Collins Co. v. Coes
This text of 8 F. 517 (Collins Co. v. Coes) 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.
Opinion
An interlocutory decree was entered in this cause, some months since, that certain of the claims of the patent sued on, which was re-issue No. 5,294 of patent No. 50,364, granted to Lucius [518]*518'Jordan and Leander E. Smith, and by them sold and assigned to the plaintiffs, were valid, and that one of them had been infringed.
The defendants now petition for leave to open the case and file an additional answer setting up the newly-discovered fact, as they believe it to be, that Lucius Jordan, one of the patentees, was the sole inventor of the improvement. Jordan & Smith were partners in the manufacture of wrenches, and Smith advanced money for expenses at the patent-office, and they agreed tobe joint ówners of the patent; but the defendants aver that this was merely a business arrangement, and that the application should have been made by Jordan alone, accompanied by an assignment of the invention tb himself 'and Smith. The law. is so, if the facts are as they are assumed to be. Jordan’s affidavit that he was the sole inventor is filed, and other affiants testify that they have heard Jordan speak of himself as ;the inventor, and never heard Smith make any such pretension; that the talk of the shop, at the time the patent was obtained, was that Jordan made the invention. Jordan swore, on his application for the patent, that both were inventors, and he has sold the joint patent and received his share of the money. Smith is dead. The transaction is not recent. Under these circumstances, if the defendants’ .affidavits alone and uncontradicted were the evidence at a final hearing, they could hardly avail to persuade me that the invention was wholly Jordan’s. But they are met not only by proof that Jordan and Smith have repeatedly spoken of the invention as joint, but by affirmative evidence that Smith made a wrench before Jordan began ■to experiment, in which the step-plate was sustained by a set-screw at the place where the patent puts the nut. After this, the partners talked over the matter and, consulted, and the joint application was made. Upon these affidavits the defendants contend that Smith was the sole inventor, which is equally useful for their purpose. I suppose that the wrench which Smith made would be an infringement of the patent; but that does not prove that it anticipated the patent. The nut is decidedly better for the purpose of the improvement than the set-screw. If the Smith wrench had been made by a third person, and had proved to be useful, it would have limited [519]*519tiie scope of the patent; and it would have the same effect if invented by Smith himself. Bat, upon the affidavits, it was merely an experiment on the way to the completed invention, and has no effect at all.
In this stale of the case there is but this argument for opening the case: that another action is pending by the plaintiffs against different defendants, in which these matters may be investigated; and if it should turn out, upon the hearing of that case, that the patent is void, it would work a great hardship upon these defendants to be obliged to pay damages and to be enjoined, when all the rest of the world could use the invention. The plaintiff corporation meets this point by saying, in its printed brief, that it is willing to defer taking the final decree in this cause until time has been given to bring that cause to a hearing. Even without such a stipulation, I do not find that enough doubt is thrown by the affidavits upon the soundness of the original decree to require mo to open it. But, with that understanding, no possible ground is left for such action.
Leave to open the cause refused.
Buerk v. Imhauser, supra; De Florez v. Reynolds, 16 Blatchf. 408; Adair v. Thayer, 7 Fed. Rep. 920.
3 Fed. Rep. 225.
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8 F. 517, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-co-v-coes-circtdma-1881.