22 F. 106 | N.D. Ill. | 1884
This is a demurrer to a bill filed to cancel two patents, the first dated September 9,1879, and the second dated October 19, 1880, both being issued to defendant for “improvements in axle-grease.” The right to cancel these patents is claimed on the ground that the defendant, in order to obtain them, falsely and fraudulently made oath that the alleged improvements had not been before known or used, when, in fact, they had been publicly known and used more
The averments in the bill, with the letter from ilie attorney general, show that the persons or corporation who claim to be aggrieved by the conduct of the defendant after he had sold them the exclusive right to manufacture this composition, have obtained the use of the name of the United States for tko purpose of conducting a suit of their own in regard to the validity of this patent. The facts set out in the bill concerning the device described in the two patents of 1879 and 1880, if true, are sufficient to defeat this patent.' They are such as are set up in very many if not almost all patent controversies wiiere the question of the novelty and validity of the patent is challenged, and such as almost every patentee is called on in some form to meet. It is true that it is an imposition on the patent-office to falsely make an affidavit that a device for which a patent is asked has not been known and used prior to the invention thereof by the applicant for the patent. Buell conduct may justly be said to be fraudulent; but it is a fact which goes to the validity of his patent, and may he pleaded by any person against whom the patentee brings suit; and it seems to me that it would be bettor to leave the litigation of questions like this, which constitute a defense in patent cases, to the parties directly interested, rather than that the government should lend its name to a suit really in the interest only of certain private parties.
The practice here inaugurated will, if followed, transfer nearly all litigation on patents, except mere questions of fact as to infringement, to the office of the attorney general, instead of leaving it in the hands
The bill im question is not authorized by any special statute of the United States. There is a statute that authorizes the bringing of a bill between interfering patentees, where two patents are issued for the same, or substantially the same, device, and the fact that congress did not authorize bringing a bill of this character is certainly a strong argument in favor of the view that it was not intended that bills of this character should be brought, and that they intended if a party took a patent he should take it subject to being defeated by those interested in its defeat, by traversing any and all facts upon which his claim to the patent is based. Another consideration of some weight in my mind is the fact that the public at large, .the patent-office, and the United States have rested for about five years, in reference to these patents, without raising any question as .to their validity, and it is now only at the instance of parties who are specially and directly interested in their defeat, and who, by the showing of the bill, have a complete defense against both these patents, that the name of the government is lent to these contestants under which to attack these patents, and that only upon a guaranty that the government is to incur no costs. If this suit can be maintained by these individuals in the name of the government,' upon the conditions named by the attorney general, the next applicant for leave to bring a similar suit may have an equally meritorious case, but no means to idemnify the government against costs, and the question will arise whether he is to be denied the right to use the name of the United States because of his poverty.
.i,It must be conceded, upon the allegations of this bill, that the defendant has acted dishonestly, both in the false statements by which he obtained his patents, and in his dealings with the persons to whom h,e sold- his business and the right to use his process under his older patént; but the fact of such dishonesty does not clothe this court yyith jurisdiption to entertain a suit in the. name of the United. States
1 do not intencLto be understood as holding that a bill in chancery will not lie in any case to annul a patent obtained by fraud, but only that this bill does not, in my opinion, make such a case as requires or authorizes the United States to allow the use of its name to fight out a contest between these individuals.
The demurrer to the bill is sustained, and the bill dismissed for want of equity.
See U. S. v. Gunning, 18 Fed. Rep. 511.