23 F. Cas. 978 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1827
This is an application for an injunction to restrain the defendants from an infringement of what the complainant claims to be his patent right. The patent bears date on the 6th of November, 1826, and the right claimed is an improvement whereby to support ships in or on dock at the bilge, called “bilge levers.” The specification commences with stating that “The improvement claimed, specified and described, consists of a new and useful method
The bill alleges that this was a new and useful improvement, and that the complainant was the true inventor thereof, and that prior to the 6th day of November, 1820, he made and constructed, and put in readiness for operation, the said improvement, at the city of New York; and having obtained his patent therefor, the improvement was put in operation under the license of the complainant, and that he became possessed of the exclusive right and liberty of making, constructing, using and vending the same, &c.; and after setting out the infringement complained of by the defendants, the bill prays that they and their agents may be enjoined and prohibited from using the aforesaid improvement on the bilge levers which they or either of them have constructed, in whole or in part, since the 13th day of May, in the year 1S27. so ordered or directed to be constructed, and from completing any such bilge levers which they or either of them have at any time in part made or constructed, and from constructing and making hereafter any such bilge levers, without the consent ;ri writing of the complainant.
The rules and principles by which this court is governed, in applications like the present, are laid down in the case of Sullivan v. Redfield [Case No. 13.597], Whether the patent is good and valid, so as ultimately to secure the right claimed under it, belongs to a court of law, in which the parties have a right of trial by jury. The jurisdiction exercised by a court of equity, in granting an injunction, is in aid of the common law, and should not be asserted when the right was doubtful; and that the court, in granting the injunctions, acts upon the assumption that the right has been infringed, or that little or no doubt exists on that point. When there has been an exclusive possession, for some considerable time, of the patent right, the court will sometimes, on the ground of possession, grant an injunction, without putting the party previously to establish the validity of the patent at law. But when the patent is recent, and any real doubts are entertained of its validity, the court will requiie that to be established at law before it will grant the patentee the benefit of an injunction. These are believed to be principles well settled in this country and in the English chancery, and to be founded upon the soundest rules of justice and equity,
Does the complainant then bring himself within .these rules, either by showing an exclusive possession for such a length of time as to warrant the presumption of right, or by showing a clear and unquestionable right as the first inventor? The patent bears date in November last, and the improvement claimed does not, from the proofs, appear to have been earned into operation, until some time in the spring of 182G; and the complainant does not ask for an injunction to prohibit the use of bilge levers made prior to the 13th day of May last. This is not, therefore, a case which calls upon the court to protect the right, on the ground of possession; and, indeed, it is not easily perceived
If the suggestion, as above stated, was first made by Stebbins, and led to the construction and application of bilge levers, as used by the dry dock company, the question arises, how far will this affect the complainant’s patent? Without intending to express any definitive opinion on this point on the present occasion, so as to preclude the consideration of it upon the trial at law, I am satisfied it throws so much doubt upon the complainant's right, as to render it improper to grant an injunction until that right has been tried at law.
In Tenant’s Case, as reported in Fess. Pat. 102, it is held that the patentee must not only be the inventor, but the first and sole inventor of the thing which is the subject of the patent. In that case the action was brought by Tenant for an infringement of his patent for a bleaching liquor. The action was resisted on two grounds: That the same means for preparing the liquor had been used for some years before the date of the patent; and that the patentee was not the sole and first inventor. And in support of the latter ground, a chemist swore that he had had frequent conversations with Tenant on the means of improving bleaching
The application for the injunction is therefore refused, on the ground that it does not satisfactorily appear that the complainant is the first and sole inventor of the improvement claimed to be secured by his patent; and this supersedes the necessity of examining the other objections that have been taken to the validity of the patent. See Langdon v. De Groot [Case No. 8,059]; Goodyear v. Mathews [Id. 5.576]; Moms v. Huntington [Id. 9,831]; Sullivan v. Redfield [Id. 13,597]. Motion denied.
