96 F. 332 | 2d Cir. | 1899
(after stating the facts as above). The French patent for a term of 15 years was issued before the date of the application for the United States patent for the same invention, and was in full force at that date, but lapsed for the nonpayment of an annuity before the United States patent issued. The effect which the lapse had upon the life of the United States patent depends upon the proper construction of section 4887 of the Revised Statutes, which was the section in force when the patent was issued, and which was as follows:
“Sec. 4887. No person shall be debarred from receiving a patent for bis invention or discovery, nor shall any patent be declared invalid by reason of its having been first patented or caused to be patented in a foreign country •unless the same has been introduced into public use in the United States for more than two years prior to the application. But every patent granted for an invention which has been previously patented in a foreign country shall*333 He so limited as to expire at the same time with the foreign patent, or, if there he more than one, at the same time with the one having the shortest term, and in no ease shall it be in force more than seventeen years.”
No one of the five decisions of the supreme court which may be supposed to bear upon a decision of this motion was based upon the facts of this case. In Bate Refrigerating Co. v. Hammond, 129 U. S. 151, 9 Sup. Ct. 225, the application for the United States patent was filed December 1, 1876, and the patent was issued on November 20, 1877. A Canadian patent bad been issued for live years from January 9, 1877, and, in pursuance of Canadian law, was extended without in ter-ruption for two terms of five years each. The question being whether the United States patent expired at the end of five years or of fifteen years from its date, the supreme court said:
“Wo aro of opinion that In the present case, where the Canadian statute raider which the extensions of the Canadian patent were granted was in force when the United States patent was issued, and also when that patent was applied for, and where, by the Canadian statute, the extension of the patent for Canada was a. matter entirely of right, at the option of the patentee, on his payment of a required fee, and where the fifteen years’ term of the Canadian patent lias been continuous and without interruption, the United Slates patent does not expire before the end of the fifteen years’ duration of the Canadian patent. This is time although the United States patent runs, on its face, for seventeen yéars from its date, and is not, on its face, so limited as to expire at the samo time with the foreign patent; it not being necessary that the United State's patent should, on its face, be limited in duration to the duration of the foreign patent.”
In Pohl v. Brewing Co., 134 U. S. 381, 10 Sup. Ct. 577, letters patent of the United States bad been issued March 18, 1879, upon application filed in the preceding January. German letters patent for the same invention bad been issued to the same inventor in September. 1877, which could run until December, 1891, but became forfeited in 1880 for neglect to pay the required annuities, and a French patent for the same invention began to run from September, 1877, for 15 years, but expired in 2 years by reason of the same neglect. The supreme court held that the potential term, and not the period of actual existence, was to govern, and said:
•‘There is nothing in the statute which admits of the view that the duration of the United Slates patent is to he limited by anything but the duration of tlie legal term of the foreign patent in force at the time of the issuing of the United States patent, or that it is lo lie limited by any lapsing or forfeiture of any portion of the term of such foreign patent, by means of the operation of a condition subsequent, according to the foreign statute. In saying that ‘every patent granted for an invention which has been previously patented in a, foreign country shall be so limited as to expire at the same time with the foreign patent,’ the statute manifestly assumes that the patent previously .granted in a foreign country is one granted for a definite term; and its meaning is that the United States patent shall be so limited as to expire at the same time with such term of the foreign patent.”
The decision in Commercial Mfg. Co. v. Fairbank Canning Co., 135 U. S. 176, 10 Sup. Ct. 718, has no appreciable bearing upon this case. An original United States patent was applied for December 13, 1873, and was issued December 30, 1873. A Bavarian patent was granted April 8,1873, and expired April 8,1876, by limitation of its term. An Austrian patent was granted October 31, 1869, and expired May 26,
The decision in Bate Refrigerating Co. v. Sulzberger, 157 U. S. 1, 15 Sup. Ct. 508, was confined to the single point that the provisions of section 4887 “refer to foreign patents granted previously to the issue of letters patent for the same invention by the United States, and not to foreign patents granted previously to the application for the American letters.”
