16 Blatchf. 139 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1879
The bill in this case is founded on reissued letters patent of the United States, granted to Nathaniel Jenkins, August 3d, 1869, for an “elastic packing for joints and valves exposed to destructive fluids.” The original patent was granted to Jenkins, May 8th, 1866. The specification of the reissued patent describes the new packing as “an elastic packing, of indestructible properties, to a valve, joint or aperture through which a destructive fluid is to pass, such as steam of any kind, hot water, kerosene or other coal oil, hot or cold.” The bill alleges, that Jenkins, by an instrument in writing, dated February 1st, 1870, assigned and conveyed to the plaintiff “the exclusive right and license, within the states
To this bill the defendants interpose a plea, which sets forth, “that the said Charles Nelson is not, and never has been, the as-signee of the said letters patent in said bill set forth, or of any territorial grant under the same, in manner and form as set forth in said bill, and that the said letters patent are now the exclusive property of Thomas William Clarke of Boston, in the county of Suffolk, and state of Massachusetts, under the following claim of title: The said Nathaniel Jenkins died, on or about the twentieth day of May, 1872, leaving a will duly probated in said county of Suffolk, in the probate court thereof, whereof Charles F. Jenkins, Alfred W. Chandler and John Has-sam were executors, and came into full possession of said letters patent. The said Charles Jenkins, Alfred W. Chandler and John Hassam, executors as aforesaid, on the -day of-, 1874, duly assigned said letters patent to Alfred B. Jenkins, under power contained in said will, and thereby conferred upon them. The said Alfred B. Jenkins, on the 'fifth day of November, 1874, duly assigned the same to said Thomas William Clarke. * * * Wherefore defendants say, that the title to said letters patent is not in the said Charles Nelson, for the states of New York and New Jersey.” The plaintiff takes issue on this plea, by a replication.
Proofs have been taken by both parties, and the ease has been brought to a hearing thereon. The real question tried and argued has been, whether the plaintiff has a right to maintain this suit in his own name alone, as it is now brought. The bill does not aver that the plaintiff is or has been the assignee of the patent or of any territorial grant under the same. Therefore, the plea, In denying that, denies what is not averred in the bill. The allegation of the bill as to the right and license conveyed to the plaintiff by Jenkins, by the instrument of February 1st, 1870, is not otherwise denied by the plea. The parties have, however, treated the pleadings and proofs as raising the question, whether the plaintiff has such a title to, or under, the patent as authorizes him to bring this suit in his own name alone; and that is the question which will be considered.
On the 1st of February, 1870, Jenkins owned two other patents which had been granted to him, besides the reissued patent of 1869. That reissue will be called the 1869 patent. The 1869 patent was for a packing composed of refractory earth and vulcanized rubber. Of the other two patents, one, granted October 15th, 1867, was for a packing for joints and valves composed of pulverized mica and vulcanized rubber, or one composed of pulverized wood charcoal and vulcanized rubber. The other patent was granted October 6th, 1868, and was for an “improvement in steam globe valves,” of that class in which an elastic or semi-elastic packing could be employed, the packing being in an annular chamber in the valve head. Premising this, the instrument of 1870 was made. It contains these provisions: “Whereas said Jenkins is the proprietor of certain inventions in the construction of stop valves, cocks, &c., and in packing or discs for stop valves, cocks and other purposes; and whereas the said Jenkins has entered into an arrangement with said Nelson to license him to manufacture stop valves, cocks, &c., under his patent dated October 6th, 186S, and also other valves, cocks, &c., of a suitable pattern to employ his said patent packing or discs, and said Nelson does agree to pay to said Jenkins certain royalties on the valves, cocks, &e., so made by him, and to conduct the manufacture and sale of said valves, cocks, &c., in a manner .that will insure the best results to the parties herein named: Now, therefore, said Jenkins does hereby authorize, empower and license the said Nelson to manufacture and sell valves, cocks, &c., of any and every kind, name and description, for any and every purpose, according to his