30 F. Cas. 273 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1855
(charging jury). The first question in this case is, what is the thing, the machine or instrument, which the plaintiff claims to have invented? It is essential to comprehend this, in order to ascertain whether it is new, never before known, or in public use; and is also essential to enable you to determine whether the cars used by the defendants are a violation of the patent. It will be necessary, therefore, in the first instance, to turn your minds to the patent and the description of the improvement claimed, which is there to be found. The description, I think I may say, is one of un-, usual clearness and precision for instruments of this character. We have had no difficulty in ascertaining from it the improvement as claimed by the patentee, as it defines not only the arrangement and construction of the car—the running gear and the body—but also the principles governing the same, and upon which the improvement is founded. The patentee refers in the beginning to the numerous curvatures in the railroads of this country, the radius of which, in many instances, is but a few hundred feet, and to the friction arising between the flanges of the wheels and the rails, causing a loss of power, and destruction of both wheels and rails. He then refers to the high velocities on railroads by the modern improvements in locomotive engines, and the demand of public opinion—of the business interests of the country—for this description of speed, and also to the consideration, that certain things in the construction of both roads and cars become important which were not, and would not have been, at the old rates of speed. He observes that the great momentum of the load and intensity of the shocks and concussions are among the things to be noted and provided for.
The patentee then refers to the fact that passenger and other cars, in general use upon railroads, have but four wheels, the axles of which are placed from three and a half to five feet apart, the distance being governed by the nature of the road upon which they are run, and other considerations. He then observes that when the cars (meaning the four-wheeled cars) are constructed so that the axles retain their parallelism, and are at a considerable distance apart, there is, of necessity, a tendency in the flanges of the wheels to come in contact with the rails, especially on a curvature of a short radius, as the axles then vary more from the direction of the radii; and that, from this consideration, when taken alone, it would appear to be best to place the axles as near each other as possible, thus causing them to approach more nearly to the direction of the radii of the curves, and the planes of the wheels to be more in the line of the rails. But there are other considerations, he says, that must not be overlooked in the construction of the car, namely, the increased force of the shocks from obstructions at high velocities; and he observes that the greater the distance between the axles, while the length of the body
Now, gentlemen, this is a result to which the patentee arrives after his discussion of the various difficulties to be encountered in the construction of the car, and it may be said to be the leading idea—the general principle—the fundamental principle, if you please—embodied in the eight-wheel car, and which he has subsequently described. I will call your attention to it again, because it brings out the principle upon which the eight-wheel car has been constructed by the pat-entee. It tends, therefore, very much to develop the leading features, the controlling features of that construction. He says: It becomes "very important, both as regards comfort, safety, and economy, to devise a mode of combining the advantages derived from placing the axles at a considerable distance apart, with those of allowing them to be situated near to each other. He then refers to the attempt to overcome these difficulties by the use of coned wheels, and to the partial remedy thereby, but points out the failure of the use of those alone, under high velocity, to get rid of the embarrassment.
The patentee then explains the object of his invention, which, among other things, is to make such an adjustment or arrangement of the wheels and axles as shall cause the body of the car or carriage to pursue a more even, direct, and safe course than it does as cars are ordinarily constructed, both over the curved and straight parts of the road, by the desideratum of combining the advantages of the near and distant couplings of the axles, and other means which he has described.
He then describes the arrangement and construction of his cars, which I will not take up your time in reading. It has been read so often and so frequently illustrated and exemplified in the progress of this trial, that I have no doubt you are familiar with it. It will be found upon the copy of the patent which I have between folios twenty-one and twenty-eight. And then comes the claim. The patentee says, after describing the construction of his car: •
“I do not claim as my invention the running of ears or carriages upon eight wheels, this having been previously done; not, however, in the manner or for the purposes herein described, but merely with a view of distributing the weight carried more evenly upon a rail or other road, and for objects distinct in character from those which I have had in view, as hereinbefore set forth. Nor have the wheels, when thus increased in number, been so arranged or connected with each other, either by design or accident, as to accomplish this purpose. What I claim, therefore, as my invention, and for which I ask a patent, is, the before-described manner of arranging and connecting the eight wheels, which constitute the two bearing carriages, with a railroad car, so as to accomplish the end proposed by the means set forth, or by any others, which are analogous and dependent upon the same principles.”
