2 F. Cas. 510 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1872
It is undoubtedly irregular to swear a person in a suit before the bill has been filed. The irregularity consists in having the affidavit sworn to under the title of a suit, in which no bill has been filed. If the title had been omitted, there would have been no irregularity. This is continually done in applications for habeas corpus and mandamus, and to swear falsely in such affidavits is indictable as perjury. The suit is commenced when the bill is filed. Eieke’s affidavit ought not to have been entitled in the suit. On this ground the affidavit of Eicke should be excluded, but I will permit it to be resworn. The parties must be considered as having had reasonable notice of it. They have had a copy of it.
The affidavits were then read, and, after argument on both sides, the following opinion was orally pronounced:
BLATCHFORD, District Judge. If I have correctly understood the counsel for the defendants, I see nothing in this case to distinguish it from the one in which Schultz and Hecht were defendants. I have listened carefully to everything that has been urged, and it has made no impression different from that produced upon my mind in the other case. The counsel for the defendants has entirely misapprehended the scope and effect of the former decision as to the Blake patent. It is very true that Blake, in his patent, describes that particular sort of hat which required, in order to make it, tha't that there should be an opening cut in it. But that particular form of hat constituted no part of the invention of Blake. A Jha.t may infringe the patent, and yet' be seamless throughout. The essence of the invention, as it appears in the patent, is this: that the product of the action of the dies to which the thing is last subjected is the completed body of the bonnet, embossed in imitation of straw, and shaped and ready for practical use, as the body of a bonnet, without further covering or ornamentation. Now, this is true of the bonnet of the defendants. It is embossed fit for use, and shaped to the form in which the last dies used in its production leave it It is of no consequence that other dies may have been used previously to shape it. It is no matter if it had been shaped by fifty dies previously. Bernard, in one of his affidavits, himself says that the last die used must be of the same shape as the previous one. This constitutes an infringement. This last die is the one that does the embossing. When the embossing is done by dies that have a shape, that shape is given by the embossing dies. Bernard, in his affidavit, says that it is absolutely indispensable that the embossing dies should have the same shape as the previous dies; and the embossing dies give the ultimate shape, because their shape is not altered. In my former decision I said: “It is claimed, on the part of the plaintiffs, that, according to the description in the specification of the Blake patent, the product of the action of the dies is the completed body of a bonnet, embossed in imitation of straw, and fit for • use as the body of a bonnet, in the shape given to it by the dies, and without further ornamenting or covering its surface;” and I said I thought these views of Blake’s invention were correct. The defendants do not afterward cover their hats, do not afterward ornament them, do not alter them in any manner. If the brim and top of the hat, as well as the body, are embossed by the dies, it is none the less an infringement. I also Said, in that decision, that the proper construction of the claim of Blake’s patent is, “that it claims a bonnet, the body of which is embossed, in imitation of straw or other braid, by dies, which, at the same time, give to it its ultimate shape.” Its ultimate shape. It is no matter how many dies have previously given shape to it. It may have been one; it may have been twenty. It makes no difference what number. This last embossing die of the defendants is the one that gives the ultimate shape to the bonnet, because it is of the same shape as the previous die. The defendants say that there are two operations in the production of their bonnet. This is nothing but trying to evade the patent by splitting the thing into two—-making two operations where only one was necessary. That will not do. A case very similar to this, in this particular, was lately tried in the district of Connecticut—Wallace v. Holmes, [Case No. 17,100]—in which the patent sued on was for a lamp-burner, to be used with a chimney, and so described in the patent. The defendants made and sold the burner; but, because they did not make or sell the chimney with it, they said they did not infringe. But it was held they did, as all the purchaser would have to do would be to buy a glass chimney next door and put it in. So, in this case, there was a purpose of infringing, I should say, in making two operations where only