82 F. 737 | 9th Cir. | 1897
This action was brought to recover damar^s for the infringement of reissued letters patent numbered 11,321. granted to the plaintiff on the 18th day of April, 1893, and
The action was tried by a' jury, and a verdict rendered in favor of the plaintiff for damages in the sum of one dollar. The case is brought here by the defendant on a writ of error to reverse the judgment rendered on such verdict in favor of the plaintiff. The specific claims of invention made by the plaintiff in the apiilication upon which such reissued letters patent are based, so far as necessary to be here set oüt, are as follows:
“(1) In combination with a car having separate and independent openings, a lid or cover for each opening, adapted to close the latter, and means for holding the lids open in oppositely inclined positions, whereby said lids are adapted, not only to form closures for the openings, but also to act as funnels to insure a circulation of the air within the car. (2) In combination with a car having separate and independent openings, a lid or cover for eacli opening, adapted to close the latter, and means carried by the respective lids for holding them open in oppositely inclined positions. (8) In combination with a ear having separate and independent openings, a lid or cover for each opening, adapted to close the latter, and foldable devices, substantially such as shown and de- ’ scribed, for holding the lids open in oppositely inclined directions. (4) In combination with a car having separate and independent openings, movable covers or lids adapted to close such openings, and side wings hinged to such lids or covers, and adapted to sustain them in oppositely inclined positions, and to form, in connection with the lids, a funnel.”
On April 11, 1895, tlie plaintiff filed with the commissioner of patents a disclaimer in full of the foregoing claims 1 and 2. On April 9, 1895, there was granted to one Thomas B. Kerby patent numbered 537,293, for a ventilator for refrigerator cars. This ventilator was afterwards, and before the commencement of this action, attached to and used upon refrigerator cars employed in transporting fruit from California to the East, and such use of the Kerby ventilator constitutes the alleged infringement of plaintiff’s patent. A sufficiently accurate description of the Kerby ventilator, and by- means of which it can he easily compared with the ventilator covered bv plaintiff’s revised letters patent, is contained in one of the briefs filed for the plaintiff in error, and is as follows:
“This Kerby ventilator is applied to the ordinary four openings of refrigerator cars, using the lids of the openings for the upper part of tlie ventilator. The lids are made of double' thicknesses of boards, placed in parallel planes with each other, and far enough apart to leave a pocket between them, into which the screen and side wings of the ventilator are shoved and closed when the ventilator is put out of use. When the ventilator is in use the said lid is held up by the frame of the Kerby screen, and the side wings do not hold or assist in holding the lids in any position, or in any way. Tlie wide ends of tlie side wings are hinged to the screen frame, and they swing around horizontally when they are being put into or taken out of use.”
In addition to the foregoing, other facts will he hereinafter stated in the discussion of the several points to which they more particularly relate.
“A patent for invention only covers and protects wliat is particularly pointed out and claimed as the patentee’s invention in the claims of the patent. It is usually expedient for the specifications of a patent †<> describe; filings already in use, and which constitute no part of the invention claimed, in order to better explain what the invention is. The present patent mentions ‘refrigerator cars,' yet those refrigerator cars were admittedly older than the plaintiff’s alleged invention, and are not claimed as any pari of his invention in the patent. You will therefore consider that nothing is protected by the intent that is described in its specifications, excepting only what is specified in the claim of the patent as the invention which the patentee claims as belonging to him.”
It would not seem possible that, after so explicit an instruction, the jury failed to understand that plaintiff’s patent did not cover either a refrigerator or ventilator car, or anything other than the ventilating device claimed by the plaintiff as his invention.
2. Jt is urged by plaintiff in error that the patent issued to the plaintiff in the action is void for want of novelty in the invention claimed, and also that the device covered by the Kerby patent is not an infringement of the plaintiff’s patent. This contention, in each of its branches, presents a mixed question of law and of fact. 1 Rob. Pat. § 272; Paving Co. v. Molitor, 113 U. S. 609, 5 Sup. Ct. 618. The circuit court correctly instructed the jury in relation to the law applicable to each of these questions, and, unless there was an entire; want of evidence upon which to base the verdict returned by the jury, such verdict is conclusive here as to every fact embraced within the issues submitted to the jury for decision. This results from the well-settled rule that on a writ of error the appellate court can only consider errors of law, and that the review under such writ does not extend to matters of fact. Zeller’s Lessee v. Eckert, 4 How. 289. Without undertaking to give even a synopsis of the evidence bearing upon the question of the novelty of the invention covered hv plaintiffs patent, it is sufficient for us to say that, in our judgment, there was ample evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury upon this point. Xov are we able to agree with the further contention of plaintiff in error that this court should declare, as a matter of law, that the Kerby device is not an infringement upon the invention covered by the plaintiff’s patent. Of course, ihere may be cases in which there is such a marked dissimilarity in the structure and functions of devices covered by different patents that a court may declare, as a matter of law, that the one does not infringe upon the other, but such is not the case before us.
