Barton v. Nevada Consol. Copper Co.

71 F.2d 381, 21 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 594, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3098
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 4, 1934
DocketNo. 7127
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 71 F.2d 381 (Barton v. Nevada Consol. Copper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barton v. Nevada Consol. Copper Co., 71 F.2d 381, 21 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 594, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3098 (9th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

WILBUR, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from the order of the District Court dismissing appellant’s bill of complaint seeking an injunction against further alleged infringement and for an accounting for benefits derived from the alleged use of appellant’s process for making an “abrasive resisting metal” covered by United States letters patent No. 1,662,357 issued to appellant on March 13, 1928.

The opinion of the trial court [58 F.(2d) 646] was adopted as the findings of fact and conclusions of law required by Equity Rule 70% (28 USCA § 72-3). The facts found by the trial court are supported by the evidence, and therefore will not be disturbed on this appeal. Briefly summarizing the findings of fact, the appellee early in 1925 installed in its concentrating and smelting plant in McGill, Nev., an eleetrie furnace for the purpose of making, abrasive resistant steel-grinding balls and liners for its mills for grinding ore. Pri- or to that time these balls and liners had been made in its furnace known as a “cupola” and the results had been unsatisfactory. After the installation of the eleetrie furnace, which was a well-known equipment, Mr. Kinnear, appellee’s general manager, was anxious to develop a method of operation which would produce the desired ball mill metal as economically and as satisfactorily as possible.

Appellant was employed by appellee company on February 20, 1925, as steel metallurgist in the research department for the express purpose of operating the new eleetrie furnace and developing a method of making abrasive resistant steel balls and liners for appellee’s mills. While in part conceived prior to his employment by appellee, the process upon which appellant later received a patent was perfected during the course of his employment and solely at the expense of appellee. Appellant used this process in the performance of his duties for appellee from the time it was perfected about the middle of 1925 until after he applied for a patent on the process on August 24, 1925, and therefore there is no escape from the conclusion that the process was used in the business of the appellee with the knowledge and consent of appellant prior to the application for the patent. Prior to applying for his patent, ap- ' pellant had not advised appellee that he was working on an improved process with the idea of applying for a patent. After making Iris application for a patent on his process, appellant took up with appellee the matter of allowing him compensation for the use of the process by appellee, and, no agreement having been reached, appellant brought this suit.

The trial court dismissed appellant’s bill of complaint on the ground that appellee had a right to use the process it was using, assuming it to be the same as the patented process, without compensation therefor, under the provisions of Rev. St. § 4899 (35 USCA § 48), which reads as follows: “Every person who purchases of the inventor, or discoverer, or with his knowledge and consent constructs any newly invented or discovered machine, or other patentable article, prior to the application by the inventor or discoverer for a patent, or who sells or uses one so constructed, shall have the right to use, and vend to.others to be used, the specific thing so made or purchased, without liability therefor.”

Appellant contends that this statutory provision has no application to the ease at bar, for the reason that his patent of a process does not come within the meaning of the language “machine or other patentable article” as used in the statute. The sole authority for appellant’s position is section 208 of Walker on Patents (6th Ed.) vol. 1, p. 208, which, it is conceded, supports that contention, but the author has not cited a single ease in support of his view.

Section 4899 of the Revised Statutes, above quoted, which was section 37 of the Aet of July 8, 1870, 16 Stat. 203, was derived from an earlier statute (section 7 of the Act of March 3,1839, 5 Stat. 354) reading as follows : “And be it further enacted, That every person or corporation who has, or shall have, purchased or constructed any newly invented machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, prior to the application by the inventor or discoverer for a patent, shall be held to possess the right to use, and vend to others to be used, the specific machine, manufacture, [383]*383or composition of matter so made or purchased, without liability therefor to the inventor, or any other person interested in such invention. * * * ”

This section (section 7 of the Act of March 3, 1831), supra) was construed to embrace a patent for a “mode of casting chilled rollers and oilier metallic cylinders and cones” in the early ease of MeClurg v. Kingsland, 1 How. (42 U. S.) 202, 210, 11 L. Ed. 102., where the Supreme Court said: “Had the words ‘invention,’ or ‘thing patented,’ been used instead of machine, etc., there could have been no> room for doubt of the application of the act to the present case. * * * We, therefore, feel bound to take the words ‘newly-invented machine, manufacture, or composition of matter1 and ‘such invention,’ in the act of 1839, to mean the ‘invention patented,’ and the words ‘specific machine,’ to refer to ‘the thing as originally invented,’ whereof the right is secured by patent.”

Appellant contends that the case of McClurg v. Kingsland, supra,, is not authority for the proposition that the statute applies to a patent for a process since the patent involved in that case was not for a process. The contrary eloarly appears from an interpretation and analysis of that case contained in a later decision by the Supreme Court, Andrews v. Hovey, 124 U. S. 694,703, 8 S. Ct. 676, 677, 31 L. Ed. 557, from which we quote as follows: “The first ease in which the seventh section of the act of 1839' appears to have come under consideration in this court was that of McClurg v. Kingsland, 1 How. 202 [11 L. Ed. 103], decided in 1843. * * * The patent was for an improvement in the mode of easting chilled rollers. It was, therefore, a patent for an improvement in a process. The patentee invent ed it while he was a workman in the employ of the defendants. They put it into use in their business. He left their employment, and then applied for and obtained his patent. His assignees sued the defendants in an action at law for continuing to use the improvement. There was a verdict for the defendants, upon the ground that, by reason of their unmolested, notorious use of' the invention before the application for the patent, they had a right to continue to use it, under the provisions of the first i lause of the seventh section. The judgment for the defendants was affirmed by this, court upon that ground. It held that the defendants were on the same footing as if they had liad from the inventor a special license to use his invention, given before ho applied for his patent, and that the first clause of the seventh section extended to the invention or thing patented in that ease, although it consisted of a new mode of operating an old machine, as contradistinguished from a patent for a machine. The court distinctly held that the words ‘newly-invented machine, manufacture, or composition of matter,’ and the words ‘such, invention,’ in the first clause of the seventh section, meant the invention patented; and that the words ‘the specific machine, manufacture, or composition of matter’ meant the thing invented, the right to which was secured by the patent.”

In Andrews v. Hovey, supra, it was also contended without success that the seventh section of the act of 1839 did not apply to a patent for a process. In Wade v. Mctcalf (C. C.) 16 P.

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Bluebook (online)
71 F.2d 381, 21 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 594, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3098, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barton-v-nevada-consol-copper-co-ca9-1934.