Attorney General ex rel. Hecker v. Rumford Chemical Works

32 F. 608
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 32 F. 608 (Attorney General ex rel. Hecker v. Rumford Chemical Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attorney General ex rel. Hecker v. Rumford Chemical Works, 32 F. 608 (circtdri 1876).

Opinion

Shepley, J.

The information in this case is by “George H. Williams, as he is attorney general of the United States of America,” at the relation ox George V. Hecker, of the city of New York, against the Rumford Chemical Works, a corporation duly organized under the laws of the state of Rhode Island, and a citizen of said state, and domiciled therein, and against George F. Wilson, a citizen of the state of Rhode Island, as president of said corporation, and its general manager.

The information showeth that letters patent of the United States were on the twenty-second day of April, 1856, granted to Ebon N. ilorsford for a new and improved preparation or substance being a substitute for a pulverulent acid for use in the manufacture of dry powders and other similar powders when a dry acid is required; that thereafter the letters patent became vusted in the Rumford Chemical Works, as assignee of Ilorsford. Two surrenders and reissues of the patent are then set out in the information, the first reissue being dated May 7, 1867, and numbered 2,597, and the second, J une 9, 18(58, and numbered 2,979. The reissue 2,979 is alleged to have been wrongfully and fraudulently obtained, and to be null and void by reason of claiming that which is not described in the original letters patent of Ilorsford, and 'that which was not the invention of Ilorsford as described in his original patent. The third claim of tho reissued patent is alleged to be void, not only as claiming an invention not described in the original patent, and not the invention of Horsford at the date thereof, but for want of any such description in either the original or reissued letters patent of the invention therein claimed, in such full, clear, and exact terms as to comply in that respect with the requirements of law. The fourth claim is alleged to be void also, because the subject-matter thereof is not described in the original patent, and because the subject-matter of the claim is not described with sufficient accuracy to enable a. person skilled in tho art most nearly allied thereto to successfully make and use the same.

Tho information further shows that on the seventeenth of June, 1868, tho Rumford Chemical Works filed a bill in equity in the circuit court of the United States for the Southern district of New York, against one John E. Eauer, alleging infringement of letters patent No. 2,979; that Lauer was an employe of the relator, George V. Hecker, and his partner, John Hooker; that the alleged acts of infringement were done in the course of said employment, and the defense of the suit was assumed by the Hookers; that, after a full hearing before his honor, Judge Blatchford, one of the judges of said court, it was adjudged and decreed that the first and second claims of said patent were void for want of novelty; that on or about the thirteenth day of [616]*616September, 1869,. the Rumford Chemical Works,filed another hill in equity, in the same court, against the Heckers, alleging infringement of said letters patent No. 2,979; and that thereupon, and after the decree ip the suit in equity against Lauer, upon the application of the complainant, the cause against Lauer was reopened and further, proofs were taken in the cause. Proofs were also taken in the cause against the Heckers, and, by stipulation of the parties, the testimony taken in the Lauer Case was used in the Hecker Case, and, after a full hearing, it was adjudged and decreed in both cases that the first, second, and third claims of reissued patent No. 2,979 were void for want of novelty, and that the defendant George V. Hecker had infringed the fourth claim of said letters patent.

An allegation is then made that the question of the validity of the fourth claim was not argued or'heard in that trial, and that it is invalid for the reasons before stated; that the cause was referred to a master to take account of profits made by the defendants in infringement of the fourth claim, and it does not appear that such accounting has been completed, or any final-decree made in the cause. The information sets out the grounds upon which the court adjudged and decreed the first, second, and third claims of the patent to be void for want of novelty, and also the grounds upon which it is now' alleged that the first, second, third, and fourth claims of the reissued patent aré void for want of novelty or patentability; and that, before the expiration of the original term for which letters patent were granted, the same were extended for the term of seven years, and the extended term was duly assigned to the Rumford Chemical Works. The information proceeds to give the requisite notice of prior publications relied upon to prove that I-Iorsford was not the original and first inventor of the inventions described and claimed in the several claims of the patent.

Allegation is then made that, since the filing of the bills against Lauer and Hecker, the Rumford Chemical Works have instituted a large number of suits, in different circuits, against persons charged with infringing reissue No. 2,979, which alleged infringements consist, in some cases, in the-resale of packages of flour prepared and sold to them by Hecker, for which preparation and sale the Heckers, and Lauer, their employe, were sued in the aforementioned suits; that, all such suits being against customers of the said Heckers, they are obliged to assume the defense, and that thereby they are subjected to great vexation and expense, inasmuch as in those suits the complainant endeavors to maintain the validity of all the claims of the patent. The information further alleges that the Rumford Chemical Works has instituted a suit in equity against George V. Hecker, in the circuit court of the United States for the district of New Jersey, for alleged infringement of reissue No. 2,979, and threatens to institute other suits against other defendants for using and selling the same flour for the making and using of which the Heckers were sued in the Southern district of Hew York; that although the fourth claim of the patent was adjudged to be valid, yet the informant believes that the decree was unadvisedly made, and that the judgment of the court sustaining said claim cannot be revised at the private instance of the defendants therein, save by the supreme court of the United States, on appeal from the final decree, which final decree cannot be made until the completion of the accounting, and during the pendency of the accounting the decree is being used for harassing and vexatious litigation under said claim; that there are valid and subsisting patents, granted according to law and now owned by the Heckers, the use of the inventions secured by said patents being greatly impeded and injured by the aforesaid doings of the Rumford Chemical Works, and by the. existence of the reissued patents aforesaid. The prayer is that the reissufid patent Ho. 2,979 should be declared void, and be 'canceled and annulled, and that the Rumford Chemical Works be enjoined from prosecuting any suit at law or in equity for alleged infringements of the [617]*617same. The bill is signed by George H. Williams, attorney general of the United States, by John A. Gardner, attorney of the United States in and for the district of Rhode Island. A motion was made and filed to set aside the service of the subpoena, and take the information from the files. The evidence offered under this motion was ordered to be filed and made a part of the record in the cause.

Inasmuch as the principal questions presented on the hearing of the motion are raised by the demurrer, the court decided to hear the parties oil the bill and demurrer, and further consideration of the motion is unnecessary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 F. 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-general-ex-rel-hecker-v-rumford-chemical-works-circtdri-1876.