Aiken v. Dolan

1 F. Cas. 233, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 197
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJune 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 F. Cas. 233 (Aiken v. Dolan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aiken v. Dolan, 1 F. Cas. 233, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 197 (uscirct 1867).

Opinion

CADWALADER, District Judge.

There have been two objections to the complainant’s derivation of title from Hibbert, the patentee. One of them is founded upon the assignment to Darius C. Brown of all right, title, and interest in the invention “to be applied exclusively to the knitting or construction of harnesses for looms and for other purposes.” This obviously meant har[235]*235nesses for looms,- and harnesses for other purposes. The objection, therefore, cannot be sustained. The other objection depends upon the effect of the agreement of September 23, 1S62. I -will consider this question as it would have been presented if the paper had been produced or its loss proved, and it had been duly verified.

If Herrick Aiken had fulfilled the conditions of this agreement, he would have become the equitable owner of the extended term. But, as he does not appear to have, in any wise, fulfilled them, the former ownership, legal and equitable, has continued as to third persons, if not as between the parties themselves. Justice does not even require that a decree should be made expressly without prejudice to the rights of Herrick Aiken, .because, if he has any rights, legal or equitable, in what may be recoverable through this litigation, the compiain-ant will be accountable to him without any such saving clause in the decree. In the mean time, the complainant is the sole party entitled, in the first instance, to redress from other persons. If the right of action had, on the contrary, been divided into fractional shares between the parties ■to the agreement, the defendant should not have been harassed by a suit in which they were not all made parties. The present is not such a case. Nevertheless, my first impression was that Herrick Aiken ought, according to the rules of procedure in equity, to have been made a party complainant or defendant; and independently of the question of verification, I still have some doubt upon the point. It is to be regretted that the objection has not been removed by amendment. For this, it is perhaps not too late, even now, to apply, if the complainant is desirous to prevent a recurrence of the question in the court of appeal.

The case will next be considered upon the merits of Hibbert’s claim to have been the ’inventor of the latch needle as an optional substitute for the former spring-hook needle in knitting machines. The latch needle has not altogether superseded the spring-hook needle. Both are in use; and the spring-hook needle, though more fragile, may be a preferable implement in the manufacture of certain fabrics of the finer kind. The hook of the latch needle is rigid. The spring-hook needle is hollowed at the proper point for the reception of the end of the hook when depressed. ■ •Of this hollow space, and of the machine by which it was made, drawings were published more than a century ago. The hollow thus formed was, long before Hibbert’s patent, ■designated in print as a longitudinal groove. It acquired, however, in the latch needle, the more distinct character of such a groove. In this needle, a pivot passes across the groove through each side of it. On this pivot the latch turns freely, lengthwise, in opposite directions toward and from the hook. It is thus turned by the loop of yam passing forward and backward. This alternating longitudinal motion of the latch is arrested in the former direction by the hook, and in the latter direction by the termination of the groove into which the latch falls back. The specification of Hibbert's patent stated that the latch needle was designed to work on the knitting frames theretofore used. It has been objected that the specification does not describe the adaptation of this needle to knitting machines. To this objection a sufficient answer is that he claimed only the invention of a new and improved knitting needle, and not the invention of any adaptation of this improved implement. The latch needles are to this day bought and sold, and imported from abroad, separately from the knitting machine, as the spring-hook needles are, and had previously been. There is no reason to doubt that Hibbert honestly believed himself the first inventor of the latch needle. There is evidence tending to refer the date of his invention to the year 1846. Its true date certainly was not later than 1847. His patent was issued January 9, 1849. The introduction of latch needles into general use was, in the language of the answer in this case, “obstructed, perhaps, and retarded by the necessity of altering machines, changing the nature of the fabrics, and, in some measure, by the doubts and prejudices of manufacturers.” But as the answer states, the manufacture and use of such needles gradually increased in extent until 1852, and having by this time become general, afterward increased more rapidly, “causing the alteration, of machines and of fabrics to suit” them, etc. The testimony shows that this more rapid increase did not begin till after 1853, and that it may probably have been due mainly to improved adaptations of knitting machines. On December 29, 1862, it was decided by the commissioner of patents to extend Hibbert’s exclusive privilege for seven years after the expiration of the first term of fourteen years, and it was extended accordingly. This decision could not have been made without proof that he had not derived a fair profit from his invention during the first part of the original term. The decision, having been made after public notice and official investigation, shows that throughout the United States he was generally considered, as he still was considered by the patent office, the first inventor. This belief may have been confirmed by the knowledge that in February, 1849, the month next after that in which his original patent had been issued, the invention was patented in England to another person as a novelty there. For some time after this extension, the rights of Hibbert appear to have been generally recognized in the United States. A person who, since 1853, has constructed “perhaps 1,000” machines for latch needles, took, in 1864, a license for making and using needles, under Hibbert’s patent, at a certain rate or toll At the date of the answer in this case [236]*236(September 6, 1866), an opposition to tbe patent seems to have been more or less organized. At this time there were, according to the answer, some forty or ñfty manufactories in the city of Philadelphia alone, which worked with latch needles, and employed with them from ten to fifteen thousand hands.

Hibbert’s. invention thus appears to have been original, whether the subject of it was new or not. What has ‘been stated suffices to show that the subject had not been generally known or' used either in the United States or in England. Prom all the proofs in the cause, moreover, it fully appears that the latch needle had never been used with profitable results in either country, certainly not in the United States. The needle and its use may, nevertheless, have been sufficiently known to a few persons to prevent it from being new. The improbability of this may diminish when we recur to the causes which prevented the invention from becoming profitable during several years next after the date of the patent.

A latch needle, according to the general description heretofore given, had been devised by Jeandean in Prance, where he obtained a patent for it in 1806. His description of it was published in a printed book in 1831. How far such needles were afterward made and used on the continent of Europe, it would be useless to inquire, because they certainly were made and experimentally used in the United States a great many years before 1846. In one prior instance, at least, they were openly used in making an experimental fabric.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F. Cas. 233, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aiken-v-dolan-uscirct-1867.