25 F. 475 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1885
(orally.) In this ease it is objected on the part of the defendant that the complainant fails to make out a case in three particulars : “First, that the complainant is estopped from enforcing its right of action, if any such existed, by a course of conduct which amounted to an implied license to the defendant to pursue the work for which.it has been sued; second, that the complainant has not proved with reasonable certainty its allegation of infringement by defendant; third, that the matter covered by the letters patent was not novel or useful at the time of its alleged invention.”
I have carefully considered the testimony, and am satisfied that the complainant lias proved the infringement as alleged; and that both the first and fourth claims have been infringed. I therefore decide that point against the defendant.
Third, with reference to novelty and usefulness, that the invention is useful does not admit of doubt. As to its novelty, that is a question that has been litigated by the ablest patent lawyers, before the most experienced judges in patent laws in the Union, for the last 15 years, in case after case. In every instance, so far brought to my attention, the patent has been sustained upon the point of novelty. Of course, thos’e decisions are not binding on this court as to the facts in this case, but they indicate the views of other courts upon similar states of facts, which have been repeatedly fully presented and considered. This case, however, must be decided upon the testimony introduced here. There is an effort, and the only substantial effort made to defeat the patent upon the question of novelty, to show that one Dr. Boettger, somewhere before" 1843, made the invention and described how nickel plating could be done, and that his process was described in a book published as early as 1843, and in subsequent editions, though no witness had seen the book or knew' of its date except from hearsay and the date inscribed on the book, it being a German publication, until some time in 1869, and the date of this patent is August 4, 1869. Some experiments have been made by scientific gentlemen to show that it is practicable to nickel plate by the use of Dr. Boettger’s solution, and proceeding in accordance with his directions. Dr. Boettger’s process could not well have been overlooked in the trial
•“Much testimony has been put into the record in this case bearing upon the question of novelty of these two patents. But a careful examination of the proof satisfies me that all this testimony which is worthy of attention has been considered by the courts before whom these patents have been heretofore adjudicated, and that no new light is shed by the testimony upon the question of novelty. The same ground seems to have been gone over in the former cases that is shown in this, and the devices held to be novel and patentable. ”
This passage applies with even greater force to the present case. Other scientific works, German and English, were referred to in the numerous cases heretofore tried, some in one and some in others, but in all of the cases the novelty of the invention was affirmed. When we consider the number, experience, and ability of the counsel engaged in the numerous cases heretofore tried, and the number and experience of the judges, including nearly all the judges of the circuit courts having the most experience in patent cases, including Mr. Justice Blatchfojrd of the supreme court, it is scarcely to be supposed that Dr. Boettger’s description of a process has been overlooked, or has not been duly considered and ruled upon.
Whatever the truth may be with reference to Dr. Boettger’s experiments, and the work referred to, they seem to have been simply scientific experiments in the labratory, in which he ascertained that by preparing and using the material in the way he pointed out nickel could be deposited, and nickel plating, on a small scale, be accomplished. That is as far as he went. He did not reduce it to a practical art. It does not appear that he ascertained all the conditions necessary to success, but simply that the particular solution would accomplish the object as a scientific experiment. This discovery was not erupted or used in the general affairs of life, and down to 1869 there was no practical work of that kind, so far as the evidence shows, —that is to say, it had not become a practical art. It was not applied to the practical and commercial uses of life. And Boettger’s method is not even now used. All appear to be using Adams’ invention. As Judge Blatchford said, Dr. Adams appears to have first discovered the conditions necessary to practical nickel plating, and to have introduced his discovery into the arts, and applied it to the
In my comments on the next proposition it will further appear to what extent this invention has gone into use, and no doubt can remain as to its usefulness. That proposition is that the invention has been used under such circumstances as to estop the complainant from asserting its right under the patent. The circumstances mainly relied on are that this solution which Dr. Adams used in his process of electro plating has been sold by his authority by the firm of Gondii, Hanson & Yan Winkle, in New Jersey, with descriptions given of the mode of using, and of all the conditions essential to successful nickel plating; that it was sold, not only by this firm, but it was sold generally by other firms. With reference to this fact it is alleged that the firm of Gondii, Hanson & Van Winkle has sent out pamphlets giving descriptions of the whole process, and advertising the solution and preparation under the patent for salo, for the purpose of nickel plating, without indicating that it was patented. Several pamphlets were introduced by the defendant to show that fact; some is
