19 F. 308 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1884
The testator of the oratrix was the owner of reissued letters patent No. 2,529, granted March 26, 1867, upon the surrender of original letters patent No. 39,702, granted to him August 25, 1863, for improvements in envelope machines, which would expire August 25, 1880. The bill was brought June 12, 1880, upon the original patent, without referring to -the reissue, to restrain the use of machines alleged to be infringements, and for an account. No motion was made for a preliminary injunction. An answer was filed setting forth the reissue August 16, 1880; the oratrix moved to amend the bill, and September 22,1880, it was by stipulation amended to cover the reissue in place of the original. The defendants now move, on the authority of Root v. Railway, 105 U. S. 189, that the bill be dismissed for want of jurisdiction in equity, because the patent had expired before the amended bill was filed, upon which only the oratrix could have any eqpitable relief. Dowell v. Mitchell, 105 U. S. 430. The infringement is solely by the 'use of machines made before the bill was brought and continued ever since, and would be covered by the general allegation of infringement made in both the original and amended bills, if filed during the term of the patent, but the continued use after the expiration of the term would not be so covered by that general allegation in a bill filed after the expiration; special
The defendants set up that the reissue is too broad for the original. The original showed and described two arms, extending from a table in the interior of a machine under which the envelope blank is made to pass on its way to a creasing box in the rear,—one on each side of the box,—to or nearly to a line with the rear side of the box. No use for these arms was stated. In the reissue those arms are described as applied in such position that they extend parallel to the edges of the creasing box with their lower edges level with, or rather below, the top edge of the box so as to bear down on the ends of the blanks and hold them in position on the box to be creased, and as secured to the table or any" other fixed part of the machine. No other reference to the table in connection with them is made. No claim was made in the original in respect to them. They are the subject of the new fourth claim. The original showed these arms only as extensions from the table. Their height in respect to the creasing box was not shown with accuracy otherwise than by reference to the table. As no function was ascribed to them their position could not be inferred from what they were to do. When they were described as in a certain position, with reference to the creasing box instead of the table, and as attachable to some other part of the machine when they would not he extensions of the table, and an office was ascribed to them, an invention different from that in the original was shown. This claim was too broad to be added at any time, and therefore void. Gill v. Wells, 22 Wall. 1; Russell v. Dodge, 93 U. S. 460. Besides, the reissue was taken out more than three years after the original, and would seem to be for that reason unreasonable and invalid. Miller
Envelope machines were in use before this invention. This inventor was entitled to and claimed a patent only for his improvements. Slides or platforms to hold envelope blanks, lifters, or pickers, to receive gum on their faces and take it to the proper place on the blank, and, by its adhesiveness, to lift them so they could be taken by carriers or conveyors, carriers or conveyors to take them to a creasing box, creasing boxes to crease them, and folding apparatus to fold them, were all then known. The seventh claim is for a balance weight connected with this form of conveyor; and the twelfth, for ribs on the face of the plunger which works in the creasing-box, and presses the envelopes after they are folded. The defendants are not found to make use of either of these devices, or what is the equivalent of either, in the working of this invention.
In this invention the lifters or pickers, after receiving gum on their faces, fall by their own weight upon a pack of blanks on a movable slide, which receives the pack and carries it to and holds it in the proper place, and lift the upper blank until it is disengaged by the table supporting the gum box, and taken by the conveyor under the table and steadied by it to the creasing box. This combination of the movable slide and falling lifters and arrangement of the table and conveyor form the subjects of the first and second claims. Also, a cam and roller, connected with the plunger, bring its face to a pressure upon the envelope to stick its folds firmly after it has been folded. This cam and roller, in combination with the plunger, are the subjects of the tenth claim. Careful and repeated examinations of the machines and patents put in evidence to show anticipations and want of novelty have failed to discover such combinations and arrangements as those covered by these three claims. The falling lifters, the arrangement of the table over the conveyor to steady the blank, and the combina
It is claimed that the inventor so conducted himself, by seeing machines similar to those of the defendants made without claiming that they infringed his patent, that neither he nor the oratrix, as his personal representative, could have any equitable right to restrain their use. It does not appear, however, that he led the defendants into any expenditure or course of conduct by his silence when he ought to have spoken which they would not have made or followed if he had spoken. The fact of the patent was open to them, as well as known to him. They could respect it, or take the risk of having what they did turn out to be an infringement. They chose the latter course, and he does not appear to have been responsible for their choice. The oratrix appears to be entitled to an injunction to restrain the use of so much of these machines as were infringements •when they were made. Crossley v. Derby Gas-light, Co. Webst. Pat. Cas. 119; 4 Law Jour. (N. S.) Ch. pt. 1, p. 25; American, etc., Co. v. Sheldon, 18 Blatchf. 50; [S. C. 1 Fed. Rep. 870;] Curt. Pat. § 436. The right to an account for past infringement follows.
Let there be a decree that the first, second, and tenth claims of the patent are valid and have been infringed, and for an injunction against the use of such parts of machines as were made in violation of those claims, and for an account, with costs.