19 F. 817 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern New York | 1884
This case has, for the convenience of counsel, been presented in several aspects. To an amended bill the defendants have filed a demurrer. The questions raised by this demurrer are the same as those heretofore raised and determined upon a demurrer to the original bill in this cause. The action, so far as it rests upon facts supposed to make out a case of duress, is not strengthened by anything contained in the amended bill, nevertheless the amended bill can stand for the same reason that the original bill was allowed to stand. The demurrer to the amended bill is therefore overruled.
Next may be considered the question raised by a motion on the part of the plaintiff to strike from the files a plea interposed by the defendants ; or, otherwise, that tlie plea stand as an answer. By this motion the question has been raised whether the fact stated in the plea must not be brought before the court by answer, and not plea. This action is a proceeding taken by virtue of Bev. St. § 4918, where provision is made for a suit in equity whenever there are interfering patents. The bill, after setting forth a certain patent issued to the plaintiff, as the first inventor of the invention therein described, charges that the defendants have a patent issued subsequent to the plaintiff's patent, and for same invention, which patent the plaintiff prays may be declared void, pursuant to the provisions of section 4918. To this bill the defendants have interposed a plea in bar of the action, in which plea they say that the invention described in the plaintiff’s patent was described in an English patent issued in 1855
The proceeding is statutory, instituted by virtue of section 4918. Such a proceeding, as I conceive, has for its sole Object a determination of the question of interference and of priority of invention. It is, by the terms of the statute, limited to eases of interfering patents, and it is only in case interfering patents are found to have been issued that the court is empowered to “adjudge and declare either of the patents void.” The implication is that when the patents are found to interfere, the result of the proceeding shall be a decree making void the patent issued to the later inventor. But if the defendant in such an action may attack the plaintiff’s invention upon - any ground which the statute permits to be set up by answer in an action for infringement, it would often result that the proceeding would fail to secure an adjudication of the question of interference, and so the proceeding be rendered futile for the purpose which the statute intended should be accomplished. Such would be the result in this case. By this plea the defendant admits the averment of the bill that the plaintiff’s patent is for the same invention as that described in the defendant’s patent, and also that the plaintiff was the first inventor. Upon these facts, uncording to the statute, the plaintiff should have a decree declaring the defendant’s patent void, and yet if the plea be allowed the plaintiff will obtain no adjudication upon this question, while the defendant will obtain a decree declaring the plaintiff’s patent void and leaving his own to stand; and this, too, when the fact stated in his plea, if true, taken in connection with the facts stated in the bill, which are admitted, show the defendant’s patent to be also void. The defendant, then, by his plea and his admission, taken together, shows his own patent void, and, upon that showing, claims a decree declaring the plaintiff’s patent void and leaving his own unaffected. Such a result cannot, as it seems to me, be permitted. According to my understanding of the statute, the proceeding permitted thereby is to be confined to a
An order will accordingly he entered overruling the plea.