Damon v. Eastwick
This text of 14 F. 40 (Damon v. Eastwick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In the year 1880 the complainants and respondent, respectively, made application for letters patent for improvements in [41]*41the manufacture of sulphate of alumina or aluminous cake, involving the same invention. The commissioner, after the usual hearing and examination, decided in favor of the respondent, to whom letters were accordingly issued. The complainants have filed this bill to obtain the benefit of a review, in the light, not only of the evidence before the commissioner, but also of that taken here. The respondent challenges the court’s jurisdiction, as well as the claim to priority of invention. As our judgment is with the respondent on the second jjoint, and the bill must therefore be dismissed, the former may be passed by.
Little need be said in passing on the question of priority. In January, 1878, the respondent discovered that aluminous cake, of superior quality, may be obtained from halloysite, by the process described in his patent. This process consists in mixing ground halloysite, sulphuric acid, and hydrate of alumina, in the manner and proportions stated in the specifications, whereby a high degree of heat is generated by chemical action, producing ebullition, the halloysite rapidly decomposed, the fine particles of silicia thus liberated infused throughout the entire mass, resulting in a uniform homogeneous cake. It is unnecessary to review the prior state of the art, or recount the complainants’ experiments in the direction of this discovery. Mr. Damon was president of tho Pennsylvania Salt Company, whose business, in part, was the manufacture of aluminous cake. Having been tendered the purchase of extensive halloysite beds in Indiana, he was anxious to ascertain how this mineral could be profitably employed. Experiments were accordingly made, which satisfied him and his company, that it was valuable for the manufacture of alu-minous cake, and they bought it in the fall of 1877. It is quite clear, however, that the experiments wore incomplete, and the process subsequently patonted had not then been discovered. Eastwick and Bihn were the company’s chemists, and it was in the further prosecution of the experiments by Mr. Eastwick, at Mr. Damon’s request, that the patented process was developed. All previous efforts had fallen short. That halloysite can be dissolved by sulphuric acid, and the resultant cake rendered neutral by the addition of hydrate of alumina, had been ascertained. But this was insufficient even to suggest the subsequent discovery, — which was not simply that halloy-site may be thus dissolved and hydrate of alumina employed as a neutralizing agent, but a process whereby a high degree of heat is generated, the action of the sulphuric acid accelerated, and the decomposition and final result greatly improved, — mainly by the em[42]*42ployment of other properties of the hydrate of alumina. That the respondent was the first discoverer of this process does not seem at first to have been doubted. His proposition to obtain letters patent was, to say the least, not discouraged by Mr. Damon, who was aware of it; and the counter-claim of Damon & Bihn does not appear to have been suggested until the respondent declined to transfer his rights to the salt company.
As remarked at the outset, the only question requiring our consideration is that of priority. The justice or injustice of the respondent’s taxing the salt company, if he proposes to do so, for the use of a process disclosed by experiments made at its request and expense, with its material, while in its employment, we cannot enter upon.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
14 F. 40, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/damon-v-eastwick-uscirct-1882.