Day v. Stellman

7 F. Cas. 262, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 487
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland
DecidedJuly 15, 1859
StatusPublished

This text of 7 F. Cas. 262 (Day v. Stellman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Day v. Stellman, 7 F. Cas. 262, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 487 (circtdmd 1859).

Opinion

GILES, District Judge.

The bill was filed on the 10th of December last It sets forth that letters patent were granted to Charles Goodyear, on June 15, 1844, for a new process of preparing India rubber for manufactures; that said patent was subsequently surrendered on account of defects in its specification; and on December 25, 1844, two new patents were granted to Goodyear: one for an improvement in felting India rubber with cotton fiber (with which we have nothing to do in this case), and the other for an improvement in processes for the manufacture of India rubber; that these two patents were for the term of fourteen years from June 15, 1844; that the commissioner of patents on June 14, 1858, after full argument, granted an extension of said patents for the term of seven years from June 15,1858; that subsequently Goodyear, by several instruments made in 1846, sold and assigned to Day, one of the complainants, the said patents, so far as related to the preparation and manufacture of shirred or elastic India rubber goods, except in so far as the right to manufacture said goods had been parted with by Goodyear by three several licenses, viz: to Hutchinson & Runyon, Ford & Co., and Onderdonk & Letson, which said licenses were duly assigned to the said Goodyear subsequently, and by him assigned to Day. [263]*263It then sets forth that in October, 1852, Day assigned all his interest under this contract to Winslow, Syms & Gilbert; that these parties assigned it to the Congress Rubber Company, a corporation of the city of New York, and that said company in 1S57, reassigned the interest to Day; so that all the interest conveyed by the contracts of 1840 are now vested in Day, except a small portion which Day parted with to his co-complainant, Hay, on October 1, 1858. The bill further sets forth that Goodyear, on May 4, 1858, conveyed to said Day, “the full, absolute and exclusive license, right, and privilege to make, use, and vend his,' the said Goodyear’s invention of vulcanized rubber, as described and patented in the reissued patent, granted to him December 25, 1849, for the present and all extended or renewed terms of said patent, as the same may or can be used in the manufacture of all braided, woven, cemented, or sewed fabrics, or such as are or can be covered or protected on one or both sides with substances other than rubber, and in all smooth elastic shirred goods; and also to make and sell iDdia rubber threads of vulcanized rubber, and all threads or sheets of rubber which are or can be made or finished by union with, or to be covered by fibrous substances.” It then sets forth that m 1850, Goodyear instituted suits in New Jersey, in equity and at law against Day, which were heard before the circuit court of New Jersey, in which the validity of these patents was maintained, as reported in 2 Wall. Jr. 283 [Case No. 5,569]. It further avers that the defendants in this case have violated the patent of June 15, 1844, as reissued December 25. 1849, and extended June 14, 1858, by selling large quantities of suspenders which are made of vulcanized India rubber, and are shirred or corrugated goods; and it prays an injunction and account.

The defendants, in their answer, set up as their defense, that the complainants, Day & Hay, have no title to the said patent for the purposes set forth in said bill; that by the contracts of 1840. set up in the bill and relied upon by the complainants, Goodyear, on certain conditions, granted to Day the privilege of using vulcanized India rubber in the manufacture and sale of. corrugated or shirred India rubber goods, which are described in the patent of March 9, 1844; that the defendants have not since October 2, 1858, sold any corrugated or shirred India rubber goods so made under the patent of March 9; and that they have done nothing to infringe any rights held by the complainants. They admit that they have sold goods composed in part of vulcanized rubber, which the complainants have no right to manufacture and sell, but they claim that the right to manufacture such goods is vested in other parties under certain assignments from Goodyear, and they set up the contract of July IS, 1S44, between Goodyear- and the Naugatuck India Rubber Company, and several assignments which vested its rights in the Union India Rubber Company. Two agreements have been filed in this cause: one setting the cause down for final hearing, and arranging the terms of a decree, if the court should decide in favor of the complainants, so as to dispense with the trouble and delay of taking an account; and the other in reference to the testimony on which the case has been heard. So that the cause has been heard under these agreements on final hearing, and is now before the court for final decree.

The title of the complainants rests upon the contracts and assignments of 1840, and the deed of assignment of May 24, 1S58, and the decision of this cause rests on the construction which the court may give to those instruments.

The first question under the contracts of 1840, is: What did Goodyear assign to Day by the paper of October 29, 1840, the first in the series? The complainants allege that by that paper Goodyear assigned to Day the right to manufacture all India rubber goods that were shirred, and to use in the manufacture thereof, Goodyear’s invention of vulcanized rubber, as patented to him on June 15, 1844, and reissued on December 25, 1S19. On the other hand, the defendants allege, that the term “shirred or corrugated goods," as used in the'contracts of 1840, is limited and was intended to be limited to the goods made under the patent of March 9, 1844, and does not include any other “shirred goods” which might be made of vulcanized rubber.

The first thing which we ascertain in the examination of this contract is, that by -its terms, it includes all India rubber goods that are corrugated or shirred; “shirred” being a technical term meaning “wrinkled,” or “contracted.” Upon the face of the paper, then, it includes all India rubber goods that are i made with vulcanized rubber, and that are ! “wrinkled or corrugated.” “Corrugated” is ! another term which means the same as “wrinkled,” in the English language. Now, is there anything in the paper itself, in ihe surrounding circumstances, or in the subsequent conveyances, to narrow the broad language of the grant? Let us look at it. The grant is “the full, absolute and exclusive right, license, and privilege,” to manufacture “shirred or corrugated goods.” Now, the term “corrugated” is well known in the English language, and is to be found in all the dictionaries, meaning “wrinkled or contracted.” But was the term “shirred” known to the' trade, or to any trade prior to March 9, 1844? How stands the testimony on this point?

But, before adverting to it, the court would remark, that while the interpretation and construction of all written instruments is for the court, it nevertheless will bring to its aid the testimony of witnesses to explain terms of art, and make itself acquainted with the material with which the contracts deal, and with the circumstances under which they

[264]*264were made; but neither the testimony of witnesses in general, nor of professors, experts or mechanics, can be received, to prove to the court, what is the proper or legal construction of any instrument of writing. Such evidence is inadmissible. ' The supreme court, in the case of Corning v. Burden, 15 How. [56 U. S.] 270, held this language: “The refusal of the court to hear the opinion of experts as to the construction of the patent, was proper.

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Related

Day v. Union India Rubber Co.
61 U.S. 216 (Supreme Court, 1858)
Goodyear v. Day
10 F. Cas. 678 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey, 1852)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 F. Cas. 262, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-v-stellman-circtdmd-1859.