Atkinson v. Boardman

2 F. Cas. 97, 1 MacA. Pat. Cas. 80
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 F. Cas. 97 (Atkinson v. Boardman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atkinson v. Boardman, 2 F. Cas. 97, 1 MacA. Pat. Cas. 80 (D.C. 1847).

Opinion

Cranch, J.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Commissioner of Patents in a case of conflicting applications for certain improvements in the construction of steam-pumps.

It appears by the files in the Patent Office that on the 4th of December, 1843, William Boardman, Jr., filed his application for his invention 11 of a new and improved portable steam-pumping engine for relieving stranded vessels, and for other purposes;” which application was rejected by the then Commissioner of Patents on the 20th of February, 1844. It does not appear upon what grounds that application was rejected, but it is suggested that the matter as then presented was not patentable, but that certain improvements have been since invented and made by which the matter has become patentable; and the Commissioner has decided that the applicant — William Boardman, Jr. — is entitled'to a patent. It is unnecessary to ascertain what those improvements were, as this is a case of conflicting applications for a patent for the same thing. The question is not, now, who invented the matter upon which the first application of Mr. Board-man was founded, but who is the inventor of the improvements which have made the matter patentable. That such improvements have been made, is admitted by both parties and by the Commissioner.

I do not find any evidence that Mr. Atkinson, after the rejection of Mr. Boardman’s first application on the 20th of February, 1.844, invented any patentable improvement upon the pump. It appears by all the evidence that Mr. Boardman constructed the pump and all the improvements. In the absence of all evidence to the contrary, the presumption, therefore, is that he was also the inventor ; and the burden of proof is thrown upon Mr. Atkinson to show, not merely that he first suggested to Mr. Boardman the abstract idea of a steam-pump — (for steam-pumps had been in common use for many years) — but that he invented the improvements which entitled it to a patent. To rebut this inference Mr. Atkinson produces the deposition of Josiah L. Hale, who says: “ Not long after the loss of the ship ‘Sheffield,’ in November or December, 1843, I met Mr. Atkinson and Mr. Boardman in the Merchants’ Exchange; and knowing that some alienation of feel[82]*82ing existed between them, and being anxious that they should be friends, I said to Mr. Boardman, ‘Why don’t you and Mr. Atkinson settle your difficulties, ’ or words equivalent. He (Boardman) made a reply having reference to a little paragraph which had about that time appeared in one of the papers respecting the pump in question, — meaning, no doubt, the paragraph which appeared in the Journal oj Commerce of the 25th of November, 1843, which gave to Mr. Atkinson the whole credit of the invention of the pump. He (Boardman) spoke with some warmth, but respectfully. The deponent replied, I had always supposed Mr. Atkinson was the inventor; he (Boardman) said he was, I again say he was; he (Boardman) used these words or words equally strong. I (deponent) replied, “so I always supposed.” After those strong expressions, Mr. Boardman said that it was the combination which made the steam-pump. Always supposing that Mr. Atkinson was the inventor, I feel certain I could never have conveyed any other idea to any person that he was not the inventor.”

Taking the whole testimony of Mr. Josiah L. Hale together, it seems strange that Mr. Boardman, while expressing indignation at the paragraph which gave to Mr. Atkinson the whole credit for the invention of the pump, should have admitted that he was the inventor in the technical sense of the word. He might have admitted that Mr. Atkinson suggested the idea of having a steam-pump, as testified by Mr. Flanders, and yet he (Boardman) might be the inventor of the peculiar combination of mechanical principles which entitled it to a patent. Mr. Hale says that Mr. Boardman told him “that it was the combination which made the steam-pump.” There is no evidence that that combination was suggested to him by Mr. Atkinson.

I do not perceive in the testimony any further evidence in support of Mr. Atkinson’s claim to be the inventor of any of the patentable improvements in the portable steam-pump.

I have not considered the declarations of the parties in their own favor in the absence of each other as competent evidence in this cause for any purpose but to ascertain when and what they have respectively claimed to have invented.

There is no evidence that Mr. Boardman was in the employment and pay of Mr. Atkinson at the time of the supposed inven[83]*83tion, or at the time of the construction of the improvements which rendered it a patentable invention, or at any previous time. On the contrary, it appears in the testimony of Mr. Carmen that before the first application for a patent in December, 1843, Mr. Boardman built four of these pumps for the Board of Underwriters, who paid him for the construction thereof, and that this was done without the interference or agency, but with the knowledge, of Mr. Boardman.

There does not appear to be any evidence that Mr. Atkinson, either before or after the rejection of Mr. Boardman’s application for a patent for the pump, gave Mr. Boardman any instructions in relation to the particular combination of mechanical principles which is understood to be the ground of his present application for a patent, nor any model or drawings by which to construct the pump; nor does there appear to be any evidence that he paid Boardman or any other person for constructing it, or that the underwriters had any authority from Mr. Atkinson to use those pumps which had been built for them by Mr. Boardman.

The deposition of Mr. Josiah L. Hale was taken in New York ten days after Mr. Boardman’s (Sr.) deposition had been taken in Nashville, N. H., and may have been taken with a view to rebut it. Mr. Boardman testified that between the spring of 1841 and the fall of 1842 Mr. Atkinson told him that William (his son) had invented a steam-pump at his (Atkinson’s) request, and that he had requested him to give his attention to getting up a steam-pump — a portable pump to be used about wrecked vessels. That Atkinson asked him if he' had seen the model of the pump invented by William. He and this witness replied that it was shown to him .by Carmen. That in none of the conversations, which he had with Mr. Atkinson did he ever pretend or intimate that he was the inventor of the pump or of any part of it; but, on the contrary, had always stated that William (his sori) was the inventor. That in September, 1842, Mr. Hale, speaking of William Boardman, Jr., said he had recently invented a steam-pump which they thought highly of, and he should use his influence to have the insurance company adopt it and to have one built, and that he intended William should make money out of it.

Mrs. Boardman, mother of the appellee, says that in the summer of 1842 Mr. Atkinson, speaking of her son William, told her [84]*84that he had been inventing a new pump — a steam-pump — to raise ships' from the ocean; that he thought William would do something' great with it; that he would assist him; that in the next season Mr. Atkinson was again at their house in Nashville. He said William was getting along finely with his pump, and expressed his opinion that it would be very valuable to him; that in neither of those conversations did Mr. Atkinson intimate that he had invented any part of the said pump ; that he expressed himself as grateful for favors he had received from her husband, and was glad to have some opportunities to make a return by assisting her son.

Mr. Jeremiah J.

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Bluebook (online)
2 F. Cas. 97, 1 MacA. Pat. Cas. 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkinson-v-boardman-dc-1847.