45 F. 256 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1891
This suit is brought upon letters patent No. 260,134, granted June 27, 1882, to Marvin C. Stone, and No. 311,534, granted February 3, 1885, to the orator, for fountain pens, in which the ink is led to the nibs by capillary attraction between a lip and the pen, and in those of the latter the ink is brought within reach of the attraction by an extension of the lip into the reservoir. The defendants’ pens are made under George H. Sackett, and letters patent No. 349,753, granted to him September 28, 1886. These inventions were under consideration on substantially the same evidence in Sackett v. Smith, 42 Fed. Rep. 846, brought against a dealer in the orator’s pens; and the question of their order in time was passed upon. The conclusion upon this was that Stone’s was first, the orator’s next, and Sackett’s last. A careful examination of the evidence now leads to the same result, and the reasons there given for the conclusion are fully concurred in. The novelty of the inventions of the orator’s patents is further questioned upon several prior patents, and most closely upon British patent No. 2,858, of October 2, 1869, to John Butcher, and American patent No. 14,425, of March 11, 1856, to A. F. and C. M. H. Warren. Each of these describes channels for guiding a flow of ink by gravity, which might produce capillary attraction to aid the flow, and might not; neither describes drawing the ink to the nibs bji that process. Stone’s invention stands first as to that, and the orator’s first for extending the lip into the reservoir. The validity of both of the orator’s patents is further questioned, because after the applications were filed important changes
Let a decree be entered for an injunction and an account, with costs.