Mr. Godson, in his Treatise on Patents, contends that a method is not patentable. He says: “When an invention is not of a thing made, it can only be known by being taught by the inventor himself, or by being learned from experiments made on the faith of the description given of it in the specification. With that assistance, however well the method or process may be set forth, some time and experience must necessarily be required, before a person can make use of the invention so beneficially as the discoverer. But the public are not bound to make experiments, and, therefore, it seems reasonable to infer that a mere process or method cannot be the subject of a patent. But sup
In the case of Moody v. Fiske [Case No. 9.745], Judge Story says: “Where the inventor claims several distinct and independent improvements in the same machine, and procures a patent for them in the aggregate, he is entitled to recover against any person who shall use any one of the improvements so patented, notwithstanding there has been no violation of the other improvements. There is no doubt, that by the law of England, a party who pirates any part of the invention of a patentee, is liable in damages, notwithstanding lie has not violated the whole. It may be that the decisions have turned upon the peculiar language of the English patents; for in all the precedents which I have seen, the patent gives the exclusive right of the whole invention, and prohibits all other persons, ‘directly and indirectly to make, use or put in practice, the said invention, or any part of the same, &c., or in anywise to counterfeit* imitate, or resemble the same, or make or cause to be made, any addition thereto, in subtraction from the same.’ But as no such intimation is given in the reports, I incline to believe that the doctrine stands uoon the general principles of law. that he who has the exclusive right to the whole of a thing, has the same right t.o all the parts which the general right legal'y includes; that is. (in cases like the present.) to all the parts which he has invented. The principal difficulty that arises, is in the application of the doctrine; and.that may. in most cases, be removed by considering the nature and extent, of the patent, or rather of the thing invented and patented. Where the patent goes for the whole of a machine as a new invention, and the machine is, in its structure, substantially new, any person who pirates a part of the machine, substantially new in its structure, deprives the inventor. so far, of his exclusive right in his invention, and may. in a great measure, destroy the value of the patent. Where the patent is for several distinct improvements in an existing machine, or for an improved machine, incorporating several distinct improvements, which are clearly specified, then if a person pirates one of the improvements, he violates the exclusive right of the patentee, for the patent is as broad as the invention, and the invention covers all the improvement; and it is a wrong
Where the right is doubtful, and that doubt can only be removed by a trial at law. there is some plausibility in requiring a party to establish his right before an injunction is granted. But this is not always the course, even in doubtful cases. There are many instances in the liooks, where the courts have said that possession, under color of title, is enough to enjoin and continue the injunction until it is proved at law that it is only color, and not real title. The case of Bolton v. Bull, 3 Ves. 140. is one of that description. An injunction had been granted that the question as to the validity of a patent, might be tried in an action at law; and so doubtful was the right of the patentee that the court, upon a case stated, were equally divided. Yet the lord chancellor refused to dissolve the injunction, declaring that he would not put the party to accept a compensation. So. also, in the case of Universities of Oxford and Cambridge v. Richardson. 6 Ves. 707. Lord Eldon, in noticing what fell from Lord Mansfield, in Millar v. Taylor [4 Burrows, 2400], “that it was a universal rule, that if the title is not clear at law. the court will not sustain an injunction.” said, that he could not accede to that proposition. so unqualified, for that there had been many instances within his own memory, in which an injunction had been granted, and continued under such circumstances until the hearing. The same doctrine is laid down in the case of Harmer v. Plane. 14 Ves. 132. And the lord chancellor said there would be less inconvenience in granting the injunction, until the legal question could be tried, than in dissolving it at the hazard that the grant of the crown may, in the result, prove to have been valid. That the question was not really between the parties upon the record; for unless the injunction is granted, any person might violate the patent, and the consequence would be that the patentee must bo ruined by the. litigation. This last observation is entitled to great weight and consideration, and furnishes a strong and cogent reason for granting injunctions in cases of this kind. The prevention of a multiplicity of suits is one of the most salutary powers of a court of equity. These cases are sufficient to show that it is the prevailing practice in England, even where the right is doubtful, and the case is sent to be tried at law, to send it with an injunction instead of denying it on that ground. But where the right is clear, an injunction is never refused: as when the right claimed appears on record, or is founded on an act of parliament, it is matter of course to grant an injunction without first obliging the party to establish his case at law. Cooper. Eq. Pl. 157: Mitf. Eq. Pl. 129. 1 Ves. Sr. 476. In the case of Blanchard v. Hill. 2 Atk. 485. Lord Hardwicke said, that in cases of monopolies', the rule that the court had governed itself by. was whether there was any act of parliament under which the restriction was founded. But the court will never establish a right of this kind, claimed under a charter only from the crown, unless there has been an action to try the right at law. This will be found, on examination, to be a governing distinction. running through the numerous cases cited on the argument. And whenever an injunction has been refused, the right was claimed under a patent from the crown, and that right considered doubtful.