9 U.S. 603 | SCOTUS | 1824
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The District Judge of the southern district of New-York, under the 10th section of the patent act, of the 21st of February, 1793, chapter 11., granted a rule upon Charles Wood and .Gilbert
A motion was made, on a former day of this term", in behalf of the patentees, for a rule upon the district Judge, to show cause why a mandamus should not issue from this Court, directing.him to make a record of the proceedings in the cause, and to issue a scire facias, -for the purpose. of trying the validity of thé patent.’ The rule having been granted, and due service had, the case has since been argued by counsel, for and against the rule; and the opinion of this Court is now to be deli-. yered. -
Two objections have been urgéd at the bar,
Both of these objections are founded upon the provisions of the 10th section of the patent act, and must be decided by a careful examination of those provisions. The words are, “ that, upon oath or affirmation being made, before the Judge of the. District Court, where the patentee, his executors, &.c. reside, that any patent, which shall be issued in pursuance of this act, was obtained surreptitiously, or upon false, suggestion,, and motion made to the said Court within three years after issuing, the said patent, but not afterwards, it shall and may be lawful for the Judge of the said District Court, if the matter alleged shall appear to him to be sufficient, to grant a rule that the patentee, or his executor, &c. show chuse why process should not issue against him,. to repeal such patent ; and if sufficient cause shall not be shown to the contrary, the rule shall be made absolute; and théreüpon, the Judge shall order procesatobeissued against such patentee, or his executors, 'See.,with costs of suit. . And in case no sufficienl^ause shall be shown, to ’ the. contrary; or if it. shall appear. that the patentee was not the true inventor or discoverer, judgment shall be rendered by such Court for the repéal of the said patent. And if the party at whose. complaint the process issued, shall., have judgment given against him, he shall pay all ■
Upon the slightest inspection of this section, it will be at once perceived, that however summary the procéedings may be, they are of vast importance to the parties, and involve the whole right and interest of the patentee. The jurisdiction given to the Court, is not general and unlimited, but is confined to cases where the. patent, was obtained surreptitiously, or upon false suggestions; where the patentee resides within the district; and where the application is made within three years after the issuing of the patent. It is, therefore,, certainly necessary, that all these, facts, which are indispensable to found .the jurisdiction, should.be stated in the motion and accompanying affidavits; and without them,. the Court cañnot be justified in awarding the rule. It follows, of course, that in any record that is tobe made of the proceedings, they constitute the preliminary part, and ought not to be omitted, In the present case, they have been wholly omitted, and the. record is, in this re.spect, incomplete and. inaccurate.
But it is said that, technically speaking, these proceedings are not matters of record. They are certainly proceedings of a Court of.record, for such are all the Courtb of the United States, in virtue of their organisation, both upon principios of the common law, and the express intendment of Conr gress. In. general, the interlocutory proceedings In suits are not entered of record, as they are deemed merely collateral incidents. But where
But the more material question is, whether the proceedings, so far as the rights of the patentees are concerned, terminated with the. rule being made absolute, so that, ipso facto, the patent was repealed, and the process to be issued was' only process to enforce or declare the repeal; or whether the process was in the nature of a sc„re facias at common law, to repeal the patent, if, upon a future, trial, the same should be found invalid.
-This question must be decided by the terras of the section in controversy; but in the interpretar tion of those terms, if their meaning is somewhat equivocal, that construction ought certainly to be adopted which, not departing from the sense, is most congenial to our institutions, and is most convenient in the administration of public justice.
With these considerations in view, let the 10th section of the act,be examined. Its object is to proyidésome means to repeal patents which have, been obtained surreptitiously, or upon false suggestions ; the very cases for which a scire facias issues at the common law. As the patents are not enrolled in the records of any Court, but among the rolls of the Department of State, it was necessary to give some directions as to the correct time and manner of instituting proceedings to repeal them. It accordingly directs, that the District Judge may, upon proper evidence, under oath, and motion made to the Court, in his discretion, “ grant a rule that the patentee, &c. show, cause why process should not issue against him, to repeal such patent; and if sufficient cause shall not be shown to the contrary, the rule shall be made absolute, and thereupon the Judge shall order process to be issued against such patentee, &e. with costs of suit.” It is obvious, from the language of this clause, that the rule is a rule not to repeal the patent, if it is made absolute, but a
Nor does the occurrence of the words “ costs of suit,” in the preceding part of the section, where it is said that “ the process shall be issued, &e. with costs of suit,” in the slightest degree impugn
Nor are there any public mischiefs which will result from the view which the Court takes of this section. On the contrary, it will subserve the purposes of general justice. If a patent has been fraudulently obtained, or upon false suggestions, it may be repealed within three years, if a jury,
Upon the whole, it is the opinion of the Court, that the rule ought to be made absolute, and that a peremptory mandamus issue to the Judge of the District Court, directing him to enter upon record the proceedings in this cause, antecedent to the granting of the rule, and upon which it was founded: that he award a process, in the nature of a scire facias, to the patentees, to show cause why the patent should not be repealed, with costs of suit: that upon such process being returned, .
Mandamus accordingly.
Judgment. Upon the hearing of this cause upon the rule to show cause, heretofore awarded by this Court,, and on consideration of the arguments of counsel for and against making the same rule absolute, it is ordered and adjudged by the Courtj that the same rule be, and hereby is, made absolute. And it is further ordered by the Court, that a peremptory mandamus issue to the District Judge of the Southern District óf New-York, commanding him to enter upon record the proceedings in this cause, antecedent to the granting, by him of the rule to show cause why process should not issue, to repeal the patent in the proceedings mentioned* and upon which the said rule was founded: that the sáid Judge do award a process, in the nature of a scire facias, to the patentees, tó show cause why the said patent should, not be repealed, with costs of suit that upon the return of. such process, as duly served, the said Judge do proceed to try the cause upon the pleadings filed by the parties, and the issue joined thereon ; and that if . the issue be an issue of fact, the trial thereof be by a jury; if an issue of law «.hen by the Court, as in other cases.