Cahill v. Beckford

4 F. Cas. 1003

This text of 4 F. Cas. 1003 (Cahill v. Beckford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cahill v. Beckford, 4 F. Cas. 1003 (circtdma 1871).

Opinion

SHEPLEY, Circuit Judge.

The complainant, on the first of September, 1868, applied for a patent for an “Improved Bronze Dressing for Leather,” for which letters-patent issued to him dated Nov. 10, 1868 [No. 83,925]. The object of the invention was to provide a fluid which would give a reasonably durable bronze finish to leather, resembling the French metallic bronze finish. This was designed as an accessory article in the trade, to give a bronze finish to boots or shoes, or to renovate this finish when the goods had become tarnished; and also for use in families, to renovate the bronze hue, on the surface of boots and shoes, when it had become worn and unsightly before the leather itself was defaced by wear.

He describes his invention as a preparation of fuchsine with spirit varnish, and gives the formula of preparation; adding that a small quantity of aniline blue may be added to increase the brilliancy of the dressing if desired, or a small quantity of metallic bronze powder may be mixed with it, •when using it on metallic surfaces. The claim is for “a bronze dressing for leather, composed of spirit varnish and aniline fuch-sine, substantially as set forth, either with or without the addition of aniline blue or bronze powder, all as described, as a new article of manufacture.” Disregarding those defences set up in the answer in support of which no testimony has been offered, the case presents only the questions, whether the complainant was the original and first inventor of the thing patented, and, if so, whether the defendants have infringed upon his rights under the patent. It becomes necessary, to a proper elucidation of the first question, to understand the precise state of the art before the invention and manufacture of a bronze dressing prepared on a for-mulalike that described in the plaintiff’s specification. Before that time, colored varnishes were well known and in common use, produced by adding to the varnish pigments of the desired color, and bronze varnishes produced by adding to the varnish metallic bronze powders. Aniline dyes or coloring liquors were in common use. They were alcoholic or other solutions of the aniline crystals; aniline crystals being sulphates or chlorides of aniline, itself a colorless substance produced by the distillation of coal tar. By acting with oxidizing or reducing agents upon fuchsine or aniline red, which is a goldish green crystal, various shades of color and also various colors were produced, according to the degree of reduction or oxidation. These alcoholic solutions of the aniline colors had also been used, mixed with alcoholic solutions of shellac, for bronzing and for giving a goldish or greenish, and a goldish and greenish, color to straw goods and similar articles. But these mixtures had none of the requisites of a bronze varnish or dressing for leather; for the reason that, when shellac was present in quantity sufficient to make a reasonably durable dressing, the action of the shellac in the varnish destroyed or changed the color of the bronze crystal. The color of the crystal of aniline violet is bronze; and an alcoholic solution of this crystal, when applied to straw goods, left, after the evaporation of the alcohol, a bronze powder or crystal on the surface of the straw or other material to which it was applied. The same result was attained by mixing, in the proper proportions, an alcoholic solution of aniline blue with an alcoholic solution of aniline red or fuchsine. But the property which the shellac possessed of modifying the color of the aniline dyes had been an obstacle to the production of a bronze varnish. The complainant seized upon this very property which the shellac possesses of modifying the color of the aniline crystal, and by experiment discovered that the shellac varnish, which destroyed the bronze color in the bronze crystal of aniline violet, developed a bronze color from the green crystal of fuchsine or aniline red. In this preparation, not only was the desired color obtained, but a resinous coating was formed on the surface of the leather sufficiently compact to be reasonably durable. This was a new process of manufacture, and the manufactured product was new and useful; and, if the complainant was the first and original inventor or discoverer of it, he is entitled to be protected in his rights under his patent.

The defendants allege, that what was claimed as new in the complainant’s patent was in public and common use in this country before the pretended invention thereof by the complainant; and in their answer they specify the names and residences of various parties who, they allege, had known and used such a bronze dressing before the date when complainant claims to have invented his process of manufacture.

Attention will only be given to those allegations in the answer in support of which some evidence has been offered, and ivhich were relied upon by counsel at the hearing. [1004]*1004Consider Southworth, who was a manufacturer of woollen goods, and familiar with the use of aniline dyes, noticed that a sufficiently strong solution gave a bronze appearance to any article to which it was applied. He tried it upon leather, and found that a solution of aniline alone would rub off and redden any thing with which it came in contact. He then experimented in Hie use of varnish over the dye to fix the color, but found that the varnish destroyed the bronze color. After various experiments, he prepared and put into the market an article which he offered for sale under the various names of “gilt.” “metallic lustre stain,” “hat bronze,” “bonnet bronze,” and “bronze varnish.” This was sometimes a solution of aniline violet, sometimes a solution of aniline red mixed with shellac varnish, without any definite rule of quantities or proportions. The complainant mingles fuehsine with varnish, the limit to the quantity of fuehsine being the point of saturation, or the quantity which the varnish will dissolve. Southworth mixed an alcoholic solution of fuehsine with an alcoholic solution of shellac. It is not difficult to see that the result would not bé the same in the two cases. The witness Bab-cock gives the reason: “To make a bronze dressing like that described in the plaintiff's patent requires a saturated solution of fuck-sine. Now a saturated solution of fuehsine, mixed with the amount of alcohol necessary to hold shellac in solution, produces a mixture which does not contain a saturated solution of fuehsine; that is, too much alcohol, too little fuehsine and shellac.” He says further: “I do not consider it possible to mix a solution of fuehsine in alcohol with shellac varnish, and produce a good bronze dressing for leather.” This opinion of the expert is sustained by all the testimony as to the utility of the article manufactured by Southworth. He produced and sold an article, which answered the purpose of a dressing for a straw hat or bonnet, or for giving a fancy finish to the edge or shank of a boot or shoe, imparting a gilt or goldish color. The evidence clearly establishes, that it was not suitable for a dressing for leather, and that Southworth’s method will not produce a good dressing of any kind for leather, and certainly not a dressing substantially like the complainant’s patent. He appears never to have bronzed any skin, except one as an experiment, and that was destroyed. Subsequent experiments by purchasers of Southworth’s “metallic lustre or stain,” in applying it as a bronze dressing for leather, resulted in demonstrating its want of fitness for, or adaptation to. that purpose, and in driving it from the market, and substantially putting an end to its manufacture or sale for that purpose.

Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 F. Cas. 1003, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cahill-v-beckford-circtdma-1871.