Byam v. Eddy

4 F. Cas. 935, 2 Blatchf. 521
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 F. Cas. 935 (Byam v. Eddy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byam v. Eddy, 4 F. Cas. 935, 2 Blatchf. 521 (circtdvt 1853).

Opinion

PRENTISS, District Judge.

This is a motion for an attachment against the defendant, for contempt in violating the injunction granted against him on the 22d of last September, and served upon him on the next ■day. The injunction, which, it is proper to observe, was granted virtually without any hearing on the part of the defendant, though upon notice and appearance, refers to the bill, and, by the terms of reference, was intended to be co-extensive with the bill, and must be so understood. We must, therefore, .look to the bill to see the extent of the injunction, what it forbids, and consequently ivhat would be a disobedience of it.

The bill sets forth a patent to one Phillips, with the specification in full. The patent is stated to have been issued October 24th, 1836, for fourteen years; renewed and extended September 11th, 1850, for seven years from and after the expiration of the original term; and assigned to the plaintiffs September 17th, 1850. The patent purports to be for “a new and useful improvement in the manufacture of friction matches,” and grants the exclusive right of making, using and vending to be used, "the said improvement.”

The specification, after stating the invention to be “a new and useful improvement In the mode of manufacturing friction matches, for the instantaneous production of light,” and to consist in "a new composition ■of matter for producing ignition,” proceeds to say: “The composition used in preparing the matches usually called loco-foco, and which light by slight friction, is a compound of phosphorus, chlorate of potash, sulpheret of antimony, and gum-arabic or glue. That which I use consists simply of phosphorus, chalk and glue.” The specification then states the proportions of the ingredients, and the mode of preparing the composition, and, after saying that the proportions may be varied, and that the ingredients may also be varied by substituting gum-arabic or other rgum for glue, and Spanish white or other .absorbent earth or mateiial for chalk, concludes in these words: “What I claim as my invention, is the using of a paste or composition to ignite by friction, consisting of phosphorus and earthy material and a glutinous substance only, without chlorate of potash, or any highly combustible material, such as sulphuret of antimony, in addition to the phosphorus.”

From the specification, it is obvious that the right secured by the patent consists, as expressed in the granting part of the instrument, merely in an improvement in the then existing mode of making friction matches; not in a combination of new ingredients not before known and used for that purpose; nor in a combination of any new with old ingredients, unless the use of chalk, Spanish white or other absorbent earths may be considered new, which would be contrary to the fact, as appears from the testimony of William Weller, an old manufacturer of friction matches in Fort Ann, New Yorlñ This witness, after stating that all the materials, except the absorbent earth, were contained in the old lucifer matches, says that that substance, as well as the other materials, was contained in the loco-foco matches; and that, in 1835, he made matches formed of glue or gum-arabic, or2 chalk or Spanish white, combined with phosphorus and chlorate of potash, and. during the spring and summer of 1836, publicly made, used and sold matches composed of these materials, and has continued to use that composition from that time to the present.

The invention claimed in the'specification, then, is not a compound of new ingredients never before used in making matches, but simply and only a new combination of old materials before used for that purpose. It purports to consist in a composition producing ignition and combustion by friction, formed of phosphorus with the earthy materials and the glutinous substance only, without the presence of chlorate of potash, or of any other like objectionable ingredient, thus avoiding the danger supposed to exist in the combination of substances of such a nature with phosphorus. This, as I understand the specification, is the “new composition of matter,” or new combination of materials, for producing ignition, claimed and patented as an improvement; and it seems quite clear, that any person may use any one or all of the materials forming the composition, in making matches, provided he does not use them in the combination patented. Certainly, any one may lawfully use them for that purpose in combination with chlorate of potash, as they were formerly used, for that is a combination recognized as essentially different, and as being known and in use anterior to the patent.

The question, therefore, is, whether tire defendant, in manufacturing and dealing in friction matches since the service of the in[937]*937junction, as it is admitted he has done, has used the plaintiff’s improvement or combination of materials, or, in other words, made matches substantially according to their patent. I say, substantially according to their patent, for, a mere colorable difference or slight variation would not exempt the defendant from the charge of infringement. Such is the question in the case; for, as the injunction does not extend beyond what appears from the bill to be the right of the plaintiffs, unless there has been a violation of the right held by them under the patent set up in the bill, there can have been no ■disobedience of the injunction.

The plaintiffs’ composition for matches, as ■described in their patent and charged to have been used by the defendant, is a compound, admitting of variation in the proportions of the ingredients, of one ounce of phosphorus, one ounce of glue or gum-arabic, and four ounces of chalk, Spanish white or other absorbent earth.

The composition asserted by the defendant to have been used by him, and which appeal’s to have been publicly known and in use before the date of the plaintiffs’ patent, is formed of four pounds of glue, two pounds ■of phosphorus, four pounds of whiting, and three-fourths of a pound of chlorate of potash; or, somewhat varying the ingredients and proportions, of four pounds of gum-arabic, two and one-half pounds of phosphorus, four pounds of whiting and one-half of a pound ■of chlorate of potash.

The only difference, aside from the relative proportions of the ingredients, between the composition patented and that claimed to have been used by the defendant consisting, as appears from the formula thus given of each, in one being made without and the •other with chlorate of potash, the question in the case is reduced to the simple inquiry, whether the matches manufactured by the defendant contained that substance as a principal ingredient or material part, in conformity with the prescribed formula, or were made without the use of it. or with but so inconsiderable a portion of it as to be substantially according to the plaintiffs’ patent.

The defendant, in his answer to the matters charged against him on this motion, after declaring that he has never violated or infringed the plaintiffs’ patent, and that the bond executed by him to them was given through misapprehension on his part of the ■extent of their patent and of his own rights, occasioned by misrepresentation, says, that he has never at anj’ time since he commenced business, which was last spring, made a match without the use of chlorate of potash, nor out of any composition of which that substance was not a constituent part, nor ■otherwise than according to what he states to be the ingredients and their proportions in the composition used by him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 F. Cas. 935, 2 Blatchf. 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byam-v-eddy-circtdvt-1853.