Cahill v. Brown

4 F. Cas. 1005, 3 Ban. & A. 580, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1636
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 9, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 F. Cas. 1005 (Cahill v. Brown) 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. Brown, 4 F. Cas. 1005, 3 Ban. & A. 580, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1636 (circtdma 1878).

Opinion

CLIEPORD, Circuit Justice.

Inventors of a new and useful composition of matter, duly secured by letters patent, are entitled to the same protection for the property as the owners of a patent for a new and useful art, machine, or manufacture are entitled to receive, and the rules and regulations in suits for infringement are the same in all material respects. Letters patent in due form were granted to the complainant for a new and improved bronze dressing, and the patentee states that the object of the invention is to provide a fluid which will give a reasonably permanent bronze color to leather; that it is more particularly designed as an accessory article in the boot and shoe trade, inasmuch as it will enable dealers to renovate their shoes or boots when the same have become shop-worn and tarnished, as is the ease when such goods have been kept on hand for a considerable time, or have been much handled. Boots, shoes or slippers of any ordinary kind, as the patentee states, may be given a brilliant and durable bronze finish; and he also states that the dressing is of important value for family use in renovating partly-worn bronze shoes, to which he adds that the invention consists of a preparation of the aniline color called fuchsine, with any spirit-varnish, as shellac, copal or other analogous gum and spirit varnishes; that a small quantity of aniline blue may be added, if desired, to increase the brilliancy of the dressing; and that he mixes a small quan-* tity of metallic bronze-powder with the fluid, when using it upon metal surfaces. Subsequent to that statement he gives his formula of preparation as follows: Aniline fuchsine-[1006]*1006about two ounces; shellac or other spirit varnish, one pint. Explanations are given as follows: that the fuehsine is mingled with the varnish by means of a pestle and mortar or other suitable means, adding that the limit to the quantity of fuehsine is the point of saturation, or the quantity the varnish will dissolve, which is about two ounces of fuehsine to one pint of varnish. When the aniline blue is added, he adds about one half ounce of blue to the above proportions, and when bronze-powder is added he uses about two ounces of the powder to one gallon of the prepared dressing, always applying the dressing with a soft brush, which, as he •states, will dry in one or two minutes. What he claims is a bronze dressing for leather as a new article of manufacture, composed of spirit-varnish and aniline fuehsine, with or without the addition of aniline blue or bronze-powder, as set forth and described. Exclusive ownership of the patent belongs to the complainant, and he charges that the respondent has infringed his exclusive right.

Service was made, and the respondent appeared and filed an answer, setting up the following principal defences: (1.) That the complainant is not the original and first inventor of the improvement. (2.) That it had been patented or described in the patent mentioned in the answer and in the printed publications, or some one of .the same, also mentioned in the amended answer. (3.) That it had been in public use or on sale in this country for more than two years prior to the complainant’s application for a patent (4.) That the respondent has never made, and does not now manufacture, bronze •dressing in accordance with the formula of preparation set forth in the specification of the complainant’s patent.

Defences not urged at the argument are omitted as unimportant in this investigation.

Beyond doubt fuehsine, which chemists sometimes call aniline red, is an article well known in the arts as a useful ingredient in ■dyeing. It is a solid crystalline substance, found in the form of grains or crystals having a brilliant emerald-green color by reflected light. Spirit-varnish is also well known in the arts and as an article of commerce, and has been for many years. Varnishes of the kind are solutions in alcohol of shellac or of other resinous substances, which, upon drying, leave a compact resinous and glossy coating. Liquid compounds of the kind have been applied to leather, but the objection to such a dressing for leather is that it makes the leather hard and causes it to crack. Efforts were made by the complainant to furnish a mixture that would give the desired coating to leather without impairing its flexibility or durability. Experiments showed Idm, that by mixing these two ingredients in proper proportions, a brilliant bronze color was developed from the green fuehsine crystal, when applied to leather, without prodir-■cing any of the bad effects resulting from the use of the ordinary varnish of the shops. Two principal ingredients, fuehsine and spirit-varnish, constitute the mixture, and the evidence shows to the satisfaction of the court that it constitutes a valuable bronze dressing suitable for leather, and that the product, as described and patented, has gone into extensive use. Inquiries were made of the complainant’s expert in respect to the nature of the improvement, and in his reply he gave it as his opinion, which seems to be well founded, that the essential feature of the invention consists in the discovery that the green color of the fuehsine may be changed to a bronze color by the use of spirit-varnish, and that the mixture when applied to boots or shoes, instead of stiffening the leather and causing it to crack, renders it more elastic and pliable by the use of the mixture. Beside the two principal ingredients referred to, the patent calls for alcohol and aniline blue, and in some contingencies for a certain quantity of ■ bronze-powder. Instead of aniline blue, the respondent uses aniline violet, but the testimony shows that the latter consists largely of fuehsine and aniline blue mechanically mixed by the manufacturer, and that it performs the same function in the mixture as the ingredient used by the complainant. Argument to show the utility of the mixture is unnecessary, as the utility of the invention is made obvious by what has already been remarked, and the court is of the opinion that the invention is well and properly described, and that all objection to the form of the patent must be overruled. When the patent is correct in form, and is introduced in evidence in a suit for infringement, it is of itself prima-facie evidence that the patentee is the original and first inventor of that which is therein described and secured as his invention. Seymour v. Osborne, II Wall. [78 U. S.] 538.

Viewed in the light of that proposition it is clear that the decision in this case must turn upon the sufficiency or insufficiency of the de-fences set up in the answer. Different theories are maintained as to the way the ingredients operate when mixed to produce the patented product, but the court is of the opinion that it is immaterial, in this investigation, whether the result is produced by mechanical or chemical action, it being shown to a demonstration that the change of color is produced by mixing the ingredients, and that the mixture, instead of stiffening the leather and causing it to crack, renders it more elastic and pliable. Cahill v. Beck-ford [Case No. 2,290].

I. Coming to the defences, the first is that the patentee was not the original and first inventor. Proofs of various kinds were introduced in support of that proposition, of which those deemed most material will be examined. (1.) Rollason’s provisional specification, which relates to a method, not satisfactorily described, of dyeing or staining woven fabrics or paper, and for coloring the [1007]*1007surface of glass previously coated with py-roxyline, by the application of a solution of the desired color to the previously prepared surface. 4 Watts’ Chem. Die. 776.

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

Related

Valvona v. D'Adamo
135 F. 544 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania, 1905)
Hanifen v. E. H. Godshalk Co.
84 F. 649 (Third Circuit, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 F. Cas. 1005, 3 Ban. & A. 580, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cahill-v-brown-circtdma-1878.