46 F. 117 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1891
The complainant is the owner of patent No. 424,944, issued April 8, 1890, to one Allen, for an instrument (a pump) for the transfusion of blood. Heretofore action was brought against the defendant, Detweiler, and another, who were making and selling pumps identical in all respects with those described in the patent. They did not defend. Decree was entered by default, and final injunction issued. Subsequently, on January 18, 1891, a patent (No. 444,690) was issued for a surgical pump similar to complainant’s, the difference between the two instruments being but slight. The defendant has since the injunction sold pumps manufactured under the latter patent, and the complainant insists that this constitutes an infringement of the patent and a violation of the injunction, and asks either for an attachment for contempt, or for an order declaring the particular pump now sold by defendant to be covered by the injunction. Upon the argument the motion for attachment was not pressed, the weight of authority being clearly against it, where the new article is covered by a later patent. The claims of the first patent are very broad, and if they are to be considered as valid in their entirety, the defendant’s new pump is an infringement. He insists, however, that the first patent cannot be sustained in view of the prior-state of the art, unless its claims are limited to the particular structure therein described, and that his pump does not infringe the claims, if thus limited. He submits earlier patents, and offers testimony as to the prior state of the art. The complainant, on the other hand, insists that the decree sustains the patent just as it stands, and that the defendant must accept that construction. The authorities cited by the complainant in support of his contention are all cases where the patent had been construed by the court, after argument, and that construction resulted in a decree reviewable in the manner provided by law. Here the patent has never been construed by the court at all. If it is to be now construed on this motion for an order declaring the new pump to be covered by the injunction, such construction will be arrived at without the taking of testimony in the usual way by oral examination, direct and cross, and without the opportunity for review. No doubt it might be sent to a master to take proof at the foot of the original decree, and upon his return a further decree might be made; but such practice would be more awkward, and probably no more expeditious, than a trial under a new bill. To the proposition that by a failure to waste the time of the court in a litigation practically hopeless, because