said letters patent, dated October 6th, 1868, and does also authorize and empower said Nelson to make any and every other valves, cocks, &c., not constructed according to said letters patent, which can be suitably arranged for employing the Jenkins patent packing or discs, without making the said Jenkins liable for any infringements of letters patent on valves, cocks, &c., taken out by any other party or parties; and said Jenkins does hereby covenant and agree to and with said Nelson, that he will sell and promptly supply all his orders for the patent packing or discs, such as are to be used in the construction of the valves, cocks, &e., so made by him or for him, at a discount of twenty (20) per cent, from the latest list of prices of such packing or discs, advertised or circulated by him, a copy of which said list is hereunto annexed, in order to show the prices at this date;” (here follows the list of prices of packing or discs;) “and the said Jenkins does also covenant and agree, to and with the said Nelson, that he will not hereafter grant any authority or license to any person or persons to manufacture, within the
The scope and meaning of the provisions of this agreement are very plain. Jenkins had a patent for valves and two patents for packing. The valves •were such as could employ the patented packing. The patented packing could also be used in other valves, not covered by the 1868 patent. Jenkins desired to retain in his own hands the manufacture of the packing, and to sell it He desired to create a market for it. He could do so by promoting the manufacture and sale of valves made according to his 1868 patent, which would require the patented packing, and of other valves which would require it. By licensing the manufacture of valves to be made according to his 1868 patent, he could derive a royalty on each valve, and at the same time obtain a profit on the manufacture and sale by himself of the packing to be used in such valve. He would also be able thus to ensure that the packing should be a satisfactory article. He. therefore, licenses Nelson to make and sell valves under the
1868 patent, and other valves which could employ the packing of the 1S67 and 1869 patents, without making him (Jenkins) liable for infringing any patents for such other valves. He agrees to sell to Nelson, for use in such valves, packing made under the 1867 and 1869 patents, at specified prices. He agrees not to license any one to make in New York and New Jersey any article in which the packing of the patents of 1867 or 1869 shall be used. He agrees that Nelson shall have the exclusive right to make in New York and New Jersey any article under the 1868 patent. Nelson agrees to pay a specified royalty on every valve made and
The instrument calls itself a license. It is not necessary in this case to construe its provisions as a license under the patent of 1868, for the suit is not brought on that patent, nor is it proper to do so, as between the present owners of that patent and Nelson, as the former are not parties to this suit. It is plainly a license to some extent to make and sell articles under the patent of 1868. As to the patents of 1867 and 1869. Jenkins owning those patents, and being engaged in making packing under them, agrees to sell such packing to Nelson at specified prices, with a view to having Nelson use it in articles to be made under the 186S patent and in other articles fitted for it. But, ihe moment it was bought by Nelson it passed out from under the monopoly of the patents of 1867 and 1869, and it required no license to enable Nelson then to use it for any purpose for which it could be used. The fact of sale carried with it a license to use and a license to sell again. The instrument conveys to Nelson no right to make packing under either of the packing patents. The royalty to be paid is to be paid solely under the patent of 1868 and for a license under it. There is no royalty to be paid under either of the packing patents. The packing is to be bought from Jenkins as an article of merchandise, at a specified price, and Nelson agrees to buy from Jenkins all the packing he, Nelson, is to use. The valves made according to the patent of 1868 are to be stamped with-the dates of all three of the patents, because the valves are made by Nelson under the patent of 1868, and the packing in them is made by Jenkins under the packing patents. Whether the instrument gives to Nelson, as against the owners of the packing patents, an exclusive right to use the patented packing in New York and New Jersey, is a question not necessary or proper to be decided in this case. At most, the instrument is, as to the patent sued on, a mere license.
