delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit brought by Edward Miller & Co. against The Bridgeport Brass Company to restrain the infringement of a patent, and for an account of profits, &c. The patent was for an alleged improvement in lamps, and was originally granted to Joshua E. Ambrose, Oct. 16, 1860, for fourteen years, and was extended for seven years longer.' It was twice surrendered and reissued, once in May, 1873, and again in January, 1876. The court below dismissed the bill on the ground that the second reissue, No. 6844, on which the suit was brought, was not for the same invention which was described and claimed in the original patent. We agree with the Circuit Court in the conclusion to which it came. The original patent described a combination of devices, amongst other things, two domes or reflectors, one above the other, elevated above a perforated cap through which a wick tube and a vapor tube ascended. It was claimed that this combination of devices,
But there is another grave objection to the validity of the reissued patent in this case. It is manifest on- the face of the patent, when compared with the original, that the suggestion of inadvertence and- mistake in the specification was a mere pretence.; or if not a pretence, the mistake was so obvious as to be instantly discernible on opening the letters-patent, and the right to have it corrected was abandoned and lost by unreasonable delay. The only mistake suggested is, that the claim was not as broad as it might have been. This mistake, if it was a mistake, was apparent upon the first inspection of the patent, and if any correction was desired, it should have been applied for immediately.
These afterthoughts, developed by the. subsequent course of improvement, and intended, by an expansion of claims, to sweep into one net all the appliances necessary to monopolize a profitable manufacture, are obnoxious to grave animadver
The power given by the law to issue a new patent upon the surrender of the original, for- the correction of errors and mistakes, has been greatly misunderstood and abused. It was first '.contained in the act of July 3, 1832, c. 357, and the law was adopted in view of suggestions made in several -judgments of this court. But it was carefully confined to-cases where the patent was invalid or inoperative by reason of a failure to com
Now whilst, as before stated, we do not deny that a claim may be enlarged in a reissued patent, we are-of opinion that this can only be done when an actual -mistake has occurred; not from a mere error of judgment (for that may be rectified by appeal), but a real Iona fids mistake, inadvertently-committed; such as a Court of- Chancery, in Gases'within -its ordinary jurisdiction, would correct. Reissues for the enlargement of claims should be the exception and not the rule. And when, if a claim is too narrow, — that is, if it does not contain all that the patentee is entitled 'to, — the defect is apparent on the face of the patent, and can be discovered as soon as that- document is taken out of its envelope and opened, there can be no valid excuse for delay in ^asking to have -it Corrected. Every inde-. pendent inventor, every mechanic, every citizen, is affected by such delay, and by the issue of a new patent with a broader and more comprehensive claim. The granting of a reissue for such a purpose, after an unreasonable delay, is clearly an abuse of the power to grant reissues; -and may justly be declared illegal and void. It will not do for the patentee-to wait-until other inventors have produced new forms of improvement, and then, with the new light thus acquired,; under pretence of -inadvertence and mistake, apply’for such an-enlargement of -his claim as to make-it embrace these new forms. Such a process of expansion carried on indefinitely, without regard to.lapse of time, would operate most .unjustly against the public, and is totally-unauthorized by the law. In such a case, even. h'e who has rights, and sleeps upon them,. justly loses-them.., _
The correction of a patent by means of a reissue,-where it is invalid or inoperative for want of a full and clear description of the invention, cannot be attended with such injurious results as follow-from-the enlargement of the- claim. -And-hence a
We think that the delay in this case was altogether unreasonable, and that the patent could not lawfully be reissued for the purpose of enlarging the claim and- extending the scope of the patent.
Decree affirmed.
