44 F. 6 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1890
This is an application for an order directing service of process upon the defendant, a Swiss corporation, by publication. The petition states that the suit is brought to remove a cloud upon “the title to certain letters patent” which it is claimed are the property of the complainant corporation, or rather of its receiver, and which “original letters patent, the subject-matter involved in this suit, are in the possession of [such receiver.]” This statement is not technically accurate. What the suit is concerned with is the title to the patent itself, —to the patent-right; and the mere custody of the letters evidencing the fact' that such patent-right was originally granted to a particular inventor is immaterial.
The petitioner claims that he is entitled to the relief prayed for, under section 8 of the judiciary act of 1875,, ivhich provides for such service upon non-resident defendants when the suit is commenced “to enforce any legal or equitable lien upon or claim to, or to remove any incum-brance or lien or cloud upon, the title to real or personal property within the district where such suit is broughtJ’ The various cases which were cited by the complainant’s counsel interpreting this section are concerned either with real property, or with such tangible personal property as was susceptible of reduction to actual possession. I cannot Satisfy myself that the section covers (or was intended to cover) such incorporeal and intangible property as a patent-right, possession of which must of necessity be ideal, not actual, and which cannot be seized or sold under an