The remaining case is that of Huber v. Manufacturing Co., 148 U. S. 270, 13 Sup. Ct. 603, which is thought to have an important bearing upon the question now at issue. Letters patent of the United States were granted to an assignee of the inventors on June 27, 1882. An English patent, dated April 7, 1874, for the same invention, had been granted to the inventors for 14 years, but expired on April 7,1881., by reason of the nonpayment of stamp duty. The application for the United States patent was filed more than seven months after the English patent had become void. The case was tried in the circuit court after the decision in the Bate Case and before that in the Pohl Case, and its opinion, based upon a widely extended misapprehension of the tendency of the Bate decision, was to the effect that under section 4887 the term of the actual existence, and not the legal term, of the foreign patent, limited the duration of the United States patent, and that the section “presupposed that at the date of the United States patent there was in force a foreign patent for the invention, and that, if there was no such foreign patent in force when the patent was issued, but only one which had lapsed and become void, although theretofore granted for the invention, there was no authority in law for the United States grant.” The circuit court decreed that the United States patent was issued without authority of law, and was void, upon reasoning which was decided in the Pohl Case to be without foundation. Judge Blatchford was careful not to affirm, although lie quoted the theory upon which the decree of the trial court was based. He had previously said that the “decision was made upon the interpretation which the [circuit] court gave to” the Bate Case. Pohl v. Brewing Co., supra. His conclusion was, “We are of opinion that, as in the case at bar the foreign patent was not in force when the United States patent was issued, the latter patent never had any force or validity”; and gave as the apparent reason for the conclusion that “the delay in applying for the United States patent until after the foreign patent expired amounted to an abandonment of the right to a United States patent. This is in accordance with the view of the commissioner of patents in Mushet’s Case” (1870), which was an application for the extension of the term of a United States patent after the foreign patent for the same invention had ex
All the decisions of the supreme court upon section 4.887 were intended to be limited to the question which arose upon the precise facts of the respective cast's, and are to be so regarded, notwithstanding any general language which was used. The Huber Case is an authority only for the right to obtain a United States patent applied for seven months after a foreign patent had. expired, and after its owners manifestly regardful it as of no importance, and consequently after the abandonment of the right to a United States patent. There has been no authoritative decision by that court upon the facts of the case at bar. The Cold and Huber Oases simply suggest what may be their decision upon the facts as now presented. Section 4887 provided that prior foreign patenting should not be a bar to a United States patent, unless under certain circumstances, but that such patent should not extend beyond the term of the life of its foreign predecessor. If the invention or the right to a patent had beeii abandoned before the application for a United States patent, its issuance was prohibited under another section. If there had been no abandonment before application, but the issuance of the United States patent was delayed until the foreign patent had become forfeited by noneompliance with some statutory provision, the question is whether, when issued, its life had been destroyed, or whether its life was upon ihe declared or legal term of the foreign patent. If its life ivas destroyed, its destruction was effected while the application was under examination, and was delayed in the patent office. Such a result would be nt variance with the spirit of the section, the intent of which was; (o make the United States term coterminous with the possible foreign term. If its life is a continuous one for 15 years, the construction makes the patent system a uniform one, and independent of mishaps occurring after the applicant was entitled to his patent, and which would have had no effect if the office could hare been more prompt. The appellee’s construction, in view of the effect of the decision in the Pohl Case, seems harsh and inequitable. Under that decision the legal term of a foreign patent in being when the United Htales patent was issued is the term of the life of (he later patent, although the foreign patent should be forthwith forfeited. Under the construction asked for, If the foreign patent was forfeited pending 1lie application for an American patent, its issuance is barred. It is very probable that any difficulty which exists in the construction of (he sec lion is because it was drawn with reference only to the state of facts which ordinarily arise, and the “conditions which we are now considering did not occur to the draftsmen. The section is applicable to the case at bar because the foreign patent was -‘previously patented”; but there Is no requirement that the foreign patent must be in force at the date of the United States patent, and in searching for the meaning of the section, as applied to this case, the words “io expire at the same time” should have ihe same‘construction in each set of circumstances, and should be taken to mean that the United (States patent expires at the end of the term prescribed in the previous foreign patent.
The order of .the circuit court is reversed, with costs.