29 F. Cas. 930 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts | 1858
(charging jury). In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover damages for an alleged infringement of a patent right. The patent produced by the plaintiff is for that of which he claims to have been the first and original inventor, in the year 1840. At that time, it seems to be settled that a patent was granted to him, which was surrendered and reissued in 1849, and the reissue of the patent is that which has been presented and read to you — or, rather, the claim was read to you, the full specification not having been read. It was renewed according to law, in 1854, for seven years from the termination of the first fourteen years. It is now in force, if it be a valid patent. •
No question is made, gentlemen, as to the reissue in 1849, or the extension in 1854. It has not been contended or suggested that the reissue is not, substantially, for what was originally described in the patent in 1840. And, therefore, gentlemen, you may take it, for this investigation, that the question is on the validity of the patent issued in 1840. Two grounds, gentlemen, are presented as defense against this claim. The first is what may be denominated the question of priority; that is, the defendant says that Mr. Whipple was not the first inventor of that which he claims in his patent. The second ground is what has been denominated the question of infringement; that is, the defendant says that whether the patent was valid or not, he has not used Mr. Whipple’s invention. These are two distinct questions, gentlemen, for your determination, and both of them must be decided in favor of the plaintiff, before he can be entitled to your verdict. As to the question of priority, that is, whether Mr. Whipple is the original and first inventor of what is set forth and claimed by him in his patent, it is sufficient, in the first instance, that he has the. patent which is granted to him by the government, under the law of the United States. To produce that instrument to you, as he has in this instance, is prima facie proof that he is the first and original inventor. He having produced that, the burden of proof is then upon the defendant, .to allege and to show that, although he has had a patent from the government, yet there is some mistake or fraud in some part, because he was not really the first inventor; for if those who undertake to give an exclusive right to a patentee, by issuing the instrument called a patent, should thereby undertake to give á monopoly to any person for a thing known before, and used before, they have no power, by law, to do so; and if this shall appear in an investigation in a court of justice, the claim will be set aside. The question, then, gentlemen, taking the construction of the patent law which I have referred to, is, whether, on the whole evidence, it appears to you that Mr. Whipple was or was not the first inventor of that which he claims in his patent. And It is here material, gentlemen, that we should distinctly understand what it is that he claims as his invention. There is a long description, part of which has been read, and this, as part of the proof, has been put into your hands, with the specification or description of the machine. But, after all, gentlemen, the concluding part, where he sums up and states what he claims as new, is that, and that only, which you are to look at, in the first instance, to see and understand all his claim. If there is a question upon the construction of that claim, then you will look at the other parts of the instrument, and will be enabled to understand the claim, and to give a construction to it.
I believe there are two distinct claims set forth; but the first has not been read to you; there is no question made about it; it is not considered material to this inquiry, or as affecting the patent in any respect, and need not trouble you in the course of this investigation. The matter for consideration is that which has been presented as the claim which has been infringed, and upon which this issue determines. The claim is for the form and arrangement of the teeth of the cylinder for burring wool. It is that he claims the form and arrangement of the teeth of the cylinder used for the purpose of burring wool, in such a manner that the outer surface of the teeth shall be substantially concentric with the axis of the cylinder. This is for the purpose of taking the wool and separating it from the burr. That is the claim; that is all that he claims to have invented.
That is the question of his claim, gentlemen; and the second question is, whether that existed before. The only machine in which it is alleged to have existed before is the common card-machine, or that card-machine as it may have been modified by Mr. M. H. Simpson. No other pre-existing machine is presented to you in the evidence, as having anticipated the invention thus claimed by Mr. Whipple. The whole inquiry, then, is narrowed to this — whether the machine used by Mr. Simpson, or described by him in any patent that he may have obtained, is sub
The second question presented is the question of infringement. If you are satisfied, from the proof upon the stand, that the defendant in this case has used an invention for which the plaintiff has not a valid patent — in other words, gentlemen, if Mr. Whipple was not the first inventor, and his patent is not valid, of course you need not trouble yourselves whether anybody has infringed it, because everybody will have a right to use it. If the patent is a valid one, and Mr. Whipple is entitled to the exclusive right to use, vend, or sell to others to use or vend, then the question is whether the defendant has violated that right by using the invention. And here the evidence lies in a narrow compass; it is not extensive or complicated. The model, also, presents to you the instrument or machine used by the defendant, which is called the Parkhurst machine. You will examine the two, and see whether this Parkhurst machine embodies and uses the invention of Mr. Whipple. If it does, it infringes. And here it is proper that I should inform you, gentlemen, that it is no matter, in that view, whether he does or does not use something else. If he has made an independent improvement upon Mr. Whipple’s machine, if he engrafts that improvement upon Mr. Whipple's invention, he can not use Mr. Whipple’s invention because he has got an improvement upon it, although it may make it work better and more advantageously. If Mr. Parkhurst should make an improvement, he has a right to his own improvement. Mr. Whipple can not use Mr. Parkhurst's improvement upon his invention, because it is engrafted upon it; and Mr. Parkhurst can not make or sell Mr. Whipple’s invention, because he has invented something that will make it better, Each may claim his own share. The question is: Does this, whatever else it may contain, or whether it contains any thing else, embrace or use the invention of Mr. Whipple? If it does, it is an infringement. Now it is contended that employing these plates with teeth cut into them is substantially using the invention of
These are the questions, gentlemen, which are presented upon the evidence in this case, and which offer themselves to your understanding, to your intelligence, and upon which you are to exercise your judgment. I do not know, gentlemen, that there is any thing further. .If there is any question of law raised, I will present it to the jury.
Mr. Dean. I would suggest, may it please your honor, this proposition: Suppose the machine used by the defendant is substantially the machine invented by Mr. Simpson, prior to the plaintiff’s patent, even though it is claimed that in some particulars it resembles the plaintiff’s patent, yet if it is substantially the same thing that was invented and used prior to the plaintiff’s patent, the plaintiff can not then recover.
SPRAGUE, District Judge. Gentlemen, I believe that the conclusion to which the counsel have called my attention will necessarily follow from what I have already stated to you. If the defendant’s machine is substantially the same as Mr. Simpson’s, then, of course, the plaintiff can not recover, because either one of two results must follow in that ease. The defendant will have the right to use that which was known before 1840, that is, if the defendant used something substantially like Mr. Simpson’s, as known before 1840, then he will have the right to use it; and it then comes to this, either it is not an infringement of the plaintiff’s, or the plaintiff is not the first inventor. We come to that result. And you may take that into view, in determining whether it is the same as Mr. Simpson’s. But in considering this, you must recollect that the question is whether it is what Mr. Simpson used prior to 1840; not what Mr. Simpson says he made in 1842, for that was subsequent to the patent, and after Mr. Simpson himself had seen the patent. And, therefore, any thing that Mr. Simpson made after Mr. Whipple’s patent, of course can not aid at all the right of the defendant or the right of Mr. Simpson. The question relates solely to what was invented prior to 1840. If Mr. Simpson’s was the same as Parkhurst’s, substantially the same — I mean Mr. Simpson’s prior to 1840 — then the plaintiff can not recover. But still, the points recur that I have already presented to you, in the question whether Mr. Whipple’s was the first and original invention or not, and the other question, whether, if so, the defendants have used that invention.