2 F. 451 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Hampshire | 1880
There is very little conflict of evidence in this case. The patentee made a machine containing his invention in the year 1857, and in 1863 he substituted for it another varying in form and proportions, but not in principle. These machines he used successively in the ordinary way of his business, as a maker of card and pasteboard, until he applied for his patent, in 1876. The specification and model represent precisely the machine of 1863. During the time that the machines were used they stood in the room with several other machines necessary for the other processes of making, .drying and coloring pasteboard, and were operated chiefly by one man, Moulton, who was sometimes assisted by one other. About 23 workmen were employed upon the other parts of the manufacture. The doors of the factory were usually kept locked, and each of the 25 workmen had a key. How many visitors came • to the factory is one of the disputed points. There were occasional visitors, but not many persons came to the factory from mere curiosity. During some months Mr. Denison, a friend of the patentee, was given the use of an upper room for making tags, and his workmen passed in sight of the pasting machine. It is not proved that any workmen, visitors, or other persons acquired or divulged a knowledge of the mode of operation of the machine, until the workman Moulton gave that information to the defendants, in 1876. ■
Was the invention in public use for more than two years before Perkins applied for his patent ? The time was enough. Was the use a public use? The law desires to encourage inventors to make their discoveries known for the improvement of the art, and to discourage an extension of the monopoly beyond the statutory period. For these reasons, and because of the difficulty of ascertaining the amount of knowledge which may have been derived from the exhibition, publication or use of the invention, it has always been held that when the public have had means of knowledge they have had knowledge of the invention. Thus, if a book has been pub
It has been intimated that a use in a workshop, where the workmen are pledged to secrecy, may not be a public use. Kendall v. Winsor, 21 How. 322; Charge of Curtis, J., —; Bevin v. Easthampton Bell Co. 9 Blatch. 50; Heath v. Smith, 3 Ellis & B. 255. In the last of these cases it is held that if the invention has been worked in the ordinary way, without an injunction of secrecy, the use is public. In McClurg v. Kingsland, 1 How. 202, it is said by Mr. Justice Baldwin, obiter, that use in a factory is a public use.
A us® very trifling in amount, or a publication purely technical, or a single sale, have often been held to deprive an inventor of his patent, without evidence that any one interested to acquire knowledge of the invention had acquired it. Henry v. Prov. Tool Co. 14 Off. Gaz. 855; Egbert v. Lippman, Id. 822; McMillan v. Barclay, 5 Fish. 189; Re Adamson’s Patent, 6 D. G. M. & G. 420; Patterson v. Gas-Light Co. 3 App. Cas. 239; Lange v. Gisborne, 31 Beav. 133.
The difference between this case and Manning v. Cape Ann Isinglass Co. is that in that case the inventor, after dissolving his partnership, permitted his partner to continue to use the invention. Neither of the partners used the invention except in their respective factories. The circumstance makes that case a little stronger, but my opinion was that the use by the firm before they dissolved their partnership was a public use. Taking these decisions together, I understand the law to be that actual knowledge of the invention need not have been derived by any one interested to practice it; it is enough that any one or more persons, not under a pledge of secrecy, saw the invention practiced, or even might have seen it if they had used their opportunities, provided it was in fact practiced in the ordinary way after being completed. And it must be held either that the workmen and visitors were a part of the public, or that they were persons from whom the public might have acquired the art without a breach of trust.
The decree must therefore be; Bill dismissed, with costs.