12 F. 147 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1882
Professor Seeley testifies that he practiced the process set forth in No. 250,247, using the exact proportions and materials specified therein, and produced thereby a product, a sample of which is Exhibit B. He says that Exhibit A (the defendants’ article) seems to him to ho identical with B; that he has tested them in various ways to determine their similarity; and that he is clearly of opinion that A is the product described in No. 250,247, and claimed in the first claim thereof. Professor Morton, for the defendants, does not say that A is not identical with B. What he says is that B is, manifestly, not the product obtained by following the directions of No. 250,247, and that ho does not hesitate to say that B was not made by following said directions. Professor Chandler does not say that A is not identical with B. What he says is that he has examined B, and, from his knowledge and experience of the plaintiffs’ process, is convinced that B was not made by said process. Dr. Endemann does not say that A is not identical with B. What he says is that he has found that B is a product1 which could not be produced by following the directions of No. 250,247. Thera is, therefore, no dispute as to the identity of A with B. The contention of the defendants is merely that B cannot be produced by following the directions in No. 250,247. Their experts do not exhibit any article which they say they produced by following the directions in No. 250,247, nor do they give any analysis of B.
In the interference before the patent-office, Professors Morton and Chandler testified that they had followed the directions given in Holliday’s specification, and had been unable to produce what he
The motion for a preliminary injunction is granted.