186 Mass. 83 | Mass. | 1904
This is a bill in equity brought to obtain the possession and legal control of letters patent of the United States, issued upon an invention of the defendant, Charles Thibodeau, to his wife, the defendant, Catherine M. Thibodeau, and by her assigned before the commencement of this suit to the defendants, Duff and Kitzmiller. From an interlocutory decree dismissing the bill ás to the defendants Duff and Kitzmiller. for want of proper service on them, and from a final decree dismissing the bill generally, the plaintiff appealed.
We do not find it necessary to determine whether, upon the pleadings and the report, the plaintiff would be entitled to relief if we had jurisdiction of all the parties, for we are of opinion that we have no jurisdiction to decide important questions involved in the plaintiff’s claim. The defendants Duff and Kitzmiller, who appear of record as the owners of the patent, are residents of the State of Pennsylvania. The only service upon them was by the delivery of a copy of the bill and order of notice
It is plain that, as against them, the court acquired no jurisdiction to proceed in personam. Merrill v. Beckwith, 163 Mass. 503. Eliot v. McCormick, 144 Mass. 10. Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U. S. 714. Freeman v. Alderson, 119 U. S. 185.
It appears by the report that the plaintiff did not desire to have the bill retained for an assessment of damages against the defendants Charles Thibodeau and Catherine M. Thibodeau. The court was, therefore, left without jurisdiction to give him any relief for which he asked, unless it had jurisdiction over the property, such that it could proceed in rem, in the absence of the holders of the title to the patent. But letters patent of the United States are not visible, tangible property which has of itself a local character, and of which the court can take jurisdiction apart from the apparent ownership of it. So far as such property has any situs, it follows the person of its owner, and ordinarily belongs at his place of residence. Prom its peculiar character, it is property, in a sense, in all parts of the United States. But this would not justify an assumption of jurisdiction over it by a court of a State in which its owner is not a resident, and where no jurisdiction is acquired over him. The decisions in Wilson v. Martin-Wilson Automatic Fire Alarm Co. 151 Mass. 515, and Ager v. Murray, 105 U. S. 126, do not go far enough to aid the plaintiff in this part of his case.
To give jurisdiction over this patent it would be necessary to show that the title of Duff and Kitzmiller is fraudulent as against the plaintiff, or is subject to equities in his favor which give him a right to control the patent. Such proof is a condition precedent to the proper exercise by the court of any jurisdiction over the patent. To a suit to determine a question of this kind the owners of record are necessary parties. Jurisdiction over them, which will authorize a trial of the question, must be obtained before a court can deal directly with the patent as property. We are of opinion that the decrees appealed from were rightly entered.
The concluding sentence of the report is as follows: “ I now report this case to'the Supreme Judicial Court for its consideration and determination. If, in its opinion, I am right in my
Decrees affirmed.