Bevin v. East Hampton Bell Co.

3 F. Cas. 320, 9 Blatchf. 50, 5 Fish. Pat. Cas. 23, 1871 U.S. App. LEXIS 1520
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 19, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 F. Cas. 320 (Bevin v. East Hampton Bell Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bevin v. East Hampton Bell Co., 3 F. Cas. 320, 9 Blatchf. 50, 5 Fish. Pat. Cas. 23, 1871 U.S. App. LEXIS 1520 (circtdct 1871).

Opinion

SHIPMAN, District Judge.

This is a bill in equity, praying for an injunction and an account, and is founded upon a patent issued to the plaintiff, May 4th, 1869. The alleged invention is called, in the patent, an “improvement in metallurgie furnaces.” The device is a simple one and need not be described here. It is sufficient to say, that it required inventive thought to originate it, and that it is a useful improvement. That the plaintiff was the original and first inventor may, also, be conceded. The defense, as set up in the defendant’s answer, rests upon the following grounds: (1.) That the invention “was in public use, with the knowledge and consent of the inventor, for more than two years prior to his application for the said letters patent.” (2.) “That the plaintiff, since his application for said letters patent, and before the issuing of the same, and during the period of seven years which elapsed between said application and the obtaining i.f said letters patent, knowingly permitted his alleged invention to become public property,, and abandoned the same to the public.”

There is very little dispute between Ihe parties about the facts. In January, 1852, the plaintiff applied for a patent, and, in April of the same year, his application was rejected. From this rejection no appeal was taken, or re-examination applied for. In May next following, the plaintiff took his application, and all the papers connected with it, except one drawing, from the patent office, but no formal withdrawal appears to have been made. The papers thus withdrawn from the office were never returned. From May 28th, 1852, till April 28th, 1862, the plaintiff had no communication with the patent office,, and the only evidence which that office contained, during these ten years, of his alleged invention, was the drawing, and the entries on the file wrapper of the date of filing the petition and other papers, the rejection of the application, and the delivery of the papers, on the order of the plaintiff, to his. brother, May 2Sth, 1852.

At the time his application was rejected', in April, 1852, the office referred the plaintiff to “Wyman on Ventilation.” as containing evidence that his invention had been anticipated and antedated. The plaintiff, in his testimony, states what he subsequently did. in reference to securing a patent under this application, as follows: “I consulted Mr_ Barnes,” (his attorney through whom he had' made his application.) “Mr. Barnes said to me, that I had paid in thirty dollars in gold, that I could, if I wished to abandon it, draw back twenty dollars from the government, but his advice was to let it lie and think of it, and, perhaps, I might think it best to take it up some other time, and I might see some others, perhaps some one in Washington, who would be able to go and explain [322]*322the matter, and see more particularly about the reasons; and, in the course of two or three years, or a year or two, my brother saw Hr. Truman Smith, a member of congress. Mr. Smith said he would undertake to obtain the rejected patent, but he thought I had better make some little alterations, and, in looking at the thing, I did not see how I could, and never did make any alterations, and so it run along till 1SC2, I think it was, when I became acquainted with Munn & Co., of New York, who said they would undertake to obtain it for me and made application.” “The patent was rejected,” (the application of 1852,) “because it was supposed to be anticipated by ‘Wyman on Ventilation.’ Mr. Barnes said that he had never seen the book, and could not find it in Middletown, and thought that perhaps I might find it in Hartford or New Haven. I could not find it in Hartford, and I -went to New Haven, probably in the course of a year or two after the rejection. I consulted Professor Olmsted, of Yale College. He said, (after looking at the book,) that he did not think it ought to have been rejected on that account.” No other or further steps were taken by the plaintiff, or any one on his behalf, towards obtaining a patent for this invention, till April, 1802.

In the mean time, the plaintiff, who resided in the village of East Hampton, Connecticut, where most of the sleigh bells used in this country were, and still are, made, erected, in 1852, a furnace embodying his invention. The same year Buell & Veazy erected one, and, in 1853, another. In 1853, one was built by J. S. Hall & Co. In 1850, the defendants built theirs. In 1850, 1857 and 1800, three others were erected. All these furnaces embraced the alleged invention of the plaintiff, were situated in the village where he constantly resided, and have been openly in use down to the present time, in the same business as that in which the plaintiff has been engaged. The fact that these furnaces were all erected upon the same plan as that described in the plaintiff’s patent, and used for the same purpose, was known to him from the time each was built, down to the date of his patent, in 1869. During all this time, the plaintiff made no objection to this open and continued use of his invention by his neighbors and competitors in business, with all of whom he appears to have been on friendly terms. It is true, he gave them no express permission. The only references ever made to the subject, so far as the evidence discloses, are those testified to by the plaintiff. He says: “I don’t know that I ever objected. Mr. Abell, (of the East Hampton Bell Co.,) came to me, when they were about to build theirs, and asked me if he could see. our furnace and chimney. I told him he could, but I could give him no license to build one like it, for I had applied for a patent and might some time obtain it. About the same time, J. G. Hinckley” (who had constructed the plaintiff’s) “was about to build one for J. S. Hall & Co., and he came to see me and said he had heard something about my applying for a patent. I told him I had. and could give him no license to build one.” Hinck-ley also testifies, that he built many of the chimneys already referred to, and that he had conversations with the plaintiff about them on various occasions, but that he never-asked his permission to build any of them. This embraces the whole history of this invention and the dealings of the plaintiff and others with it down to April, 1S02, when he filed another application for a patent.

In April, 1802, the plaintiff filed the new application, paying the fee of fifteen dollars, as prescribed by the act of 1801, [12 Stat. 248, § 10,] then in force, that act requiring that sum to be paid on filing an original application. In this new application, no reference was made to that of 1852, nor to the payment of the fee required by the former act, nor to any circumstance connected with it. Indeed, the fact that any prior application had been made, seems to have been studiously ignored. This application of 1802 was filed April 2Sth, and rejected May 10th in the same year. The specification and one drawing which had been used on that application appear to have been taken from the office, and were returned by the plaintiff’s agents, Munn & Go., March 17th, 1803. No further communication with the office was had by the plaintiff, or his agents, till April 5th, 1869, when a re-examination was applied for. In regard to the course of the plaintiff after the rejection of May, 1862, he testifies as follows: “After that I went to Washington myself, and saw Mr. Smith there then. He was not a member of congress at that time. He thought it would cost considerable, and I concluded that I would think of it, and see what the prospect was of its value, and I neglected to employ him, or any one else, to make further application, until 1808, I think it was,” (it was, in fact, in March, 1809,) “when I employed Theodore G.

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29 F. 508 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1887)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 F. Cas. 320, 9 Blatchf. 50, 5 Fish. Pat. Cas. 23, 1871 U.S. App. LEXIS 1520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bevin-v-east-hampton-bell-co-circtdct-1871.