“After the decisions of Judge Blatciiford in the suits of the United Nickel Company against a large number of manufacturers in New York, in which the nickel-plating patents were again sustained, and subsequent injunctions granted against the Gore and other solutions, the American Manufacturers’ Association, composed of some forty of the largest manufacturers in the country, decided in a body to abandon the suits and take out licenses; their action has been followed by many others throughout the country, the licenses now numbering about three hundred. The result has been, so far, to advance the price of nickel-plated goods; notably saddlery, hardware, stoves, etc. ”
Then they go on, under the date of June 1, 1878, and publish this:
“The United Nickel Company has this day granted to Condit, Hanson &Yan Winkle, of Newark, N. J., the exclusive license for manufacturing cast-nickel anodes under their various patents, [the use of certain anodes is one of the claims in this patent, but not claimed to be violated; but complainant has other patents covering anodes,] requiring from them a standard of quality that will insure the best results in the hands of our licensees, and at reasonable prices, to be governed by the market price of pure nickel. All nickel anodes manufactured by them hereafter will have the name of the United Nickel Company and date of patents upon them; and we therefore notify all parties against manufacturing, selling, or using cast-nickel anodes not made under our license.”
This is the edition published in 1881. That agreement was made in June, 1878. It shows that these patents having been contested and always sustained, all the leading nickel-plating establishments then infringing combined together to abandon the infringement and take out licenses. This pamphlet is express notice, sent to purchasers with the goods purchased, of the condition of this patent; but that is not all." The manufacture and sale of this solution proposed under the patent do not authorize the nickel plating covered by the first and fourth claims. The first and fourth claims of the patent do not cover the process of' manufacturing the solutions necessary for nickel plating. That is embraced as a distinct invention under the third claim,—the methods described for preparing the solution of the double sulphate of nickel and ammonia. The third claim of the patent is as follows: “The methods herein described for preparing the solution of the double sulphate of nickel and ammonia and the double chloride of nickel and ammonium.” The third claim of the patent, then, covers this process of making the proper solution to be used.
Complainant does not claim that the third claim is infringed. Desiring, of course, to make the patent a success, complainant provides for a recognized place, where the solution, properly manufactured according to the patent in such manner as would make the nickel
“Tlic electro-deposition of nickel by means of a solution of the double sulphate of nickel and ammonia, or a solution of the double chloride of nickel and ammonium, prepared and used in such a manner as to be free from the presence of potash, soda, alumina, lime, or nitric acid, or from any acid or alkaline reaction.”
That is what the first claim is. It is plating by means of the described solution; and the conditions under which plating can be done is that the double sulphate of nickel and ammonia, or a solution of the double chloride of nickel and ammonium, must be prepared in such a manner as “to be free from the presence of potash, soda, alumina, lime, or nitric acid, or from any acid or alkaline reaction.” Those are the essential conditions which Adams discovered, and it does not appear that Dr. Boettgor ever discovered that those were necessary conditions. It does not appear that he ever discovered that the absence of all these elements is essential to successful nickel plating, for commercial purposes. This is the first claim. The defendant has infringed it. The defendant uses Adams’ preparation to accomplish his purposes. That preparation is covered by the third claim. The first is a claim in addition to that. The selling of the solution does not authorize, inferentially or otherwise, the use of it for the purpose of nickel plating, whatever else it may be used for, without also procuring a license to nickel plate under the first and fourth claims, which are separate inventions.
Again, defendant says that at the time Adams discovered the necessary conditions for nickel plating, and brought them before the public, the nickel of commerce was impure, and it was necessary to prepare it. Now, it is said, the nickel of commerce is pure, and any one can buy it, and the nickel plating can be accomplished by using it in the form in which it is found, without going through the process
The fourth claim is:
“The electro-plating of metals with a coating of compact, coherent, tenacious, flexible, nickel of sufficient thickness to protect the metal upon which the deposit is made from the action of corrosive agents with which the article may be brought in contact.”
Let there be a decree for complainant as to the first and fourth claims, and a reference to the master to ascertain the profits and damages sustained.