Béné v. Jeantet

129 U.S. 683, 9 S. Ct. 428, 32 L. Ed. 803, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1719
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 5, 1889
Docket167
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 129 U.S. 683 (Béné v. Jeantet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Béné v. Jeantet, 129 U.S. 683, 9 S. Ct. 428, 32 L. Ed. 803, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1719 (1889).

Opinion

Mr. Justice EaMar

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in equity, brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District óf New York, by John Béné and Adolph Griinberg against Emile Jeantet, praying an injunction, accounting, and damages for an alleged infringement of reissued letters patent No. 8637, granted bo Béné, March 25. 1879, op an application filed March 4, 1879, for an improvement' in the process of refining and bleaching hair.

Counsel for complainant stated in the record that no claim *684 is made in this suit for the bleaching- of hair except so far as the bleaching ■ may result incidentally from the process of refining; and the only issue presented by the pleadings, therefore, relates to the question of infringement so far as the • process of refining hair is concerned, there being no issue raised as to the validity of the patent in any respect.

• The nature and object of the invention are set forth in the specification as follows:

“This invention relates to the treatment of all kinds of coarse hair, which, in its natural state, has little commercial value, and is entirely unfit for toilet uses and purposes. The said treatment serves, mainly, to refine the hair or reduce the diameter of the hairs and to render them more pliable and glossy; but it also serves to.partially bleach the hair or lighten its color or tint and fit it to pass through any of the ordinary dyeing processes, whereby it may be given any shade or color desired or possible. In carrying out my invention, for the purpose of producing from the coarse, harsh hair- above mentioned, a soft, pliable hair of fine texture, I treat the said coarse hair to a bath composed of such chemicals or chemical substances as will dissolve away á portion of the surface of each hair, and thus reduce its diameter. I find that a solution of a chlorine salt dissolved in an excess of muriatic acid serves-my purpose as a bath for this refining treatment. .1. claim as my invention:
“ (1) The method of refining all grades of coarse hair, which •consists in subjecting it to the action of chemicals, whereby the surface of each hair is corroded or dissolved away and its diameter reduced, substantially-as set forth.
“ (2) The method- of refining coarse hair, which consists in subjecting it to the action of a hath composed of muriatic acid, in which is dissolved a chlorine salt, substantially as set -forth.
“ (3) The method of refining and bleaching all kinds and grades of coarse hair, which consists, first, .in bathing and' manipulating the same in a chemical bath, composed of" acid and a chlqrine salt; and then in a bleaching bath, composed-of. acids and bichromate of potash, substantially as and for the purpose set forth. .
*685 ■ “ (4) The method of refining and. bleaching all kinds and grades of coarse hair, which consists, first, in bathing and manipulating the same in a bath composed of acid and a chlorine .salt, which refines the hair; second, subjecting the refined hair to a bath composed of acids and bichromate of potash; and, third, subjecting the hair thus refined and-bleached to the proper shade to a fixing bath composed of warm water, solution of muriate, of tin, bisulphate of soda and muriatic acid, which sets the color, substantially as- set forth.
• “ (5) The method of refining and treating hair, which consists in first passing it through a refining bath composed of an acid and a chlorine salt;. then, if desired or necessary, through bleaching and. fixing baths, as above described ; and, 'finally, treating the hair so refined to a bath composed of water and ammonia, to remove all of its impurities, substantially as specified.
“ (6) As a new article of commerce and manufacture, hair of fine texture produced from any grade of coarse hair, either animal or human, by the method of refining, substantially as herein described.”

The court below held that were it not for the latter part of this description the specification would fail to comply with the statute, and would be void for uncertainty. It therefore limited the patentée to his second claim, and accordingly ruléd that under this’specification “the patent is to be construed as one for a process of refining hair by treating it in a bath composed of a solution’ of chlorine s,a.lt dissolved in an excess of muriatic acid, and the claims are to be limited accordingly.”

The court further found from the evidence prod need in the case that the alleged infringement,’the sole issue presented by the'pleadings, had not been proven, and, therefore, dismissed the bill without prejudice, to the right of the complainants to bring an action at law ’ if they were so advised. An appeal from this decree brings the case here.

Under’ § 4888 Nev. Stat. the specification must describe tne invention and the manner and process of “making, constructing, compounding and using it in such full, clear, concise and exact terms as to enable-any person skilled in the art or science *686 to which it appertains . ... to make, construct, compound and use the' same.” ■ Tested by this requirement, the patent in suit cannot receive the broad construction for which complainants contend. Except as applicable to the second claim, the specification is not full and clear enough to give one skilled in chemistry such an idea of the particular kinds and character >of the chemicals, or combination of chemicals, with the relative proportions of each, as would enable him to use the invention without having to resort to experiments of his own to discover those ingredients. The broad construction claimed for this patent as a pioneer and foundation invention in the art of refining hair cannot extend the rights of the patentee beyond the compositions of matter and processes which, as stated in the patent, embody his real invention. It is true, as appears upon ■ the pleadings, that the appellant Béné was the first discoverer, of a process of refining hair, and his patent, therefore, is entitled, within the limits just indicated, to a lib,-eral construction. If, therefore, it was proved that the hair' dealt in by the defendant was refined by substantially the same chemical action as that set forth in the second claim, the fact of infringement was established, and the ¡-complainants were entitled .to the decree prayed for. -

Upon the trial no direct testimony was offered by plaintiffs to show that the articles dealt in by the defendant were treated .or refined by the patented process. The only fact upon which the'plaintiffs relied was, the correspondence of- ■ the articles proved to have been sold by defendant, in respect of smoothness, lustre" and pliability, with the hair produced according to the patented-process; which correspondence, it was contended, showed that both products, resulted-from the same method or equivalent method of preparation; and it was-farther insisted that the court was bound from that fact to conclude that refined hair, like that in question, could not be produced except by treating it in a bath composed of a solution of chlorine salt dissolved in an excess of muriatic acid, or a solution of their (chemical) equivalents. ■

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 U.S. 683, 9 S. Ct. 428, 32 L. Ed. 803, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bene-v-jeantet-scotus-1889.