting such fabric, substantially as herein described.”
The foregoing.is the entire information touching Booth’s fabric contained in his patent. His drawings do not show the fabric either during the process of manufacture or in a finished state. His patent makes no reference to Astrakhan or Astrakhan cloth. It contains no hint that his fabric is to have an Astrakhan like appearance. It gives no directions whereby a resemblance to Astrakhan cloth can be attained. ' It says nothing about a curly or wavy surface. It does not state that his loops are to be matted and curled. On the contrary, his statement is that, by tbp process of fulling or felting, the back of the fabric “becomes considerably shrunk,” and the face yarn is caused to project “in the form of loops, thereby producing a very ornamental appearance.” Evidently, the described loops thus produced are plain loops. The essential features of Astrakhan cloth are lacking. It is clear to us from the face of Booth’s patent that the product therein described and thereby attained is something altogether different from the fabric described and produced by Bywater in and by the patent in suit.
The contrary conclusion, which the able judge of the court below reached, was based upon the effect which he felt constrained to give to the testimony of the defendants’ professional expert, their foreman, and two knitters. We have examined that testimony with the utmost care, and we are obliged to say that, in our opinion, it does not justify a decree adverse to the patent in suit. This testimony strikes us as very meager. It consists of little more than the bare opinions of the witnesses that Booth’s patent discloses the Bywater fabric. The witnesses really give no reasons for their conclusions. No detailed analysis of Booth’s specifications is made by any of them. None of them pretend that any of the terms employed in Booth’s patent require explanation by an expert. No such elucidation ■ is attempted by any of them. These witnesses call the Booth fabric “Astrakhan cloth,” and say that, by following the directions of Booth’s patent, without more, Astrakhan cloth can be produced; and one of them states that he has done this. This is the whole substance of their testimony. Ought it to be controlling? We think not. Testifying in 1896, it was impossible for these witnesses to divest their minds of their then knowledge respecting the Bywater fabric and the mode of its production, even if they had been unbiased. But what a willing witness *653in 1896 might read into the Booth patent is no fair test. The true question is, what did that patent disclose to the public in 1881? We are well satisfied that the expert testimony of the defendants’ witnesses furnishes no safe aid in the solution of that question. The .Booth patent speaks for itself, and its meaning is to be determined by the court.
The language of the Booth patent which we are calk'd upon to consider is of easy comprehension. The following observations of the supreme court «-ire here pertinent:
“The words used nre not technical, either as haying a special sense by commercial usage, nor as having a scientific meaning different from their popular meaning. They are the words of common speech, and, as such, their interpretation is wiiiiin the judicial knowledge, and therefore matter of law.” Marvel v. Merritt, 116 U. S. 11, 12, 6 Sup. Ct. 207.
In Norton v. Jensen, 1 C. C. A. 452, 49 Fed. 859, 864, the circuit court of appeals for the Ninth circuit well said:
“If the reasons given by the expert, witness are deemed reasonable and satisfactory, the court may adopt them; but, if they are unsatisfactory, the court will discard ilie testimony, and act upon its own knowledge and judgment. It is always the duty of the courts to construe the patent by reference to the language of the claims and an examina lion of the specifications and drawings accompanying the same.”
In National Co. v. Belcher, 71 Fed. 876, 879, this court, speaking by Judge Butler, in refusing to give controlling effect to the testimony of a competent mechanic, who stated that, by following the directions of an earlier patent, he had made a device identical with the one in controversy, said:
“If a. valuable patent might be overthrown in this manner by the testimony of an expert, without careful inquiry into, and virtual demonstration of, its correctness, the rights of imientoes would rest upon the testimony of such witnesses, rather than the judgment of the court.”
Here the defendants’ expert witnesses.fall very far short of demonstrating the correctness of their testimony. They do not give any satisfactory reasons to sustain their statements. Virtually their testimony is the expression of mere opinions. But, convinced by our investigation that Booth’s patent neither described By-water’s fabric nor disclosed to the public the means for its production, we most follow our own judgment. The decree of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded to that court, with directions to enter a decree in favor of the complainant in the bill.