49 F. 916 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois | 1892
This case is now before the court on a general demurrer to the bill of complaint. The matters set forth in the rill necessary to be considered on this demurrer are that before the 24th of November, 1875, one James Boyle had invented the device covered jy the patent, infringement of which is charged in this case, and on the ¡¡aid 24th day of November he filed his application for his patent, and appointed Alexander & Mason his attorneys to solicit and advocate his application; that on the 27th of said month of November, and before ■he allowance of his patent, the said James Boyle died intestate, leav- : ng a widow, Theresa M. Boyle, and four children; that On December :i, 1875, Mrs. Boyle, the widow, entered into a contract with Thomas L Rankin, whereby he agreed to complete an ice machine, which was :n process-of construction at the time of Mr. Boyle’s death, and to press he application for a patent, and, in case a patent was obtained, to use lis best efforts to introduce the machine, and share the profits with Mrs. Boyle until she should have received $5,000, when she was to assign ;he patent and the machines then in use to Rankin; that, under diree:ion of Rankin, Alexander & Mason, the solicitors appointed by Boyle, irosecuted the application for a patent, and, to overcome objections nade by the examiner to the said specifications and claims made by Boyle, said solicitors on the 20th of December, 1875, amended the spec.fications and claims, as the same had been prepared by Boyle, and hereafter, and on the 2lst day of March, 1876, the patent.No. 175,020 ¡vas granted unto James Boyle, his heirs or assigns, for the said invenñon, _for the period of 17 years from the last-mentioned date; that on he 9th day of March, 1876, said Thomas L. Rankin obtained temporary letters of administration on the estate of said James Boyle, and aftjr wards, and about the 5th day of July, 1876, Theresa M. Boyle, the ■ ¡vidow of said James Boyle, was appointed administratrix of the estate
It is a proposition so axiomatic and elementary as to require no citation of authority, that all the rights and remedies of inventors to the exclusive property in their inventions comes from the statutes. It is the patent issued to the patentee in pursuance of the constitution and laws of the United States which gives him the property right in his invention, and protects him in the use thereof. As was said by Justice Grier in Child v. Adams, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 189:
“The power of the commissioner of patents to issue patents, and the effect of them, is carefully defined by the statute. By defining the conditions under which the power it confers shall be exercised, it necessarily excludes all others, except, perhaps, the correction of their own clerical errors.” See, also, Morton v. Eye Infirmary, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 320.
The statutes of the United States recognize only three classes of persons to whom a patent for an invention can issue. These are — First, the inventor himself; second, the assignee of the inventor, when the assignment is made before the issue of the patent; and, third, the executor or administrator of the inventor, if the inventor dies before the patent is granted. Rev. St. U. S. §§ 4886, 4895, 4896. “A patent for an invention is a grant by the state of the exclusive privilege of making, using, and vending, and authorizing others to make, use, and vend, an invention.” 2 Kent, Comm. p. 366. In Galt v. Galloway, 4 Pet. 332; McDonald’s Heirs v. Smalley, 6 Pet. 261; Galloway v. Findley, 12 Pet. 264, — it was held “that a patent of lands to a dead man and his heirs was void, and conveyed no estate;” and the same principle is affirmed in Davenport v. Lamb, 13 Wall. 418. And, upon the principle established in these cases, 1 am unable to see why a patent for an invention to a dead man is not wholly inoperative. The grant by letters patent to a man and his heirs, or his heirs and assigns, for an invention, conveys an estate of inheritance during the existence of the rights created by the grant. But for the use of the word “heirs” in the statute and the patent, the grant might be construed as wholly personal, and to end with the life of the grantee. On the death of the patentee, the right secured goes,
The allegations in the bill that, after the death of Mr. Boyle, his widow made a contract with Rankin, by which he was to prosecute the applicat on for and obtain the patent, do not, as it seems to me, help the case. Mrs. Boyle, at the time she made the alleged contract with Rankin, was not administratrix of her husband’s estate, and had .no right to act in the premises, and could not clothe Rankin with any authority to act. Ia fact, she was not appointed administratrix until alter.the patent-office had allowed the patent, and nothing remained to be done but to pay the final fee. The authority of Alexander & Mason, the solicitors appointed by Mr. Boyle,,ended with his death, and all steps taken' by them after Mr. Boyle’s death to procure the issue of the patent were wholly with-oat authority from any one having any power to act in the matter. The statute having in clear terms provided what shall be done to preserve an inventor’s right to a patent in the event of his death before the patent is g-anted, there seems to me no escape from the conclusion that it is only by following the mode pointed out by the statute that a valid patent can bs obtained in such cases. It is not necessary, for the purposes of this case, to decide whether a new application should have been filed by the administrator, or whether the administrator could have stepped into the proceedings on suggesting the death of the applicant, and been allowed to continue the proceedings in the name of the administrator. This, perhaps, would be a matter of practice for the patent-office to decide. But tc whom the patent shall issue is a matter of substance, and I am clear that, after the death of the applicant, the patent can only issue to an executor or administrator, as provided by statute.
Quite a portion of the bill is taken up with allegations showing, or tending to show, that the defendant Skinkle has dealt with the patent, at some time since its issue, as a valid patent, that he has held it out to 'the public as valid, and that, in certain proceedings instituted in the patent-office, he made affidavit as to its validity. The hill shows that for a time Skinkle was an officer and stockholder in certain corporations engaged in the manufacture and sale of ice-machines under this patent, but it also shows that whatever interest those companies had in the patent had terminated before the present complainant acquired its title. If this patent was void from the beginning, no conduct on the part of Skinkle, or those associated with him, could give it validity. Xo rule of estoppel can be called in to aid these complainants, who, by the showing of their bill, did not acquire title from Skinlde, or the corporations with which he is connected, in dealing with this patent as against the public, if it was void from the beginning. That there are cases where parties may, by dealing with a patent, estop themselves from denying its validity, is undoubtedly true; but none of the cases cited go to the extent of holding that any acts of an individual can vitalize and make valid a patent which never had validity, or took effect as a grant. I do not, therefore, see that any force is added to the complainant’s case by these allegations. If any person had challenged the validity of this patent in the hands of the Boyle Tee Company or the Consolidated lee Company, while Skinkle was a member of those companies, no acts of his, supporting or alleging the validity of the patent, would have been in the least material in resisting such challenge. As to the defendants Feathorstone, the only’ allegation of the bill is that they manufactured ice-machines for the Boyle Tee Company and the Consolidated Ice Company while those companies considered themselves entitled by their licenses or other agreements to the use of the patent. They were, at the most, mere employes of the principal infringers, and cannot possibly be held to have either indorsed or validated the patent by their action in manufacturing machines such as are described in the specifications. For these reasons the demurrer is sustained, and the bill dismissed for want of equity.