The hill in this case charges the defendant with the infringement of patent No. 162,183, granted to complainant April 20, 1875, for an “improvement in metallic paper-fasteners,” and patent No. 337,182, granted to complainant March 2, 1886, for a “metallic fastener,” and seeks an injunction and accounting. In the specifications of the first-mentioned patent the matter of the invention covered thereby is stated as follows:
“My invention relates to that class of metallic fastenings known to the trade as ‘ McGill’s paper-fasteners,’ wherein the shanks of the fasteners are flat, and in close contact with each other, and make only a single hole in the papers which it is designed to connect; the two shanks opening from each other after passing through the papers, and confining said papers between said shanks and the head of the fastener. * * * The shanks of the fasteners so formed are run through the papers or other articles to be connected, and are separated on the other side of the same, and thus coniine said articles between the said shanks and the head of the fastener.”
The fasteners described in the patent are made by cutting two blanks from thin, flexible sheet-metal of suitable width for the purpose required, which are made pointed at one end, and on the other end is a semi-circular piece, which, on being bent at a right angle, makes a semi-circular head. These two blanks are placed back to back, so that they present a circular head or top, and over those is turned a concave metal cap, which gives the top or head of the fastener a button-like appearance, and holds the shanks of the two blanks in close parallel contact. Another mode of making the fastener, as described in the specifications, is to cut a slit in the middle of the metal cap of the proper shape and size to allow the two shanks to be passed through it, so that the heads of the two shanks shall rest in the cap, and then turn the flange of the cap up over these heads. There is but one claim in this patent, which is:
“The within-described metallic fastener, formed of the two blanks, ab, ab, and the cap or shell, a, bent and connected together as herein shown and described, the ends of the shanks, b, b, of the blanks being in close parallel contact, and pointed so as to. make only a single hole in the articles it is designed to connect, substantially as described.”
The other patent shows a blank for a metallic fastener cut from thin, flexible sheet-metal, preferably sheet-brass, split from both ends in a manner to leave a neck between the two cuts, so that two pointed shanks project in one direction and two arms in the other direction from this neck. This blank is then folded over in such a way that the shanks are brought back to back, in close parallel contact, the neck holding them in this position. The arms are then bent at right angles in opposite directions, and a metal cap is closed over these arms, thus making a *231head for the fastener. This metal cap may be round or oblong in shape; may be placed on top of the arms, and its flange turned down over them; or a slit may be made in the middle of the cap, through which the shanks may be passed, and then the flange of the cap turned upward over the arms. The specifications say:
“The fastener is operated by forcing its double shank through the articles to be bound or fastened until the under side of its covered head rests on one side of the same, and then separating the blades of the shank on the other side of the material and bending them down flat, in opposite directions, on the same, so as to bind the material between them and the fastener head. One of the shanks of the fastener is made longer than the oilier, so that it will project beyond the shorter one when both shanks are folded in cióse parallel contact, to admit of the ready separation of the shanks in applying the fastener, as described. The connecting neck holds the parts of the fastener together, thereby facilitating the capping or covering of the same. It also binds or locks together the tops or fold of the fastener shanks;- and prevents their parting at that point while the shanks proper are being separated in applying the article to the uses intended.”
Infringement is charged only as to the first and second claims of the patent, which are:
“(1) A metal fastener blank, split centrally through its length from both ends in manner to form a connecting neck, a, having two shanks, 6, b, of different lengths, projecting in one direction, and two arms, c, c, in the opposite direction, substantially as set forth. (2) As an improved article of manufacture, a metallic fastener consisting of a metal fastener blank split centrally through part of its length from both ends, one of the split ends forming the two shanks, b, b, of different lengths, and the other end the amis, c, c, the shanks, b, b, being folded back to back, in close parallel contact, and the arms, o, c, folded over in opposite directions at right angles from the shanks, b, b, and permanently secured in such position by a metal cap, suh-i stanlially as described.”
The defenses insisted upon are: (1) That the patents are both void for want of novelty; (2) that defendants do not infringe.
