96 F. 568 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1899
To the bill of complaint herein, alleging infringement of the first claim of patent No. 208,157, issued to complainant September 18, 1878, for an improvement in rope clamps, defendant, at final hearing, has interposed nine defenses, which will be considered and disposed of in their order.
“The herein-described method of connecting one part of a rope adjacent to another part, or the ends of two ropes, by clamping the same with one or more open rings of metal, under extreme pressure, as set forth.”
Oil demurrer, Judge Coxe Reid that the second claim was manifestly invalid on its face, by reason of want of patentable novelty. Covert v. Travers Bros. Co., 70 Fed. 788. The patent covers the method of holding two pieces of rope by pressing them together with a ring of stiff metal wire. The patent expired in 1895, two months after this suit was brought.
The first defense, of laches, is established by the testimony of the complainant himself, who admits that he knew defendant was manufacturing the alleged infringing device for 14 years before he brought suit. Such laches are a bar to a decree for an accounting, and there can he no injunction, because the patent has expired. McLean v. Fleming, 96 U. S. 245; Kittle v. Hall, 29 Fed. 508.
The second defense, that the patent has already been held invalid, is both admitted and proved. In 1888, upon final hearing before Judge Wallace, a hill alleging infringement of the patent in suit was dismissed for want of novelty; and it is not claimed that there is any material difference as to the facts in the present case, or that the learned judge made any mistake of fact or law.
The third defense, of anticipation, is proved by various prior patents and printed publications showing metal eyelets, wire or fiat strips, and clasps and clamps which embody substantially the means covered by said second claini.
The fourth defense, of denial of invention, is necessarily established by the foregoing facts; and the court may take judicial notice that, tiie alleged invention is nothing more than the application to a rope or cord of Die devices from time immemorial applied to garters, suspenders, curtain cords, and tag strings.
It is unnecessary to discuss the further defenses of insufficient specification, nonpatentability for other reasons, noninfringement, and abandonment.
The writer has recently had occasion to condemn the practice of speculating on chances in patent causes after an adverse decision, by a new suit before a new judge, instead of by a disposition of the first suit by appeal. It is not necessary to point out the application of those remarks to this patent for a mere mechanical device utterly devoid of merit and of inventive ingenuity. Let the bill be dismissed.