Dahlgren v. United States

16 Ct. Cl. 30
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 16 Ct. Cl. 30 (Dahlgren v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dahlgren v. United States, 16 Ct. Cl. 30 (cc 1880).

Opinion

Davis, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The statute which sends this case here lays down rules for its trial and the principles which shall govern the court in deciding it.. The act provides:

“That the claim of Madeleine Vinton Dahlgren, ás adminis-tratrix of the late Eear-Admiral John A. Dahlgren, for compensation for the adoption and use by the Government of the United States of certain inventions relating to ordnance, made by the said John A. Dahlgren, and for which letters patent of the United States, numbered thirty-two thousand nine hundred and eighty-three (32983) thirty-two thousand- nine hundred and eighty-four (32984), thirty-two thousand nine hundred and [49]*49eighty-five (32985), thirty-two thousand nine hundred and eighty-six (32986), were issued to him, be, and the same is hereby, referred to the Court of Claims, which court is hereby vested with jurisdiction in the premises, and whose duty it shall be to hear and determine:
“First, whether the said John A. Dahlgren was the first and original .inventor of the inventions described in said letters patent, or any of them; and if they shall find that he was such first and original inventor of any-of the same, then to determine,
Secondly, what amount of compensation, if any, his estate is justly entitled to receive from the United States for the use of his said inventions, or any of them, either before or since the date of said letters patent, up to the time of adjudication, and for a full and entire transfer of said several patents to the United States; and in determining the right of said estate to recover the amount of compensation to be paid said estate for the use of said inventions and the transfer of said patents, the court shall take into consideration the facts, if proven, that, while the said John A. Dahlgren was engaged in perfecting the inventions he was in the service of the United States as an officer in the Navy, and that the expense of making experiments, trials, and tests for the purpose of perfecting such inventions was paid by the United States: Provided, That in no event shall such Court of Claims allow for the use and transfer of said patents, on the basis aforesaid, a sum exceeding sixty-five thousand dollars ($65,000); but said sum shall not be diminished pro rata in case the claimant fails to establish the novelty, use, or value of any of said patents.
Either party may appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States upon any such question where appeals now lie in other cases, arising during the progress of the hearing of said claim, and from any judgment in said case, at any time within ninety days after the rendition thereof; and any judgment rendered in favor of the claimant, as such administratrix, shall be paid in the same manner as other judgments of said Court of Claims; and the payment of such judgment shall vest the full and absolute right to said patents, and each of them, in the United States.” (Act June 19, 1878, 20 Stat. L., p. 583, ch. 357.)

From the language of this act it would naturally be inferred that, after passing upon the originality of the invention, we are then ” — that is, at once — to enter upon the question of damages.

The Attorney-General, however, contends otherwise. In an ingenious and forcible argument he urges that the instruction to the court that the fact of Dahlgren’s being in the Navy while perfecting his inventions, and of the payment of the cost of the [50]*50experiments from the Treasury are to be taken into consideration in determining the right of his estate to recover; that the statute explicitly directs us to consider them in connection with the question, not of the amount of damages, but of the right of recovery. ,

If we accept this construction of the act, the claimant’s case comes to an end almost as soon as it begins. Lieutenant Dahl-gren was an officer in the Navy, on duty at Washington as an ordnance officer when these experiments began. They were conducted by him in the line of his duty, at the public expense, under the constant supervision of his superior, to whom he reported every step, and with a view to improvements in the ordnance for the Navy. While they were going on his pay was increased by special act of Congress beyond that of other officers of his rank on duty on like shore service. Their results were reported to Congress by the Secretary of the Navy. Special appropriations were made for conducting them on a larger scale at sea. All tírese facts were, through. statutes of the United States, through reports of the Secretary of the Navy, and through other documentary proof, known to Congress when it passed this act. They are, if not waived, a complete defense here.

If Congress had intended to set this defense up, it is more reasonable to suppose that it would have done so itself rather than put the claimant to the cost of a suit in order to have it set up here. And when we consider that it apparently intended under the word First ” to marshal all the subjects which were to be considered in bar to the right of recovery, and under the word “ Second” all those relating to the amount of damages, this arrangement and collocation of the legislative instructions, taken in connection with the previous probabilities, raise the strongest presumption against the Attorney-General’s construction.

In order to avoid this result, he is obliged to separate from the act that portion upon which he relies, and to regard the remainder as surplusage. If he is correct, the effective words of the act are “ in determining the right of said estate to recover, the court shall take into consideration,” &c., and the words “ the amount of compensation to be paid said estate for the use of said inventions and the transfer of said patents ” have no force whatever.

[51]*51His argument meets witli a further difficulty iu the consideration that there was a dedication of Dahlgren’s inventions before the patents were issued and that that defense is waived by Congress. It does not seem probable that the legislature would waive the defense of dedication and instruct the court to consider the facts insisted on by the Attorney-General in bar.

All this leads irresistibly to the conclusion that the only way in which we can give force to the words which the Attorney-General’s construction expunges from the statute, and can make the act conform to the probable wishes of Congress, is by construing it as a direction to the court to consider the facts referred to, if proved, in determining what amount of compensation Dahlgren’s estate has a right to recover.

It is found that Dahlgren was the first and original inventor of all the inventions described in the patents referred to in the act j but that those described in Nos. 32985 and 32986 had no utility ■or Aralue. This leaves for consideration only the inventions described in Nos. 32983 and 32984. The claim under No. 32983 was for the completed gun of the form and proportions known as the Dahlgren gun, of whatever caliber it might be made» The claim under No. 32984 was for a form of casting for the manufacture of that gun, by means of which it was claimed that a greater uniformity in strength of metal could be attained than by the forms previously in use. This general statement of the nature of these inventions is sufficient for the purposes of this opinion.

The United States have made extensive use of these inventions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Ct. Cl. 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dahlgren-v-united-states-cc-1880.