American Hide & Leather Splitting & Dressing Mach. Co. v. American Tool & Mach. Co.

1 F. Cas. 647
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedNovember 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 F. Cas. 647 (American Hide & Leather Splitting & Dressing Mach. Co. v. American Tool & Mach. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Hide & Leather Splitting & Dressing Mach. Co. v. American Tool & Mach. Co., 1 F. Cas. 647 (circtdma 1870).

Opinion

SHEPLEY, Circuit Judge,

[charging jury.] This is an action brought by the American Hide and Leather Splitting and Dressing Machine Company, as plaintiff, against the American Tool and Machine Company and George H. Fox, as defendants, for an alleged infringement of letters-patent of the United States, granted Aug. 14, 1860, to Joseph F. Flanders, the alleged inventor, jointly with one Enos G. Allen, to whom Flanders had assigned one-half of his interest prior to the issue of the letters-patent, which, by mesne assignments, are alleged to have passed to the plaintiff corporation before the date of the infringement complained of. The defendants do not deny, and for the purposes of this trial it is admitted, that they made and sold one machine embodying the invention described and claimed in the letters-patent declared on; and that, therefore, they have infringed the plaintiff’s rights, unless they have established by evidence one or more of the defences set forth in their special pleas, or have proved to the satisfaction of the jury one or more of the special matters in defence of which they, gave notice under the statute. The principal grounds of defence relied upon in this case are: First, that the invention was in public use and on sale, with the knowledge and consent of the inventor, more than two years prior to his application for a patent; second, that he had abandoned the invention to the public prior to his application for a patent; and, third, that the same invention had been patented by him in England more than six months prior to his application for a patent in the United States, and had been introduced into public and common use within the United States prior to his application for a patent in the United States.

Now, as to the first of these three grounds of defence, the act of March 3, 1839, modified the law of patents as it existed under the act of 1S36, and as it had previously existed with regard to the public use of the invention prior to the application for a patent. Since the act of March 3, 1839 (except in case of proof of abandonment to the public, or what perhaps would be a better term, dedication to the public, though I have used the words of the statute), no purchase, sale, or use of the invention invalidates a patent, unless such purchase, sale, or use has been for more than two years prior to the application for a patent; but a public use or sale of the invention, with the knowledge and consent of the inventor more than two years prior to his application, does invalidate a patent and make it void. The burden of proof is always on the defendant who sets, up such prior sale or use; and he must show it to have been with the knowledge and consent of the inventor, and to have been public in the ordinary way of a public use or sale of a machine, and not to have been a. use for the mere purposes of experiment. But if it is in public use or on sale with the consent or allowance of the inventor more than two years prior to his application for a patent, and not in use merely for the purposes of experiment, then, as I have already instructed you, the patent is void. I shall have occasion to call your attention more particularly to this matter hereafter, when I come to refer to the special instructions which have been asked for in relation to some of the questions arising with regard to public use and to abandonment In this view of the law, gentlemen, what is the testimony in relation to the public use and sale of this invention more than two years prior to the application? The date of the application for this patent is April 11, 1860. About that, there is no controversy. The question, then, under the first branch of de-fence, for you to consider, is, whether this invention was in public use or on sale with the knowledge and consent of the inventor prior to April 11, 1858. Such public use, within the statute applicable to this branch of the defence, may be by the inventor himself, of one machine, or by any other person, with his knowledge and consent or approval. I do not instruct you, as matter of law, that such public use or sale of one machine would necessarily involve it; but I say the jury are authorized, if they find one machine to have been in public use or on sale, with the knowledge and consent of the inventor, more than two years prior to his application for a patent, to find that sufficient to make the patent void. This is distinguishable from the “public and common use,” which I shall have occasion to refer to hereafter, and which makes a patent void if it continues for more than six months before the patent is applied for in this country after the inventor has taken out one in England. That “public and common use” is a different use from the “public use” referred to in the sixth section of the statute of 1839.

It is not my purpose or intention, gentlemen, to recapitulate to you the testimony in this case, but only to call your attention to enough of the evidence, on either side, to enable you to understand the application to that testimony of the principles of law which I shall state to you. The Flanders and Marden patent of Aug. 29, 1854, was obtained for the rotating knife, which, has been explained to you and exhibited in the drawings and models. Under that patent, which passed through successive mesne conveyances into the possession of a corporation bearing the name of the American Leather-Splitting Company, to the titles of which the present plaintiff corporation is the successor, the first [650]*650machine which was constructed by the inventor, Flanders, originally contained only the application of this rotating knife to an old machine which was then in existence; and this first machine, as he constructed it, ..contained apparently no new device except that of the rotating knife; but before he conveyed his interest in this patent and in the machine, which was then in the process of manufacture and perfection, to his sub-owners, and before they conveyed to the American Leather-Splitting Company, the device of the sectional rollers and the rubber roller, according to the testimony as I understand it, and as I understand it to be un-contradicted, was inserted in the machine which passed to them; and if I understand the testimony rightly, the American Leather-Splitting Company never made, never sold, never put on sale or exhibition, or had manufactured, any machine that did not contain this device of the sectional rollers and the yielding elastic rubber roller upon which they rested.

With tb.e exception of the first machine which went into Sibley’s shop, in Hawley street, and which was never sold to the public, but was only being manufactured for the pur-pose of experiment, some time in the year 1855, I have failed to see any evidence in this case (you will judge, gentlemen)'that any machine was ever made by Flanders, by his grantees, or by anybody under that patent, or was ever put upon sale or upon exhibition, which did not contain the device of the sectional rollers and the rubber roller, substantially as set forth in the subsequent patent of Aug. 14, 1860; that is to say, according to the testimony of witnesses examined on the respective sides, the device of the sectional rollers, resting upon this rubber roller which had a fixed axis of revolution so as to embody the principle of adapting the under surface upon which the leather rested to the inequalities of the thickness of the leather to be split, so that, however unequal the under surface might be, the upper surface should always be in a line parallel with the gauge-roller above it, so that the knife should cut from the leather a slice or layer or stratum, which should be of uniform thickness.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Technology Licensing Corporation
423 F.3d 1286 (Federal Circuit, 2005)
Downs v. Andrews
25 F.2d 218 (D.C. Circuit, 1928)
Electric Hammer Corp. v. Deddens
267 S.W. 207 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F. Cas. 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-hide-leather-splitting-dressing-mach-co-v-american-tool-circtdma-1870.