visional specification, not going beyond or varying from it as to the nature of the invention, but conveying additional informa- tion, which may have been acquired during the currency of the provisional specification, as to the manner in which the invention is to be performed."
"From this description of the different offices of the two specifications, it follows that upon an issue whether the specifi- cation, enrolled in pursuance of the letters-patent, describes and ascertains the nature of the invention, if the claim in the complete specification is comprehended within the terms of the provisional specification that issue will be satisfied. The relation which the provisional specification bears to the complete specification is much the same as that which, before the Patent Law Amendment Act, the title bore to the specification; and the observations of Tindal, C.J. in Cook v. Pearce 1 are as applicable to the pro- visional specification now as they were to the title formerly."
Then his Lordship says:-" The only objection, then, which is open, is upon the complete specification, whether it is sufficient in itself, and whether it agrees with the provisional specification. Now, by agreement is not meant a perfect correspondence, but merely that there shall be nothing in the complete specification at variance with the provisional.
It is clear, therefore, that unless the complete specification in this case claims something different from the provisional specification, the objection to the patent under consideration cannot prevail."
This case appears to me to apply exactly to the matter before us with the addition in paragraph (d) of the intermediate appli- cation of the opponent for the invention contained in the complete specification.
It is a rare thing for a patent to be forfeited for what is known as disconformity. Of course it depends upon the facts, but the case must be clear.
The point is of general importance to inventors, as well as of manifestly great value to the parties. I think the cases cited by Mr. Starke on this point support his contention that the estab- lished principles applied to the facts of this case entitle his clients to a favourable decision. In Gadd v. Mayor, &. of Man-
18 Q.B., 1064.