Clark Patent Steam & Fire Regulator Co. v. Copeland

5 F. Cas. 987, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 221
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 F. Cas. 987 (Clark Patent Steam & Fire Regulator Co. v. Copeland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark Patent Steam & Fire Regulator Co. v. Copeland, 5 F. Cas. 987, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 221 (circtsdny 1862).

Opinion

SHIPMAN, District Judge,

charged the jury as follows:

The plaintiffs are the owners of what is termed, in the present controversy, the “Timothy Clark” patent.

The alleged invention secured by the patent was made, according to the testimony of the inventor, in the spring of 1S47. The original patent was issued in August of the same year. Owing to some defect or obscurity in the original specification, a very common circumstance, the patent was surrendered, a new specification filed, and the patent reissued. The patent was afterward extended, by the commissioner of patents, for a further term of years.

This suit is brought on the reissued patent; and, although the plaintiffs seek to recover for an infringement, it has been wisely agreed between the parties, that if the jury find a verdict for the plaintiffs, they may find nominal damages only.

The main object of the controversy is to settle the validity of the patent, as it generally is in patent suits, damages being of minor importance. It is always wise, where it can be done, without too great a sacrifice, to relieve the controversy of the embarrassment which often arises in attempting to fix the amount of damages, where the rules to be applied are not very clear, or easy of application. The jury, in this case, then, are relieved from all perplexity on that subject, and, if they find for the plaintiffs, should assess the damages at six cents.

But the important question for the jury to determine is, is this Timothy Clark patent valid?

Congress has wisely provided by law that inventors shall exclusively enjoy, for a limited season, the fruits of their inventions. To enable them thus to reap the benefits of their inventions, letters patent are issued to them, conferring upon them an exclusive grant, authorizing them alone to manufacture, sell, or practice what they have invented.

Upon such letters patent' or grant the present suit is brought.

In order to sustain the suit, the grant must be valid. In other words, the invention described in it must be new and useful, for it is to new and useful inventions alone that the law applies.

A small degree of utility is sufficient to support a patent; and, in the present case, the defendant frankly admits that the patent is useful in some degree, and, therefore, is valid, so far as that question is concerned.

This leaves but two questions for you to dispose of: 1. Was the invention new? 2. Has the defendant infringed? If you find the first question in favor of the plaintiffs, you will, I apprehend, have no difficulty in coming to a correct conclusion on the second; and I shall follow the course pursued by both counsel, and confine my remarks to what I deem the only question which will require much of your attention.

Was the invention described in the plaintiffs’ patent new at the time Clark says he invented it — in the spring of 1847?

In order to start correctly on this inquiry, let us first see clearly what is the precise invention described in the plaintiffs’ patent; what, in other words, is the true construction of the plaintiffs’ patent.

It is the duty of the court to determine this construction.

I charge you, then, gentlemen, that the invention described in the patent is a mechanism, so organized and connected to the boiler of a steam engine or steam generator, that, when properly set to a given pressure in the boiler or generator, it will, automatically and promptly, by force of the pressure in the boiler or generator, open and close the damper, as the pressure in the boiler or generator rises above or falls below the figure at which the mechanism is set.

The practical object of this organized mechanism, in its application to a steam engine, is to regulate and control the steam by uniformly maintaining the pressure at which the steam shall work the engine, at any given power the engineer chooses to fix, [989]*989•within the range of his engine, and thus to release the hand and mind of the engineer from the performance of that duty.

This is the invention which the inventor describes in his patent. His patent is prima facie evidence that this invention is new, or, in other words, that he is the first and original inventor of it. The defendant insists that, notwithstanding the patent, the invention is not new. He says that substantially the same organized mechanism existed, and was well known, before Clark’s invention, and that it Is to be found in the — 1. Float regulator. 2. Piston regulator. 3. Brunton’s operative thermometer.

As to the float regulator, it is not claimed that it is adapted to high pressure engines, and it is for the jury to say whether they find, in any description of this float regulator before them, the invention of this patentee. That the float regulator was described in books before the invention of Clark was made, of course, there is no doubt. That its description was well known to inventors and engineers for years before the invention of Clark, is equally true. But, in order to affect the validity of Clark’s patent, the jury must find, from the evidence, that the description of this float regulator embodies substantially the same organized mechanism, operating substantially in the same manner as that described in Clark’s patent.

As to the piston regulator — this is older than Clark’s, but the same inquiry arises, and is to be disposed of by the jury: Does this piston regulator embody substantially the same organized mechanism, operating substantially in the same manner as Clark’s?

In regard to both the float and piston regulators, the plaintiffs say that it may well be asked, why neither of these old contrivances were in any considerable use, at the time of Clark’s invention, and why they have not been since, if they were substantially the same as his.

They claim to have proved that Clark’s contrivance possesses great beauty and utility; that it performs, with ease and precision, what engineers were desirous of having performed by some mechanism that would dispense with their constant attention; and they insist, that if either the float or piston regulator was substantially like Clark’s, it would have possessed substantially the same beauty and utility, and would have come into use. Of the force of this claim • of the plaintiffs, when tried by the clear light of the evidence before them, the jury are to judge. If the jury do not find that either the piston or float regulator, as presented to them by the evidence, embodies the invention of Clark, as I have defined that invention, then they will inquire, if the description of Brunton’s machine, contained in the printed specification of Brunton. sets forth substantially Clark’s organized mechanism, as an organized mechanism, operating in substantially the same way? There has been a question raised as to the construction of one portion of Brunton’s patent, and as the construction of printed or written instruments is a duty which the law devolves on the court, I will determine its construction upon that point.

The question is, whether the “Brunton’s Operative Thermometer,” as he terms it, is described as to be operated by liquids merely, or by fluids, when understood in the broad sense, as including both liquids and elastic vapors, such as steam and gases?

Brunton’s patent speaks of his machine as having the elastic vessel expanded by fluids, and if the term fluids, as he used it, is ■ to be understood as embracing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 987, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-patent-steam-fire-regulator-co-v-copeland-circtsdny-1862.