Day v. Candee

7 F. Cas. 230, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 9
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 F. Cas. 230 (Day v. Candee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Day v. Candee, 7 F. Cas. 230, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 9 (circtdct 1853).

Opinion

INGERSOLL, District Judge.

The complainant, claiming to have, by assignment from Edwin M. Chaffee, the exclusive light do the extended patent originally granted to Chaffee, August 31, 1S3G, for grinding India rubber without a solvent, and extended to him for seven years from August 31, 1850, and that the defendants are using the thing patented without any license or lawful right, .has brought his bill in equity to this court in which he seeks the interposition of the court to restrain and enjoin the defendants .against the further use of the invention thus secured to Chaffee and his assigns by such extended patent.

In the bill, the complainant, among other things, alleges, that before August 31, 1S3G, one Edwin M. Chaffee, of the state of Massa- . ehusetts, became and was the first and original inventor of a new and useful improvement in the process and machinery for the manufacture of India rubber, for which, he, the sdid Chaffee, on August 31, obtained a patent by which there was granted and secured to him, for the term of fourteen years from that date, the full and exclusive right and liberty of making, constructing, using, and vending to others to be used the said improvement so invented by and so pan ented to him. That he, the said Chaffee, previous to August 31, 1S50, made application to the commissioner of patents for an extension of said patent, for the term of seven years from the last mentioned day, which was granted to .him, and that said extension inured to his sole and exclusive benefit That in the year 1845, Charles Goodyear, by some contract, lien, or assignment, claimed to have become the owner of said patent so granted to the said Chaffee in the year 1S3G, and that before the extension thereof, and before the same was extended, in 1850, he conveyed the same, by license or sale, to a combination of individuals, among whom were the defendants. That since the extension of the original patent, the defendants have had no right, title, or interest in said extended patent, and no license or permission from the said Chaffee to use the improvement or invention so patented and secured to said Chaffee, for the extended term of seven years from August 31, 1850. That the defendants, since the last mentioned date, and since the term for which the original patent was granted has expired, and since the same was extended, have been using the improvement and invention of the said Chaffee, so patented to him, without any license or ■ permission from the said Chaffee, or from any one having right to’ give such license or permission. That the said Chaffee, on July 1, 1S53, by his deed of assignment of that date, in writing, duly executed and recorded in the patent office, for a valuable consideration to him paid, did assign, transfer, and convey to the complainant all his, the said Chaffee’s, title to said invention and said patent for said extended term of seven years; and that the defendants are using said invention so patented, without any license or permission, and persist in so using the same, though called upon to desist. In the bill the complainant claims and prays, upon the aforesaid facts therein .stated, that this court would grant a writ of injunction, directed to the defendants, commanding and enjoining them, and each of them, not to manufacture India rubber .by any of the processes or machinery as patented to the said Chaffee in the said letters patent There is no allegation in the bill that the defendants had no right to use the improvement patented to the said Chaf-fee, during the continuance of the original patent. It is substantially admitted, that up to August 31, 1850, they had such right so to use the same; that up to that time, they were duly licensed, by the person or persons in whom the right secured by the patent was vested, to use the same. But the complaint is, that since the expiration of the original patent, and since the same was extended, they had no such right, either in law or in equity. That from the time the .patent was extended to July 1, 1833, when the rights which the said Chaffee then had to the said extended patent were transferred and assigned to the complainant they were not licensed or otherwise authorized to use the improvements' secured by the extended patent, either by the said Chaffee, or by any one acting under his authority, and that since the transfer of the right which the said Chaffee had in the extended patent to the complainant, they have not been authorized to use the same in any way, either by the complainant, or by any one acting under his authority. And that during the whole of the period from the time the patent was extended, they have been using the thing or process secured to Chaffee and his assigns, by the extended patent, without right or excuse, contrary to the mind and will of the said Chaffee, up to the time of the assignment of the extended patent to the complainant, and contrary to the mind and will of the complainant since that time.

The bill, therefore, upon the face of it, shows a good cause of complaint Upon the face of it, there is shown, on the part of the complainant, a right to demand equitable relief. And the allegations contained therein. if true, would authorize the court, and make it their duty, to grant the injunction as prayed for. The question, therefore, to be determined is, are these allegations, thus [233]*233•set forth in the bill, true? The defendants ■admit that a portion of these allegations are ' true. But they claim that another portion ■<of them, and a material portion of them, are not true. They admit that Chaffee was the original inventor of the improvement •patented—that it is a useful improvement —that on August 31, 183G, he obtained a patent for the same, by which the exclusive right to such improvement was se•cured to him for the term of fourteen years —that he afterward obtained an extended patent for seven years, from August 31, 1850, and that said extended patent was -a valid one. They admit that during the existence of the original patent, Charles •Goodyear, by assignment, became the owner of such original patent, and that up to August 31, 1850, they used the improvement patented, under him and by his license and -authority. They admit that since August -31, 1850, they have been using the improvement patented, and that they are now using the same, and that the right which Chaffee had in the extended patent on July 1, 1853, if he had any, was on that day assigned to the complainant. But they deny that since the expiration of the original patent, and «ince the same was extended, they “have had no right, title, or interest in said extend- • •ed patent, and no license or permission” to use the same. They claim that ever since •said patent was extended, they have had a right to use the same, and now have such right. That for all that period they have had, and now have, not only an equitable right, but a legal right to use the same. And this question of right must be determined upon the proofs which have been exhibited on the hearing of the motion.

• "When the motion for a preliminary injunction was filed, and before any affidavits had been taken, it was conceded by the complainant’s counsel, that the rights of the complainant, as against the defendants, were only such as the said Chaffee’s would have been, if the assignment by Chaffee to the complainant had not been made; and that no greater success ought to attend the complainant’s application than would have attended an application on the part of Chaffee, had not that assignment been made, and the case had been presented by him, Chaffee, asking relief in his behalf. And without such concession, such, upon the evidence, would be the rule to be adopted.

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

Related

Southwestern Brush Electric Light & Power Co. v. Louisiana Electric Light Co.
45 F. 893 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 F. Cas. 230, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-v-candee-circtdct-1853.