The claim itself explains the improvement set up by the patentee. It is the arrangement and construction and adjustment of the eight-wheeled car, as described in his specification, the car as a whole. The patentee claims no right as inventor to any of the constituent parts of the car, the wheels, the axles, and peculiar construction or framing of the running gear of the bearing carriages, the contrivances by which they are connected together, the springs, the bolsters, the turning of them upon the center, or the swiveling of the trucks —nothing of this is claimed as new on the part of the patentee. This is plain from the terms of the claim, which is the construction and arrangement and adjustment of these various parts into a car as a whole, combining the advantages which he has set forth as he claims.
Now, it is proper to observe, that this improvement, as claimed by the patentee, is made upon the existing four-wheel car then in general use, and which, as has appeared in the progress of this trial, is still in use in England, and probably upon the Continent, unless they have adopted our eight-wheel cars, some specimens of which I have understood have been sent to the Continent It will, therefore, be proper and useful for you to examine this four-wheel car as then in general use, and the evidence in respect to it. Models have been introduced and exemplified, and no doubt you understand it. But you should inquire into this fact, in order to ascertain whether or not the difficulties described by the patentee existed upon curved roads at great velocity, I mean as respected this four-wheel car then in use upon roads with high velocity and with short curves— and whether or not the eight-wheel car, as arranged and constructed by the patentee, is an improvement upon it This is one of the questions in the case for your consideration, and, as to this, you will probably not have much difficulty. From the time they were first brought out in Baltimore—I mean the eight-wheeled cars—it is admitted on all
Now, gentlemen, if I have succeeded in explaining to you the improvement described in the plaintiff’s patent, and claimed by him, upon these four-wheel cars, by the construction of an eight-wheel car, as I hope I have, the next question to which your attention must be called is this—whether or not this improvement as thus described in the patent, and as first brought out in Baltimore -►whether this was the improvement of the plaintiff. This is one of the material- questions in the case, which, as you have already discovered, has been most seriously contested between the parties. After calling to your minds the construction given by the court to the patent, and to what constitutes the improvement which is claimed to have been reduced to practical use—after you have ascertained and comprehended this improvement claimed by the plaintiff, and described in his patent—after this, which is a question of law (I mean so far as the construction of the patent is concerned), after you have ascertained what is claimed by the plaintiff as his improvement, the question whether or not he was the first inventor of it is a question of fact, which belongs to you to determine. The burden of the evidence—for the greater portion of the time, the long time which has been consumed in this trial—has been directed on both sides to the solution of this question. The patent of the plaintiff, given in evidence, and the extension of it for seven years, which has been given in evidence, together with the testimony of the experts introduced on the part of the plaintiff in the opening of the ease, furnish prima facie evidence that the plaintiff was the first and original inventor of the improvement claimed, and of its utility; and therefore, the burden of showing that he was not the first and original inventor, and of the inutility of the patent, rests upon the defendants. They, are obliged to assume this position in that stage of the trial. Accordingly, they have gone into evidence at large for the purpose of satisfying you upon these points, and you have before you, first, the evidence from Baltimore, for the purpose of showing this— that, assuming the car described in the plaintiff’s patent-to be the improvement upon the four-wheel car, and that it was new and useful, yet the defendants insist upon this evidence, that the plaintiff was not the first' inventor, but that somebody else was. They refer to the timber, the wood, and the trestle cars, and much evidence has been given in respect to these cars. The plaintiff, on the contrary, insists that neither of them embodied his improvement, or that if any of them did, it was constructed after his invention, which it is claimed is carried back upon the evidence to the fall or beginning of the winter of 1830. Now, gentlemen, I am not going over this evidence on either side. It has been so amply and ably discussed by the learned counsel upon both sides, that I can not doubt that you are familiar with every material portion of it. It will be for you to say, upon the evidence, whether or not the defendants have furnished evidence to satisfy you that the plaintiff was not the first and original inventor, but that somebody else was. They have that burden upon them. It will be for you to determine, upon the whole of the evidence, whether they have overcome the patent, and the evidence furnished in support of it.