3. The plaintiff in error further insists that under the evidence and the instructions of the court the jury could not possibly have found that the Kerby device was an infringement of any other than claims 3 and 4 of the plaintiff’s reissued letters patent. And from this it is argued that the judgment should be reversed on the ground that the plaintiff’s disclaimer of claims 1 and 2 of his reissued letters patent necessarily operated as a disclaimer of the specific combination or invention described in claims 3 and 4 of the same patent. Claims 1 and 2 of the patent just referred to are exceedingly broad, and cover all possible means for holding the lids of the ventilators open in oppositely inclined positions, while its claims 3 and 4 are more narrow, and cover only the specific means therein particularly described for holding such lids open. The whole argument of the .plaintiff in error upon this point seems to rest upon the proposition that, as claims 1 and 2 are broad enough in their descriptive language to include the specific combinations covered by claims 3 and 4, plaintiff’s disclaimer of claims 1 and 2 was, in legal effect, a disclaimer of the particular device described in claims 3 and 4; in other words, that the particular means for holding the lids of the ventilators open as described in claims 3 and 4 were thus disclaimed, because such means are covered by the broad language of claims 1 and 2. In support of this position it is argued that the disclaimer filed by the plaintiff is not to be treated as a simple withdrawal or expunging of claims 1 and 2 from the specifications of which they originally formed a part, and thus leaving the remaining claims to be construed as if such claims 1 and 2 had never been made, but that the instrument of disclaimer is to be construed by itself as an independent and affirmative declaration by the plaintiff that he was not the first or original inventor of any device covered by claims 1 and 2; and the case of United States Cartridge Co. v. Union Metallic Cartridge Co., 112 U. S. 644, 645, 5 Sup. Ct. 486, is cited to sustain this proposition. In that case it was said:
*741 “The disclaimer was one of the fact of invention. It could not lawfully he anything but a disclaimer of the fact either of original invention or of first invention. It was not merely the expunging of a descriptive part of the specification, * * * but it was a disclaimer of all claims based on such descriptive part,” etc.
But in that case the court was discussing the effect of a disclaimer of the fact of invention of a specific and particular mechanical device, the language of the disclaimer thus construed by the court being:
“Your petitioner disclaims the said movable die, D, called a ‘hunter,’ as being the invention of said Ethan Allen; thus leaving the description of said die, 1), the same as shown in the original patent and the drawings thereof.”
Of course, in such a case the court properly held that the disclaimer was specific, and must be construed as an affirmative declaration that the patentee was not the inventor of the particular thing disclaimed. In considering the scope and effect to be given a disclaimer, the same rules are to be observed as in construing any other written instrument, and so as to carry out the intention of the person executing it, as indicated by its language when construed with reference to the proceedings of which it forms a part. Tt cannot be read independently of its relation to (he original specifications, of which it becomes a part when recorded. Applying this rule of interpretation to the disclaimer filed by the plaintiff in this action, it would seem too clear to admit of any doubt that such disclaimer cannot be given the broad and sweeping effect claimed for it by the plaintiff in error. On the contrary, the only reasonable construction which can be given the disclaimer of claims 1 and 2 is that the plaintiff intended to thereby limit Ms patent to the specific invention described in the remaining claims of his specifications, and not to abandon such remaining claims.
4. We do not think the claims of the plaintiff’s reissued letters patent are any expansion of the invention referred to in the specifications of his original patent, and such reissued letters are therefore valid, under the rule declared in Topliff v. Topliff, 145 U. S. 156, 12 Sup. Ct. 825; Odell v. Stout, 22 Fed. 159; and Gaskill v. Myers, 81 Fed. 857.
5. Another ground upon which the reversal of the judgment under review is asked is that the evidence fails to show that the plaintiff in error was guilty of the act of Infringement complained of, even if it should be conceded that the Kerby device is an infringement upon the invention protected by the reissued letters patent granted to the defendant in error. Tn order to fully understand the point thus made, it is necessary to briefly refer to the facts upon which, it is based. The cars on which the Kerby device was used, and which use the plaintiff claims to have been an infringement upon his patent rights, were owned by Armour & Co., of the city of Chicago; and the plaintiff in error was their general manager in this state, and as such conducted for them here the business of leasing such cars, furnished with the Kerby device, to shippers of fruit who desired to engage the use of cars thus equipped. The plaintiff in
“I am of opinion that the only persons who can he held for damages are those who should have taken a license, and that they aré those who own, or have som'e interest in, the business of making, using, or selling the thing which is an infringement, and that an action at law cannot he maintained against the directors, shareholders, or workmen of a corporation which infringes a patented improvement.”
•We are unable to agree with the opinion thus expressed, that only those persons can be held for damages “who own, or have some interest in, the business of making, using, or selling the thing which is an infringement.” It is well settled that a mere -workman or servant who makes, uses, or vends for another, and under his immediate supervision, a patented article, is not liable in an action at law for damages which may have been sustained by the patentee by-reason thereof. This rule is an' apparent exception to the general principle of law which makes all who participate in a tort of misfeasance principals, and liable for damages therefor; and we do not think it should be so extended as to exempt from liability the general manager of a business which infringes upon the exclusive right of a patentee to make, use, and vend the invention protected by his patent. Such an agent, to use a word sometimes employed in the discussion of the law relating to fellow servants, may be regarded as a vice principal, and he should be held responsible in damages for any action of his in the transaction of the business thus placed under Ms management which is in violation of the rights of another.
“The argument for the plaintiff is that the defendant is liable because it is insisted that, whenever au agent of a corporation assumes to authorize or directs the commission oí a trespass, the agent assuming- to confer the authority,*744 or who gives the direction, is himself personally liable to the injured party, although he did not directly participate in the commission of the wrongful act. Undoubtedly, all persons commanding, procuring, aiding, or assisting in the commission of a trespass are principals in the transaction, and stand responsible to answer in damages to the injured party. Both the master who commands the doing and the servant who does the act of trespass may be made responsible as principals, and may be sued jointly or severally for damages, as the injured party may elect.”
While what was thus said cannot be regarded as an authoritative decision upon the point we are now considering, still, as the expression of the opinion of a very learned judge upon a question naturally suggested by the argument of that case, it is entitled to very great respect, and in our opinion it is a correct statement of the law applicable to this case. Without extending this opinion by a discussion of other points urged in behalf of the plaintiff in errar, it will be sufficient for us to add that we find no error in the record; and therefore the judgment sought to be reversed should be, and accordingly is, affirmed.