Allen v. Hunter

1 F. Cas. 476, 6 McLean 303
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedApril 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1 F. Cas. 476 (Allen v. Hunter) 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
Allen v. Hunter, 1 F. Cas. 476, 6 McLean 303 (uscirct 1855).

Opinion

Instruction of the Court.

This, gentlemen of the jury, is an action for the infringement of a patent. The plaintiff, who is the patentee, “claims to have invented a new and useful mode of sotting mineral teeth on metallic plates,” and he describes as follows the composition and mode of application: “The cement may be formed of any of the known fluxes, combined with silex, wedgewood and asbestos intermixed with gold and platinum scraps, which form a metallic union with the plate upon which the teeth are set. The compound which I prefer is composed of silex 2 oz., white or fluid glass 2 oz., borax 1 oz., wedge-wood 1% oz., asbestos 2 drms., feldspar 2 drms., haolin 1 drm. This compound should be intermixed or underlaid upon the plate, with gold or platinum scraps. The gum color consists of feldspar % oz., white glass 1 oz., oxyd of gold 1% grs.: moisten and apply with a brush.” After describing how the application is to be made, the patentee says: “I claim as my invention, and desire to secure, by letters patent, a new mode of setting mineral teeth on metallic plates by means of a fusible silicious cement, which forms an artificial gum, and which also unites single teeth to each other, and to the plates on which they are set.” “I also claim to be the inventor of said cement or compound, a full and exact description of which is herein given.” “I also claim the combination of asbestos with plaster of paris, for covering the teeth and plates for the purpose of sustaining them in their proper position, while the cement is being fused.”

A caveat was entered by the plaintiff, in the office of the commissioner of patents, the 29th of April, 1851. This notice to the office that the plaintiff was the first inventor, for which he claimed a patent, was to answer a double purpose. First, to give notice of his claim as inventor, and, second, to prevent a patent from issuing to another for the same thing. The patent issued to the plaintiff bears date the 23d of December, 1851. Under the law, before this patent could be issued, a thorough examination of the claim was made by examiners of the patent office, who were appointed, it is to be presumed, on account of their knowledge and experience in matters of science, mechanism, chemistry and natural philosophy, which enables them to judge of the feasibility and utility of inventions and discoveries made, and for which the inventors or discoverers apply for a patent. A claim which has thus been examined and sanctioned by the granting of a patent, gives to the patentee a prima facie right to the invention or discovery claimed. And the individual who disputes the right must produce evidence to counterbalance the legal presumption of right in the plaintiff from his patent. On the subject of patents. [477]*477we are governed by the law, and not by our own notions of policy. Some individuals who prefer their own theories to the practical results of society, which have been established and sanctioned by the wisdom of ages, hold that there- can be no property in a discovery or an invention.- And these notions may have an influence on their judgment, when they are called to act on the subject of patents. Such an influence should be regarded as unjust and against law. You are sworn, gentlemen, to act on the subject before you according to the law and the evidence.

The defenses made to the right claimed by the plaintiff are: 1. That the patent is void upon its face, for want of certainty in its specifications. The law requires “every inventor to swear that he does verily believe that he is the true inventor or discoverer of the art, machine, or improvement for which he solicits a patent; and he shall deliver a written description of his invention, and of the manner of using or process of compounding the same, in such full, clear and exact terms as to distinguish the same from all other things before known, and to enable any person skilled in the art or science of which it is a branch, or with which it is most nearly connected, to make, compound and use the same.” In requiring this particularity, the law has two objects in view: 1. That the invention or discovery claimed may be clearly distinguished from all other inventions or discoveries. 2. That when the patent shall expire and the invention or discovery shall become public property, any one skilled in the art or science may construct or compound it.

Patentees are not monopolists. This objection is often made, and it has its effect on society. The imputation is unjust and impolitic. A monopolist is one who, by the exercise of the sovereign power, takes from the public that which belongs to it, and gives to the grantee and his assigns an exclusive use. On this ground monopolies are justly odious. It enables a favored individual to tax the community, for his exclusive benefit, for the use of that to which every other person in the community, abstractly, has unequal right with himself. TJnder the patent law this can never be done. No exclusive right can be granted for anything which the patentee has not invented or discovered. If he claim anything which was before known,, his patent is void. So that the law repudiates a monopoly. The right of the patentee entirely rests on his invention or discovery of that which is useful, and which was not known before. And 'the law gives him the exclusive use of the thing invented or discovered, for a few years, as a compensation for “his ingenuity, labor, and expense in producing it.” This, then, in no sense, partakes of the character of monopoly. Inventors are often great benefactors. And how ill are they generally rewarded! If the invention or discovery be of great value, a system of piracy is commenced, not so much to injure the patentee, as to benefit the actors. And it cannot be denied that this course of action is made popular in the community by the charge of monopoly against the patentee, and his realization of large profits. His expenses are not considered, the benefit he has conferred on society, nor the shortness of seven or fourteen years, to which his exclusive right is limited. For the maintenance of his right he is subjected to legal controversies, which, not unfrequently involve him in an expenditure beyond the amount of his profits. Inventors and discoverers are proverbially poor. It is said that the man, by the operations of whose genius the streets of the city of London were first lighted, was a wanderer and a beggar in those streets. The gas company, who were made rich by his invention, eventually made some provision for him. What have inventors done for our country? The application of steam to the propulsion of vessels upon the water, and carriages upon the land, have advanced our country a century in commercial intercourse, in civilization and in everything which constitutes a great nation. And look at the numberless labor-saving machines, the cotton gin, the planing machine, the reaping machine, and many other machines and inventions, which by the force of machinery accomplish wonderful results. It then appears that patentees, so far from being monopolists hanging as dead weights upon the community, are the benefactors of their country.

By the law an exl ension of a patent can be given only where it is made clearly to appear that by the profits from the term of the grant the patentee has not been remunerated for his ingenuity, labor and expense, in bringing his invention into operation.

In this case the patentee says that the cement may be formed of any of the known fluxes; and it is argued that as this includes all fluxes, “if there be any which cannot be so used, the patent is void.” The words of the specifications are to be taken together, and they are to be so construed as to give effect to the meaning and intention of the person using them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F. Cas. 476, 6 McLean 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-hunter-uscirct-1855.