37 F. 333 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania | 1889
This is a suit for the alleged infringement by the defendants ofletters patent No. 258,156, for improvements in glass-annealing furnaces, granted to Cleon Tonduer, the plaintiff, on May 16, 1882; a patent which this court already has had occasion to consider in the case of Tondeur v. Stewart, 28 Fed. Rep. 561, where there was a decree in favor of the patentee. The present defendants, however, were not parties to that suit, and as some new proofs have been adduced by them, this case has been heard as if none of the questions involved had ever been passed on, and the conclusions I am about to announce have been reached after a re-examination of the grounds of the former decision, and a careful consideration of the case in all its branches.
“(1). The combination of the bars, d, d', arranged side by side, and alternately between each other, the set, d, supporting the sheets of glass while the bars, d', are pushed towards the leer or flattening wheel, a, and the set, d', supporting the sheets of glass, and moving them onward and through the tunnel, substantially as set forth.”
The answer denies that the plaintiff was the first and original inventor of what was patented to him, and also denies infringement.
To sustain the former defense the defendants rely, not only upon the patents to Bievez and Bowen, which were mainly relied on to defeat the suit in Tondeur v. Stewart, supra, but also upon letters patent dated November 25, 1873, granted to J. B. Boulicault, and several French patents, particularly the patent to A. M. Bouvy. Now, in respect to the
Coming, then, to the question of infringement, we find that the defendants, use two sots of elevated bars, and that the only difference (alleged to be material) in construction or mode of operation between their device and that described in the plaintiff’s specification is, that in the defendant’s leers fhe bars which support the sheets of glass while the reciprocating bars are pushed towards the flattening wheel are stationary, and the vertical movement for shifting the glass from one set of bars to the other is performed by the reciprocating bars alone. Is this difference sufficient to relieve the defendants from the charge of infringing the first claim of the patent ? Certainly the variation is practically un
“I am aware that movable bars and fixed temporary rests for the glass have long been in public use to move sheets of glass through an annealing tunnel; •therefore I do not claim these.”
Now, it may well be that the patentee considered the simultaneous change in the elevation of the two sets of bars as the most advantageous mode of shifting the glass from set to set, and this feature he has taken care to cover by the second claim of the patent. But the first claim calls for no such limitation as is insisted on, and its language is free from ambiguity. Why, then, should the court import into the claim a qualification not expressed,—something wholly unnecessary to the therein described operation,—when the only practical effect would be to deprive a worthy inventor of the benefit of his patent?
The disclaimer was considered in the case of Tondeur v. Stewart, supra, and the judgment of the court was against giving to it the effect here contended for. To that conclusion I must adhere. I will not repeat, or much enlarge on, what was said upon this subject in the former opinion. The disclaimer is to be read with reference to the prior state of the art, and it may and ought to be construed so that it may harmonize with ■the plainly-expressed terms of the first claim of the patent. The claim follows directly upon the heels of the disclaimer, “but what I do claim is: (1) The combination of the bars, d, d',” etc. The specification describes two sets of bars,—one set having a temporary supporting function, and the other set supporting and moving the sheets of glass through the leer. The first claim of the patent is for the combination of these two’set’s of bars arranged and co-operating in the manner and for the purpose defined. The claim should be interpreted with reference to the actdal invéntión.' The reasonable presumption is that, having a just-
But the defendants make the further defense (which was not set up in the prior suit) that the letters patent sued on are null and void, upon the ground that in the application for his patent the plaintiff made oath that he was a citizen of the United States, which he was not. The answer does not allege, nor is there any evidence to indicate, that the plaintiff was guilty of any fraud, or that his oath was willfully false. On the contrary, it satisfactorily appears that he acted uude'r an honest mistake, and with no improper design whatever. The plaintiff left Belgium, his native land, in the year 1881, and came to the United States with the avowed intention of making this country thenceforth his permanent place of residence and citizenship; and he ignorantly supposed that by virtue of his residence, and the residence of his family, here, he became a eitizen. ' This mistake he did not discover until a long time after the grant of his patent. Now, the question raised, it will be perceived, is not whether the letters patent are voidable, for the cause assigned, at the suit of the government. The position taken is that the patent is a nullity. In support of the proposition, the defendants cite the case of Child v. Adams, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 189, in which a similar defense was sustained by Judge Grier. But that case arose under and was governed by the patent act of 1836, which allowed the grant of letters patent to aliens only upon peculiar conditions, to which citizens were not subject. 5 St. at Large, 117. By that act the patent fee payable by a citizen was $30 only, whereas an alien was required to pay at least $300, and, if a British subject, $500; and by the stringent language of the act the fee was to be paid before the application for a patent could be considered by the commissioner. Section 9. Then, again, an alien patentee was compelled “to put and continue on sale to the public, on reasonable terms, the invention or discovery for which the patent issued.” Section 15. It was, therefore, under that act, of the highest importance that the applicant should truly disclose his citizenship; and section 6 required that before any inventor should receive a patent he should “make oath, * * * of what country he is a citizen.” The decision cited was expressly put upon the ground that an alien, whether through ignorance or intention, falsely swearing that he vras a citizen, in order to procure a patent, not only failed to perform a condition upon which his right to a patent depended, but committed a fraud upon the government. But the law governing the present case, i. e., the patent act of 1870, as embodied in the Revised Statutes, abolished all such discriminations against aliens, and placed them upon the same footing as citizens, in respect to the grant of letters patent for inventions, and the enjoyment of the privileges thereby secured. Rev. St. §§ 4886, 4920,