286 F. 68 | 3rd Cir. | 1923
On appeal this court, reversing the decree of the District Court (244 Fed. 463), found certain claims of Letters Patent No. 1,018,890 and No. 1,071,992 valid and infringed (252 Fed. 805, 164 C. C. A. 645). These patents are known in this litigation as EUett’s second and third patents. Following the mandate and the reformation of the decree below, the case went to an accounting, which is still in progress. The defendants now ask this court for permission to apply to the District Court for leave to file a bill in the nature of a bill of review based on newly discovered evidence. John Simmons Co. v. Grier Bros., 258 U. S. 82, 42 Sup. Ct. 196, 199; Birdsboro Steel Co. v. Kelley Bros., 147 Fed. 713, 78 C. C. A. 101.
Dates which become pertinent on this application are these: This action was brought in the District Court in October, 1914; the evidence was concluded in February, 1916; and the decree was entered in August, 1917. The case was heard on appeal, decided and remanded in July, 1918. The evidence on which this application for review is based was discovered in December 1921 or January 1922.
The span of this litigation — not yet reached — brings to mind the law governing the opening of causes closed by decrees and the granting of new trials on the ground of newly discovered evidence. For reasons which are quite obvious, applications of this kind, involving not infrequently belated attempts to escape the consequences of adverse decisions, are not favored by courts and are, accordingly, subjected to the closest scrutiny. One seeking this relief is confronted with the presumption that the decree is correct and has the burden of showing that his claimed after-discovered evidence could not have been discovered before the trial and there produced. It is not every piece of evidence that comes to the knowledge of the losing party after decree that constitutes after-discovered evidence on which may be based a valid application for leave to file a -bill of review. It is only evidence that has come to light under circumstances which show that it could not with reasonable diligence have been discovered and produced at the trial, and then only if it is of a character sufficiently decisive on the merits to move the court in its discretion. Bennett v. Schooley, 77 Fed. 352 (C. C., W. D. of Pa.); Hitchcock v. Tremaine, 9 Blatchf. 550, Fed. Cas. No. 6,540; Reeves v. Bridge Co., 2 Ban. & A. 256, Fed. Cas. No. 11,661; Baker v. Whiting, 1 Story, 218, Fed. Cas. No. 786 ; 20 R. C. L. 289-300, and cases.
When the new matter relied upon consists of record evidence drawn from the archives of the government, which might as easily have been found at the time the controversy arose as after its decision, courts are slow to erant the application. Dumont v. Des Moines Val-
Without expressing an opinion on the materiality of the newly discovered evidence to the issue of validity of the patents in suit, we shall, in the light of the law we have stated, review the facts involved in its discovery. They are as follows:
At the trial the defendants introduced, among others, British Patent No. 1507, 1908, to Archibald Sharp as an anticipation 'of the patents in suit. This patent was considered and discussed by experts of the respective parties for and against its claimed anticipation. The parties stipulated that the sealing date of this patent was April 22, 1909, and it was proved that the invention disclosed by Fllett’s second patent was made as early as May, 1908. The sealing date of the Sharp patent was therefore subsequent to Fllett’s invention and less than two years prior to the application of Ellett’s second patent, February 16, 1911. R. S. 4886, Comp. St. § 9430. It was, however, more than two years prior to the application date of Ellett’s third patent, April 15, 1912. Since the trial the defendants have discovered that prior to February 16, 1909 (the filing date of Ellett’s second patent), the Birmingham Public Libraries, Birmingham, England, and the Manchester Reference Library, Manchester, England, each received and had open to the public a printed copy of the Sharp application, which eventually became the British patent to Sharp, sealed and granted April 22, 1909, and that on February 11, 1909, the British Patent Office, London, England, had printed copies of the patent on sale. Therefore, the defendants claim that these copies describe the same clutch as is claimed in Ellett’s Letters Patent and constitute an anticipation of Ellett’s invention, not as a prior patent but as a prior publication. This is the after-discovered evidence on which the)'- base their application for leave to file a bill of review.
Assuming for the moment that these allegations are true, the relief which the defendants seek turns primarily on the method by which they made their discovery and on the related circumstances which, under the law, must show no lack of diligence on their part in not finding the evidence earlier.
As to the circumstances under which this discovery was made the defendants say that in December, 1921, they were informed unexpectedly that the printed copy of the Sharp patent in the Bound Volume of British Patents in the United States Patent Office was stamped March 2, 1909. Realizing the implication of this stamped date, they immediately instituted an investigation abroad which produced the information stated. They were not able, however, to obtain from the British Patent Office any information as to sale and distribution of copies of the Sharp patent prior to February 16, 1909, or from Sharp himself as to the use of the publication before that date.
Tested by the standard which the law imposes in such cases, we are of opinion that the facts on which this application is rested do not disclose that diligence which the law requires of one seeking relief by a bill of review. Accordingly, the petition is denied.