It was provided by section 11 of the act of July 4, 1836 (5 Stat. 121), which was the statute in force when the 1868 and 1869 patents were granted, and when the instrument of February 1st, 1870, was made, that “every patent shall be assignable in law, either as to the whole interest, or any undivided part thereof, by any instrument in writing, which assignment and also every grant and conveyance of the exclusive right under any patent, to make and use, and to grant to others to make and use, the thing patented, within and throughout any specified part or portion of the United States, shall be recorded in the patent office within three months from the execution thereof.” The 14th section of the same act provided, that an action at law for damages for infringement might be brought “in the name or names of the person or persons interested, whether as pat-entees, assignees, or as grantees of the exclusive right within and throughout a specified part of the United States.” The seventeenth section of the same act gave original cognizance “as well in equity as at law” to all the circuit courts of the United States, of “all actions, suits, controversies, and cases'1-arising under any patent law, and gave power to such courts, “upon bill in equity filed by any party aggrieved, in any such case, to grant injunctions, according to the course and principles of courts of equity,” to prevent infringements. Under these provisions it was always held, that no mere licensee could bring a suit for infringement, either at law or in equity, in his own name alone. In Gayler v. Wilder. 10 How. [51 U. S.] 477, 494, it is said, that while, by the fourteenth section of the act of 1836, the patentee may assign his exclusive right within and throughout a specified part of the United States, and the assignee may, upon such an assignment, sue in his own name, for an infringement of his rights, yet, in order to enable him to sue. the assignment must convey to him the entire and unqualified monopoly which the patentee held in the territory specified. excluding the patentee himself as well as others; and that any assignment short of this is a mere license. That was a suit at law. Wilder, the assignee of the whole of the patent, had granted to one Herring the exclusive right to make and vend the patented article, a safe, in the city and county of New York, for a royalty of a cent a pound on each pound the safe might weigh. But Wilder reserved the right to set up a manu-factory for making the safes in the state of New York, not within fifty miles of the city, and to sell them in the state of New York, paying to Herring a cent a pound on each safe so sold within the state. The supreme court held that the agreement was “not an assignment of an undivided interest in the whole patent, nor the assignment of an ex-
The thirty-sixth section of the act of July 8. 1870 (10 Stat. 203), provides, that “every patent or any interest therein shall be assignable in law, by an instrument in writing; and the patentee, or his assigns or legal representatives, may, in like manner, grant and convey an exclusive right, under his patent, to the whole or any specified part of the United States.” This provision is not different from that found in section 11 of the act of 1836, and is now embodied in section 4898 of the Revised Statutes. The “exclusive right,” under a patent, to a specified part of the United States, means an exclusive right to do everything under the patent, in such specified part, which the patentee could do, and is the same thing as the “exclusive right,” under the patent, “to make and use, and to grant to others to make and use, the thing patented, within and throughout” such specified part. Section 55 of the act of 1870 contains the same provisions, in substance, \which are above cited from section 17 of the act of 1836, and they are now embodied in sections 629, 711, and 4921 of the Revised Statutes. Section 59 of the act of 1870 provides. that an action atUaw for damages for infringement may be brought “in the name of the party interested, either as patentee. assignee or grantee.” This means such a grantee as is referred to in section 36 of the act of 1870, and no other grantee than such as is spoken of in section 14 of the act of 1S3C. The provision above cited from section 59 of the act of 1870 is now embodied in section 4919 of the Revised Statutes. There is no ground for saying that the scope of the act of 1870 is greater than that of the act of 1836.
Applying the foregoing interpretation of the law to the provisions of the instrument under which the plaintiff claims the right to bring this suit in his own name alone, it is entirely clear that he has no such right, because he has not the title to the patent for any part of New York or New Jersey, which is the defence set up in the plea. Even if the agreement between Jenkins and Nelson gave to Nelson such an exclusive right and license to use the packing of the reissue of 1869 as is alleged in the bill, the plaintiff would have no right to maintain this suit in his own name alone. The plea is allowed and the bill is dismissed, with costs.
[For other cases involving this patent, see note to Jenkins v. Johnson, Case No. 7,271.)