The proof shows that the initial step in the art to which these devices belong was a fastener made of thin, flexible metal, pointed at one end, and a portion of the other end bent at aright angle, thus leaving a pointed single shank, which could bo thrust through the paper and bent sideways, so that the paper was held between the head and bent shank. The proof also shows that in July, 1866, a patent was granted to complainant 'for a metallic paper-fastener, which was made by bending a strip of thin, flexible metal in such a manner as to form a head, and two shanks project back to back downward from the middle of the head. This is described in the patent as a “T-shaped fastener;” thus making a fastener with two shanks, instead of one, which could be thrust through one lude in the paper or material to be held together, and the material firmly held between the head and shanks by bending the shanks sideways in opposite directions. And the proof also shows that for more than two years before complainant applied for patent No. 162,183, of April 20, 1875, he had made and put upon the market paper-fasteners made sub*232stantially like those described in his patent of July, 1866, over the heads of which had been turned a metal caj), thus giving the heads a button-like appearance. It is true, he states that he had used this metal cap merely as an ornament, and that it performed no such function as it performed in patent 162,183, where the cap held the two shanks of the fastener together. The proof also shows that in May, 1870, a patent was granted to one Gilford for a button, where two metal shanlts, with the upper ends bent at right angles, are held together by turning the flange of the middle cap over them: and it is obvious, evento superficial inspection, that these shanks, thus united by a cap, only needed to be pointed to make the fastener described in complainant’s patent 162,183. The complainant’s admission that he had used the metal caps on the heads of fasteners made under the 1866 patent, seems to me sufficient to answer any claim of novelty in the idea of capping the heads of the shanks shown in patent 162,183.. It involved no invention to use a cap for the purpose of holding the two shanks of the 1875 patent together when the same kind of cap had been turned over the head of the 1866 fastener, even if in the latter the cap was merely ornamental. But I doubt if the cap was a merely ornamental appliance to the 1866 fastener. The heads of its fasteners were made by merely bending a flat piece of metal into a T-shape, and would be naturally loose and easily displaced, and the cap necessarily gave firmness and strength to the structure, and the inference is certainly a natural one that the statement of merely ornamental use was made in the exigency of his case for the purpose of securing the issue of the patent No. 162,183, the application for which was then pending, and had been reported adversely upon in the patent-office. With a metal cap, used by complainant himself for over two years on T-shaped paper-fasteners made under his patent of July 24, 1866, and with the Gilford patent of May 24, 1870, showing two button shanks, held together by a metal cap, I am of opinion there was no novelty in the fastener covered by the patent No. 162,183, granted April 20, 1875.
The first claim of the patent of March 2, 1886, is upon the metal blank split centrally lengthwise from one end to form the shanks of a fastener, one shank being shorter than the other, and also split centrally from the other end to form arms, leaving a connecting neck between the two slits, thus making a blank which, on being folded over on the line of the slits, brings the two shanks of the fastener closely together, face to face, and on which a head can be formed by bending the arms above the necks in opposite directions at right angles, and covering them with a metal cap. This claim is most clearly anticipated in the Pack & Van Horn patent of November 23, 1875, in the Locks patent of December, 1883, in the Lindsay patent of January 25, 1876, and in the complainant’s patent No. 199,085, granted January 8, 1878, so far as the slitting of the metal is concerned, so as to leave a connecting neck between the two shanks; and in complainant’s patent No. 56,587, granted July 24, 1866, the drawings show one of the pointed shanks of the T-shaped fastener there described as shorter than the other; and in com-*233plainanfs patent, No. 308,368, granted Xovember 25,1884, he not only shows in his drawings, but particularly describes, a two-shanked fastener, with one shank made shorter than the other, “for convenience in separating the shanks for the purpose of clinching them down.” So that it appears clearly from the proof that a blank for a metal fastener with these two features — the connecting neck, with one shank shorter than the other — was certainly old at the time the patent Xo. 337,182 was applied for and obtained. The second claim of this patent, No. 337,182, is for a metallic fastener as a new article of manufacture, made from the blank described in the first claim, and the head covered by a metal cap. As the metal cap in this claim is of the same kind, and performs no other function, than the cap called for in complainant’s patent, Xo. 162,183, granted April 20, 1877, not to mention those which he applied to his fasteners of his July, 1866, patent, and is also found in his patent of .January, 1878, there was certainly no novelty in the use of such cap at the time complainant applied for and obtained his patent No. 337,182.
I will add that the proof shows that this complainant has taken out over 100 patents upon metallic fasteners intended to fasten paper or textile material together, hut, so far as the two patents now before the court are concerned, the two-shank fasteners covered by the old patent of July 24, 1866, with the head covered by a melal cap turned over portions of the top of the strip, bent at right angles, so as to form the button-like head, anticipates both the structures now under consideration. The idea once conceived and illustrated by a capped T-shaped fastener, and with two flexible shanks arranged to pass through the same hole in the paper or other material to be held together and clinched by bending the shanks apart from each other, can afterwards be apjAied in a variety of ways. Thus a T-shaped two-shank fastener could be made by bending thin, flexible metal in many ways, so as to secure two shanks to the head; and these changes involve no invention, but mere mechanical skill. Improvements they may have been, but not inventions. I am therefore clearly of opinion that both these patents are void for want of novelty, and that tlie bill should be dismissed upon that ground alone, but, if not void for want of novelty, it is very clear to me that the defendant’s patent does not infringe either of the complainant’s patents now in suit, as it is made of a blank formed substantially like the blank described in the 1866 patent, except that one shank is not made shorter iban the other, and only one of the defendant’s shanks is pointed. If it was patentable to make one shank shorter than the other in a paper-fastener, it certainly does not infringe that patent to point one shank, and leave the other square at the end which is to be passed through the paper, thereby giving an opportunity to take hold and separate the shanks by reason of the metal being cut away from one. The bill is therefore dismissed for want of equity.