2 F. 774 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1880
This bill is brought upon letters patent Bfo. 122,001, dated December 19, 1871, issued to J. Joseph Eagleton, Sarah N. Eagleton, administratrix, assignor to Eagleton Manufacturing Company, for an improvement in japanned furniture springs. The defences set up in the answer are that Eagleton was not the original and first inventor of the improvement; that the specification is not sufficiently full, clear and exact to enable persons skilled in the art to practice the. invention; that the specification does not contain the whole truth relating to the invention; and that the defendants do not infringe.
The springs, which are the subject of the patent, are coiled helical or hour-glass springs, so-called, made of steel wire,
The oath of Eagleton that he believed himself to be the original and first inventor of the improvement described in his application was made June 26,1868. He authorized the members of the firm of Munn & Co. to act as his attorneys in presenting the application^ and making all such alterations and amendments as might be required, and his application was filed July 6, 1868. It was rejected, and he was notified by letter, in the care of his attorneys, dated July 10, 1868, of the rejection. He died in February, 1870. The application was renewed as in his name, by the attorneys, December 29, 1870. The specification was amended by them, in his name, October 19, 1871, and again rejected; was amended in like manner November 7, 1871, and was finally granted.
That steel furniture springs of this sort, tempered and strengthened in this manner, were known and used by various persons named in the answer, before the date of the patent, is fully and clearly shown by the evidence and not disputed. If the patent was not accompanied by the application the date of the patent would be deemed to be the date of the invention,
“To obviate this difficulty I propose to provide steel springs coated with japan, which I find to be of great advantage in resisting the corrosive action of the atmosphere on the steel, and whereby steel springs are made very much more durable than any other. To some extent the same purpose may be accomplished by coating the spring with tin or zinc, or other similar metal which will not suffer by corrosion, but the process of coating with such metal requires the use of acids for cleaning and preparing the steel, which, adhering to the steel, and being to some extent enclosed within the said coating and maintained in contact with the steel, have an injurious
“ Having thus described my invention, I claim as new, and desire to secure by letters patent, japanned furniture springs, as a new article of manufacture, substantially as and for the purpose described.”
Here is the whole of the specification and claim, and there is nothing in it nearly or remotely suggesting or hinting at anything more than merely protecting the springs by japan.
There is not a word about any method of tempering them whatever; nor that his treatment of them has any tendency whatever to temper them.
All that is said relates entirely to their need of protection, and to his mode of protecting them. The patent office so understood and construed it, rejected it because japanning was open to all, and informed him of the rejection and its grounds, and he acquiesced in it as long as he lived. There is no question but that the rejection upon that understanding was right. It is not claimed that this patent, or any patent, could be maintained for merely protecting steel or any other metal, in the form of these springs, or in any other form, by japan.
The discovery is that moderate heat, such as may be applied in japanning, will restore and impart temper to these springs.
The patent is, therefore, for the springs tempered in this manner.
The application does not take that discovery or invention back to its date at all. It shows nothing affirmatively about any such thing. Still, it is claimed that the proofs in the case show that Eagleton was in fact the first inventor or discoverer of this improvement. When the application fails to take the date of the invention back of the date of the patent, and the defendants make out prior knowledge and use by others beyond any fair or reasonable doubt, as the law re
The evidence on which the plaintiff claims to make this out is weak; not so much in the number and character of the witnesses, as in what they pretend and appear to know that Eagleton discovered and did. . They fail to set forth such experiments and tests, and results examined by him, as would ordinarily accompany such a discovery. On this subject his original application is very weighty and important. As said by Mr. Justice Nelson in Manny v. Jagger, 1 Blatchf. 372: “ The description of the invention by the patentee, in his own language, affords the highest evidence of the thing or instrument which he claims to have discovered.”
In view of all the evidence on this subject, it not only does not appear that Eagleton did make this invention or discovery before the others, but it appears that he did not, and that probably it never came to his knowledge while he lived.
It is said in argument that it is not necessary he should have known the full effect of the process he invented in order to uphold the patent, and that if he invented japanning it might not be necessary for him to know that japanning would temper. It is doubtless true that an inventor need not know all the uses to which his invention is capable of being put; and equally true that there must be some patentable invention patented before any use of it can be covered by the patent. Here, japanning by itself was not patentable. Eagleton described no mode of japanning which would temper or strengthen the steel. The temper and strength are produced by the heat altogether, and not at all by the japan. He did not even mention that the japan was to be applied with heat. Had a patent been granted to him on his application it would have covered japanned springs, not tempered springs. He did not invent or discover anything patentable of which any one use could be made, and, a fortiori, not anything of which more than one use could be made.
' Upon this view of these questions of fact, the issue of fact joined upon the traverse of the answer must be found for the defendants.
They made the amendments in his name without any authority in fact, whatever authority they may have supposed they had. The amendments were not mere amplifications of what had been in the application before, but carried into it the pith and substance of the whole invention for which the patent was granted. The patent was granted upon this without any new oath by the administratrix. Probably a patent may well be taken out by an administrator upon the application and oath of the intestate to that invention for which the patent issues; but that is not this case — this invention is entirely different.
This application, as to the invention for which the patent issued, was made and acted upon as upon the application and oath of a living person, when there was no such person and could not be any such application and oath.
The proceedings of the patent office are presumed to be regular, and founded upon proper proceedings, but they must necessarily be founded upon the applications of living persons or their personal representatives, such as the law recognizes, and not upon those of persons who are merely supposed to exist; and should be founded upon the oath of the inventor or his personal representative, in accordance
This case is stronger against the patent than that there spoken of. Here the addition was made wholly without authority in fact, while there, apparently, it had the support of the inventors themselves all the way through.
This objection is not specifically set up in the answer, and it is claimed that for that reason it cannot properly be taken notice of. Some defences to suits on patents, like those resting upon prior knowledge and use by others, and those resting upon failure of the specification to disclose the whole truth in respect to the improvement, and others named in the statutes, have to be set out more fully in some cases than the ordinary rules of pleading would require, because the
The defendants deny infringement, and set up the right to make tempered springs, sufficiently to put the plaintiff to proof of the patent alleged in the bill; and that proof may be met by any proof on the part of the defendants, which will tend to show there was no valid patent; and such evidence is admissible under these pleadings unless it goes so far as to attempt to make out a defence which the statute requires to be alleged that is not alleged. This is like evidence under the general issue at law which is always admissible to show that a written instrument declared on never had any valid existence in fact, although it did have in form.
Let there be a decree dismissing the bill of complaint, with costs.