Buchanan v. Howland

4 F. Cas. 529, 5 Blatchf. 151, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 341, 1863 U.S. App. LEXIS 445

This text of 4 F. Cas. 529 (Buchanan v. Howland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buchanan v. Howland, 4 F. Cas. 529, 5 Blatchf. 151, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 341, 1863 U.S. App. LEXIS 445 (circtndny 1863).

Opinion

HALL, District Judge.

It was conceded, at the hearing, that there had been no trial at law, in which the validity of the patent under which the plaintiff proceeds, had been established; and, also, that no preliminary injunction had been granted, or even applied for, in this suit It was, therefore, insisted, on behalf of the defendants, that no relief could be granted to the plaintiff; that the issues upon which the validity of the patent depends are triable only at law; and that because the plaintiff had not applied for the trial at law, of proper issues to determine the validity of his patent and its infringement, this court should now dismiss his bill, with costs. In support of these positions, the counsel cited Curt. Pat. §§ 314, 315, and note 1; Id. §§ 328, 336, and note 1; and Bacon v. Jones, 4 Mylne & C. 433. These sections of Mr. Curtis’ valuable work, so far as they relate to the question now under consideration, are based mainly upon the ease of Bacon v. Jones, and must, therefore, be considered in connection with the full report of that case. By that report, it appears, that the lord chancellor, after speaking of applications for injunctions before the final hearing, said: “When the cause comes to a hearing, the court has also a large latitude left to it; and I am far from saying that a cause may not arise, in which, even at that stage, the court will be of opinion that the injunction may properly be granted, without having recourse to a trial at law. The conduct and dealing of the parties, the frame of the pleadings, the nature of the patent right, [532]*532and of the evidence by which it is established, these and other circumstances may combine to produce such a result; although this is certainly not very likely to happen, and I am not aware of any case in which it has happened. Nevertheless, it is a course unquestionably competent to the court, provided a case be presented which satisfies the mind of the judge, that such a course, if adopted, will do justice between the parties.” In the report of the same case before the master of the rolls, (the report in Mylne & O. is of the hearing and decision before the lord chancellor, on appeal,) the master of the rolls is reported to have said (1 Beav. 3S7): “I think that, if a plaintiff be entitled to an injunction on the merits and on the evidence produced at the hearing, he is not to be deprived of that right, because he has not moved for an injunction at a previous stage of the cause.” And see Baily v. Taylor, 1 Buss. & M. 73, 76; Isaacs v. Cooper [Case No. 7096]; Wilson v. Tindal, Webst. Pat. Cas. 730, note; Hind. Pat. 356.

It is apparent, from the reports of the case of Bacon v. Jones, and other English cases, that, even in the English courts, there is no inflexible rule- requiring a court of equity to refuse a permanent injunction, upon a final hearing, on the grounds urged in this case; and certainty the American practice has not been such as to sustain the positions of the defendants’ counsel. The case of Goodyear v. Day [Case No. 5,569], is a case, in many of its features, somewhat like the present; and the opinion of the court, as delivered by Mr. Justice Grier, states very briefly the practice of our courts, in respect to this question, and presents his reasons for proceeding to the final disposition of the cause without requiring the verdict of a jury — reasons which apply with much force in the present case. In the case of Goodyear v. Day, above referred to, Mr. Justice Grier, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “It is true that, in England, the chancellor will generally not grant a final and perpetual injunction in patent cases, when the answer denies the validity of the patent, without sending the parties to law to have that question decided. But, even there, the rule is not absolute or universal. It is a practice founded more on convenience than necessity. It always rests on the sound discretion of the court. A trial at law is ordered by a chancellor to inform his conscience; not because either party may demand it as a right, or that a court of equity is incompetent to judge of questions of fact or of legal titles. In the'courts of the United States, the practice is by no means so general as in England, or as it would be here, if the trouble of trying issues at law devolved upon a different court. Oases involving inquiries into the most complex and difficult questions of mechanics and philosophy are becoming numerous in the courts. Often questions of originality and infringement of patents do not depend so much on the credibility of witnesses or the weight of oral testimony, as on the application of principles of science and law to admitted facts. It is true that, in matters of opinion, both mechanics and learned professors will differ widely. But still, the question is not to be decided by the number, credibility, or respectability of such witnesses, but by the force and weight of the reasons given for their respective opinions. It is no reflection on trial by jury to say, that cases frequently occur, in which ten out of twelve jurors do not understand the principles of science, mathematics, or philosophy, necessary to a correct judgment of the case. Besides, much of the time of courts is lost, where twelve men will not agree upon a verdict, or where, when they have agreed, the conscience of the chancellor, instead of feeling enlightened, rejects it altogether. A select or special jury of philosophers, if they could be got, would, perhaps, not prove more satisfactory, or obviate the difficulty. In a late case, involving the validity of Morse’s telegraph patents, which was heard in Philadelphia, a final injunction was decreed without a verdict to establish the patents; and many other cases might be cited from other circuits, if necessary, in support of the practice, showing that the courts of the United States do not always consider it a proper exercise of their discretion, to order such issues to be tried at law, before granting a final injunction. In the present case, there are many reasons why the court will not thus exercise their discretion: 1st. Because this case has been set down for final hearing, on the exhibits and proofs, without any motion or order of the court for such an issue; 2d. After a patient hearing of very able counsel, and a careful consideration of the testimony, the court feel no doubt or difficulty on these questions, which would be removed or confirmed by a verdict; 3d. It would require three or four weeks, at least, to try this case before a jury, if this library of testimony were read to them, and at least as many months, if the witnesses were examined viva voce, as they probably would be; and. after all this expenditure of time and labor, it is even more than probable that, from the confusion created by the great length of the testimony and argument in court, or the force and effect of those urged from without, no verdict would be obtained, and most certainly none that would alter the present conviction of the court.” The answer of the defendants, in Goodyear v. Day, not only denied the allegations of the bill, but concluded by praying “a trial by jury of the various issues of fact formed by it” The defendant did not, however, make any special motion for the trial of such issues by a jury; and this, it has been seen, was considered by the court as a prominent ground for proceeding to the final determination of the cause without a trial at law. In this case, no prayer for a [533]*533trial by a jury is to be found in the answer, and no special motion for such trial has been made.

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4 F. Cas. 529, 5 Blatchf. 151, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 341, 1863 U.S. App. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buchanan-v-howland-circtndny-1863.