19 F. 749 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1884
Infringement is alleged of the first and second claims of reissued letters patent No. 10,189, granted August 29,1882, to L. Poroni, assignor of James Joseph Hicks, for an improvement in thermometers. The invention of Peroni was patented in England, January 24, 1878, and the original patent here was issued December 9,
The defenses principally relied upon, besides that of non-infringement, are: (1) That the reissue is void, being for that which was abandoned on the application for the original patent, and as enlarging the claim of the .original; (2) anticipation by description in prior foreign publications; (3) prior public use.
The specification of‘the original patent follows verbatim that of the English patent. The invention is substantially described as consisting in locating the bore for the mercury in the glass tube beyond the mechanical center or axis of the magnifying curves of the tube. This involves discarding the circular glass tubes commonly used, and employing those in which there is a convex surface so located as to be eccentric to the bore. Several illustrations are given to show how the bore is located when the magnifying surfaces of the tube differ in their form and location, and all of which exhibit how the scientific fact is utilized, that the apparent size of an object is magnified more when it is beyond the mechanical center of the convex face through which it is viewed than when it is located at the center of the are formed by the convex face. There were two claims in the original: (1) A thermometer tube having its bore out of or beyond the mechanical axis or center, as and for the purposes described. (2) A thermometer tube having its bore out of or beyond the center thereof, and a curved portion or portions for magnifying said bore, substantially as set forth.
It is insisted for the defendants that these claims are intended to-emphasize the theory that the invention consisted of a tube, in which the bore was to be outside the center of the tube, and were intended to limit the patent to such an invention, and that this was done in order to obviate the danger that the claims would otherwise be anticipated by the Negretti and Zambra English patent of 1852, although the language of the claims, read without a careful analysis of the specification, would seem to limit them to a tube in which the bore is out of or beyond the center of the tube itself. The first claim is certainly capable of a construction as broad as the invention described in the specification, and, if the case were now here upon that claim, such would be the construction which it would receive. The mechanical axis or center referred to in the claim would be construed to refer to the mechanical axis or center of the convex or curved surface of the tube. There was nothing in the prior state of the art to
“In this case the tube is mainly circular in section, and the bore is in the center of the main portion thereof, but tbe tube is formed witli a curved portion standing up above the general surface of the tube, and, by reason of the bore of the tube bging beyond the mechanical axis or center of such raised curved portion, the latter acts as a lens or magnifying curve, and greatly magnifies the appearance of the bore.”
All this is quite inconsistent with a construction of the first claim that would limit the invention to one in which the boro is out of or beyond the mechanical axis or center of the tube itself.
In the reissue the specification has been amended so as to express clearly what was plainly suggested, but left to he spelt out by inference in the original. This lias been done by a statement of the principle of his invention and a more specific description of the means employed to carry it out. The first claim of the reissue is: “A thermometer having its bore in rear of or beyond the-mechanical axis or center of the convex surface through which it is viewed, as and for the purpose described.” The second is: “A thermometer having a convex or lens front for magnifying the bore, formed of a smaller curve than that of the body of the thermometer, substantially as set forth.” The second claim, as also the third, (which is not involved in this suit,) cover details of construction described in the specification, but the first claim is broadly for the principle and means of producing the magnifying effect as described in the specification. While any uncertainty which existed in the first claim of the original patent is eliminated by the first claim of the reissue, it is not a broader or a different claim, upon a fair and reasonable construction of that claim in the original. What lias already been said concerning the Negretti and Zambra patent disposes of any defense of anticipation resting upon that patent.
The defense of prior use is not satisfactorily established by the evidence. So far as it rests upon the thermometer of Hicks, sold in this country, those of the class described as No. 450 in his catalogue, and which were made with a flat back and front so that they would not roll off a table when in use, if they magnified the column at all, they did so in a hardly appreciable degree, and were of no practical utility in that behalf. The class described as No. 451 was passed upon by the patent-office before granting the reissue, and held not to show the invention of Peroni. Although they had been described in complainant’s catalogue as magnifying the mercurial column, the proofs show the bore to have been located between the lens surface and the center of the arc of the lens, and consequently the magnification was much less than that produced by Peroni, and did not involve his principle. As to the thermometers made and sold by Adolph Bayer, the evidence indicates that although he made half a dozen or a less number on one occasion, they were made experimentally, and the result was not sufficiently encouraging to induce him to repeat the experiment. He was a manufacturer and dealer in the article. The Peroni thermometer was a success as soon as it was introduced to the trade, while Bayer’s fell still-born upon the current. The proof is not satisfactory that they were a practical success, but, on the contrary, indicates that they belong to the catalogue of abandoned experiments. The specimen exhibited was made years later, for tfie purpose of meeting a motion for an injunction in a suit brought upon the complainant’s patent. Without considering with particularity the other instances of prior use relied upon, it suffices to say that the defendants’ case fails to meet and overthrow the presumption arising from the grant of the patent by such cogent and satisfactory proof as the rule of law applicable to the defense requires.
The more difficult question in the case is as to infringement. The defendant is manufacturing ostensibly under the letters patent granted to Henry Weinhagen October 19, 1880, and reissued January 16, 1883. The claim of the original was for a thermometer tube having a flat bore and a flat back, and sides forming acute angles with said back, and converging towards and joining each other at an acute angle opposite the flat bore, so as to form a prismatic front. The theory of the invention is that the magnifying power is due to the refracting action of the prismatic sides in combination with the flattened bore in a plane at right angles to the line of view. Indeed, it
A decree is ordered for the complainant.