Hitchcock v. Tremaine

12 F. Cas. 246 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1872

BLATCHFORD, District Judge.

The grounds set forth in the petition, for the relief asked, are: (1.) That the defendants did not have proper expert testimony on the first hearing; (2.) That they have discovered, since the first hearing, that a patent issued to one Louis, prior to the plaintiffs’, and set up in their answer as anticipating it, has been twice reissued, one of such reissues having been granted since the first hearing; (3.) That, since the first hearing, they have learn*247ed that said Louis was the inventor of the identical device covered by the plaintiffs’ patent, and made and sold many of such devices at least five years before the date of the plaintiffs’ patent.

['For other cases involving this patent, see note to Hitchcock v. Tremaine, Case No. 0,538.]

(1.) The want of proper expert testimony is. no ground for granting a rehearing. Application should have been made to the court prior to the first hearing, for opportunity to procure and put in such testimony. No sufficient excuse is shown for not doing so.

(2.) As to the reissues of the Louis patent, all of them are subsequent in date to the plaintiffs’ patent, and cannot affect its novelty or validity, if there is nothing in the specification or drawings of the original patent to Louis which affects such novelty or validity, as was decided by the court on the former hearing:

(3.) As to the alleged newly discovered evidence as to a prior invention by Louis of the plaintiff’s device, the defendants fail to bring themselves within the principle on • which amendments of answers after hearing are allowed, — India Rubber Comb Co. v. Phelps [Case No. 7,025], — by showing that they could not, with reasonable diligence, have obtained the testimony which they now wish to adduce, prior to the former hearing. On the contrary, the evidence shows that they could.

(4.) A careful review of the testimony given by Mrs. Louis, Bioren, and Frail, in regard to the alleged prior invention by Louis, leads to the undoubting conclusion, that, whatever he made resembling the plaintiffs’ fan, in form, location, and operation, was an unsuccessful experiment, so far as he preceded Carpenter in time. The collateral evidence leads to the same conclusion. The patent to Louis, of June 10th, 1862, shows that, at that time, he had no invention of a fan external to the air passages. The newspaper publications show no such invention. And the testimony on the part of the plaintiffs is conclusive to show, that, prior to Carpenter’s invention, patented in June, 1865, and even down to 1867, Louis had nothing in the way of an external rotating fan, except what may have been merely experimental, and was not considered by himself to be of any importance compared with other devices he employed to produce a tremolo. This is one of those eases, so often met with in the history of patents, where an invention, once perfected, has shown itself to be so useful and so highly appreciated as to have gone at once into so extensive use, that it is inherently impossible it should have been known before, and not have gone into general use. Its success leads infringers and rival inventors to set up crude and unsuccessful experiments as anticipating it, and dim recollections are stimulated, and conscience is strained, to clothe with living flesh what was an inert and useless skeleton.

The prayer of the petition is denied, with costs.

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