Then another ground is taken, viz: that there is nothing new in the arrangement or construction of the car, as described in the patent, but that it was old, and before in public use; and they say that it is to be found in Chapman’s patent and drawings, and also in Tredgold and Pairlamb’s—al-though as to the two latter, they are not much relied upon—in the Quincy car, in the Allen locomotive, and in the Jervis locomotive. All these have been brought out in the progress of the trial, and amply examined and discussed, and I am persuaded that you are entirely familiar with all the evidence bearing upon this branch of the case. The question upon it will be, whether or not you find the improvement of the plaintiff—the improvement existing in the arrangement and construction of his eight-wheel car upon the four-wheel car—whether you find that improvement in any one or all of these patents or machines—not whether they have eight wheels and two trucks, free to swivel or rock; but the question is, whether the peculiar arrangement, adjustment, and 'construction of the car—the wheels and tracks in relation to the road—claimed in the patent, and which I have endeavored to explain to you, on the principles which the patentee has developed—whether that embodiment thus found in the eight-wheel car is to be found in either of these structures to which you have been referred. That is the question.
Another ground of defense set up on the
A kindred principle, also, it may be proper to state here, which is, that where a person engaged in producing some new and useful instrument or contrivance, and who has embodied it into a machine, and endeavored to reduce it to practice by experiments—if those trials fail—if he fail in success and abandon it, or give it up, that consideration affords no impediment to another person, who has taken up the same idea or class of ideas, and who has gone on perseveringly in his studies, trials, and experiments, until he has perfected the new idea, and brought it into practical and useful operation. He is the person—the meritorious inventor—who is entitled to the protection of the law.
Another ground of defense set up is, that the patentee allowed the public use of his improvement, of his eight-wheel car, upon the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, before he made his application for a patent. Now, it is undoubtedly true, as the law stood at the time of this patent, in October, 1834, that the public use of the invention, with the consent of the patentee, or sale of it, prior to the time of his application for a patent, operated as a forfeiture—as a dedication to the public. This, however, means the use of the perfected invention—the invention complete. If the use be experimental, to ascertain the value, or the utility or the success of the thing invented, by putting it into practice by trial, such use will not deprive the pat-entee of his right to the product of his genius. The plaintiff, therefore, in this case, had a right to use his cars on the Baltimore- and Ohio Railroad, by way of trial and experiment, and to enter into stipulations with, the directors of the road for this purpose, without any forfeiture of his rights. He could not probably obtain the opportunity of trial which was essential to the perfection of his improvement without obtaining their consent, .and, as I have already said, it is the use of the improvement after it has been completed and reduced to practical success, which operates as a forfeiture—as a dedication to the-public—as a giving it up to the public.
Now, gentlemen, if, upon consideration of these questions which I have submitted to you, you should come to the conclusion that this improvement is a useful one, and that the plaintiff is the first and original inventor of it, the next question for your consideration is, the question of infringement. If you are against the plaintiff upon either of the two-first questions of utility and originality, then, of course, this other question will not be reached.
Then..as to the infringement by the defendants’ cars, the question is; Do they embody the arrangement and construction of the plaintiff’s car—in other words, the improvement in the plaintiff’s specification? Improvements, as you hare seen during the progress of this trial, have been made upon the eight-wheel car, since it was brought out and put in operation. The swinging bolster is an instance, and there are also others that •have been mentioned in the course of the-trial. Now, the improvements thus made upon the eight-wheel car do not give any right to the thing improved. The plaintiff in this case would have had no right to use a four-wheel car, if there had been a patent for it, because he had improved it by the eight-wheel car. So an improvement upon the eight-wheel car does not absorb, or give a right to the inventor of that improvement to use the thing improved. Therefore, the question still is, whether or not you find in the defendants’ organization and arrangement the-organization and arrangement of the plaintiff’s improved car. If you do, the additional improvements since made upon it do not disprove the infringement. It is a question of fact for you to determine. Having ascertained and comprehended what the improvement of the plaintiff is, as claimed in his patent, and which I have endeavored to explain to you in the beginning of this charge, you will apply that to the defendants’ cars, and see-whether it is embodied there. If it is not,then there is no infringement. If it is, there is an infringement.
Then, as to the question of damages. It is admitted by the counsel for the plaintiff"
I have prayers for instructions here, by the defendants’ counsel, numbering, I believe, eighty, but the counsel must excuse me from going over them. I have given all the instructions, and all the principles of law that I deem necessary or useful in the submission of this case to you, and whatever else may be found in these numerous prayers is beyond what I deem proper to trouble you with, for I regard them as not pertinent, nor relevant, and not material to comment upon.