Anilin v. Hamilton Manuf'g Co.

2 F. Cas. 346, 3 Ban. & A. 235, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1606
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedFebruary 4, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 2 F. Cas. 346 (Anilin v. Hamilton Manuf'g 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
Anilin v. Hamilton Manuf'g Co., 2 F. Cas. 346, 3 Ban. & A. 235, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1606 (circtdma 1878).

Opinion

SHEPLEY, Circuit Judge.

An objection is raised to the validity of the reissued letters patent, under which complainants claim that the original patent was taken out in England by Graebe and Liebermann, on the 16th of June, 1869, and was suffered to expire, by reason of the omission to pay the annual fees upon it, on the 18th of December, 1871, after the reissue of the American patent for the same invention, dated April 4th, 1871. It is contended that the patent in controversy was. issued under the act of July 8th, 1870, [16-Stat. 198,] and that as the 25th section of that act provided that an American patent “shall expire at the same time with the foreign patent” which has been obtained previous to the American patent, the reissue of the American patent expired on the 18th of December, 1871, when the English patent expired.

The act of March 3d, 1839, [5 Stat. 353, c. 88,] provided that, in all cases where a patent shall be granted after the same invention shall have been patented in a foreign country, “such patent shall be limited to the term of fourteen years from the date or publication of such foreign letters patent.” The act of March 2d, 1861, [12 Stat. 246,] provides “that all patents hereafter granted shall remain in force for the term of seventeen years from the date of issue,” and repeals all acts and parts of acts before passed, inconsistent with the provisions of the act of 1861. The act of 1870, § 25, provides that in case of a [347]*347prior foreign patent, the United States patent “shall expire at the same time with the foreign patent, or, if there be more than one, at the same time with the one having the shortest term.”

The law of July 8th, 1870, (Rev. St. § 4887,) was not retroactive, and did not operate to put an end to American patents granted before the law took effect The original patent in this case was dated October 5th, 1869, before the passage of the act of 1870. Without a breach of good faith to the patentee, who had complied with the provisions of previous acts by disclosing his invention and paying the required fees, congress could not take away any portion of the term of the patent, or any right to a reissue which existed under the laws in force when the patent was granted, and which formed a part of the contract between the parties. Nor is any such intention to be gathered from the words of the statute. The act of 1870 has not, in the practice of the patent office, been acted upon as retroactive. Apperly v. Clissold, Com. Dec. 1870, p. 164. This long-continued usage and practice of one of the departments of the government is entitled to be considered by courts with great respect. The act of 1870, while repealing prior acts, contains a proviso saving all rights existing and all remedies which have arisen under any of said laws, and § 5,597 of the Revised Statutes contains a similar provision. The patent of Graebe and Liebermann, assigned to the complainants, did not, therefore, expire when the English patent became void by the omission to pay the annual fees.

The subject of the patent is a new and useful composition of matter, being an improvement in dyes or coloring matter pro: duced from anthracene, and styled in the reissue as “artificial alizarine.” Before the invention of Graebe and Liebermann the word “alizarine,” a word coined from the Arabic and modem Greek names for madder, was commercially applied to a class embracing different varieties of dye-stuffs obtained from the madder plant. These dye-stuffs owed their value not only to a crystallized compound, which can be obtained from the madder and some other plants, known as “aliza-rine,” but also to other materials existing naturally in the madder, or produced by the action of fermentation, heat, and the like, and by the aid of chemicals. The term “aliza-rine” was also applied by chemists to a theoretically pure crystallized extract from madder, whose formula was 0hH8O4. These madder extracts were among the most valuable dye-stuffs known to the world, and to supply the great and constantly increased demand for them large tracts of land were devoted to the raising of madder.

In 1868, Graebe and Liebermann, by a new process invented by them, produced their new composition of matter, now, for want of a name more accurately descriptive, called “artificial alizarine,” a product unknown to both science and the arts at the date of their invention. Coal-tar (a substance containing a large number of the compounds caused by the various reactions which take place when coal is subjected in close vessels to intense heat), when submitted to a second distillation, yields at a very high temperature, as one of its products, anthracene, which, when purified, is a white, waxy substance. From this body named “anthracene,” Graebe and Liebermann, by the series of chemical treatments described in the specifications, built up a beautiful and complex product, an artificial dye-stuff, now known as “artificial aliza-rine.” This was not a chemically pure aliza-rine. Their process stopped far short of the elimination, from the product, of the bodies other than chemically pure alizarine. In fact, the presence of some of the other bodies appears to much enhance the value of the dyestuff produced by their process. This product was one entirely new. The process by which they produced it was entirely new. Anthrapurpurine, isopurpurine, and other bodies, combined with alizarine in their product, are not known to have existed before they were produced by Graebe and Lieber-mann.

This composition of matter, which to a great degree has taken the place of madder preparations in the arts of dyeing and calico-printing, was new as to its origin. It was a purely artificial production, built up, as well as described by Professors Morton, Hed-rick, and Ordway, by a process of chemical synthesis, from materials none of which contained it, or anything approaching to it, in character or properties. Its composition was new. It contained, combined with alizarine, other bodies of themselves effective dyeing agents before unknown, and existing for the first time when produced by Graebe and Lie-bermann. It was new not only in some of its new chemical properties, but in its capacity to produce, in dyeing and calico-printing, tints which cannot be obtained with the preparations of madder or any other dyestuffs previously known.

Objection is made to the validity of the reissued patent upon which this bill is brought. Graebe and Liebermann, on the 5th of October, 1869, obtained letters patent of the United States, No. 95,465, in which, after describing their process in the words contained in the reissue, they made the following claim: “The within-described process for the production of alizarine, by first preparing bibromanthrakinon or bicloran-thrakinon, and then converting these substances into alizarine, substantially as above set forth.” This patent was subsequently reissued in two divisions, one for the process and one for the product. In division B, upon which this suit is brought, they claim: “Artificial alizarine produced from anthra-cene or its derivatives by either of the methods herein described, or by any other method which will produce a like result.”

[For other suits involving the same patent, see Badische Anilin & Soda Fabrik v. Cochrane, Case No. 719; Cochrane v. Badische Anilin & Soda Fabrik, 111 U. S. 293, 4 Sup. Ct. 457; Badische Anilin & Soda Fabrik v. Cummins, Case No. 720; Same v. Higgins, Id. 722.]

The right to reissue in two divisions, one for the new process and one for the new product, is fully sustained by the opinion of Mr.

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Cochrane v. Badische Anilin & Soda Fabrik
111 U.S. 293 (Supreme Court, 1884)

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Bluebook (online)
2 F. Cas. 346, 3 Ban. & A. 235, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anilin-v-hamilton-manufg-co-circtdma-1878.