Detmold v. Reeves

7 F. Cas. 547, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 127

This text of 7 F. Cas. 547 (Detmold v. Reeves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Detmold v. Reeves, 7 F. Cas. 547, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 127 (circtedpa 1851).

Opinion

KANE District Judge.

The complainant, Mr. Detmold, is the assignee, and as such, the patentee in this country, of an invention made by M. Faber Du Faur, and patented by him in 1840 and 1841, in Bavaria and Wurtemburg. The American patent was issued in 1842, but it was amended and reissued in 1843. It was for “a new and useful invention for generating and applying heat,” and its immediate subject is &• new mode of collecting, conducting and using the combustible gases that ordinarily escape from the tunnel-head of the blast furnace. The defendants are extensively engaged in the manufacture of iron, and, it is charged, that they are availing themselves of a part of the patented invention.

The interests which are involved in the controversy are very great, and may be seriously affected by the action of the court on the present motion. The argument, therefore, has had the widest range—embracing the originality of the patented invention, its practically useful character, its identity in principle with the apparatus employed by the defendants, the right of the inventor, by his assignee, to protection under the patent laws, the regularity of the proceedings of reissue, and their legal effect, as well as the policy of postponing the summary relief, which it is the province of equity to administer. until after an adjudication of the merits by a court of law. But, of these questions, which were argued by learned counsel on both sides with characteristic ability, there is only one, after all, which, on a careful review of the whole ground, I deem it necessary to decide.

The claim of the complainant, as it has been expounded by his counsel in the present case, is for “a new method of economizing fuel, by using the waste combustible gases of the upper portion of the blast furnace, by drawing them off below the upper level of the charge, and conducting them through convenient passages to other fireplaces or structures, there to be burned as fuel.” It does not assert an exclusive right to the use of gases from the tunnel-head, nor to the employment of pipes or tubes for conducting gases; and very properly, for both of these were long ago familiar to the arts; its essential characteristic is, that the gases are to be withdrawn “below the upper level of the charge.”

Can such a claim be legitimately deduced from the terms of the intent before me? This is the controlling question of the cause.

The descriptive language of the specification does not designate, as the place for taking off the gases, a point “below the level of the charges”—an expression that would apply equally well to any and every such point—but one “at or near that point of the furnace where the limestone employed as a flux is completely calcined, and the reduction, or deoxydation,has not yet commenced;” and this point, it adds, “will generally be at about one-third the bight of the whole furnace below the tunnel-head, or two-thirds above the bottom stone.”

It is true, that the formal claim, at the close of the instrument, speaks of drawing off the gases at one or more points below the top of the fuel; and if the expressions" “fuel” and “charges” can be regarded as convertible, this would certainly countenance the exposition of the complainant’s counsel. But it does not stand alone; and it can not be interpreted fairly, without giving effect to the words that follow -it, “substantially as set forth in the above specification.” There is here an important qualification of the broad language of the claim—one that limits and defines it by a reference to the description that has gone before—and when the two parts are taken together, as they must be, they do not impart the withdrawal of the [549]*549gases from below the top of the charges generally, at any and all points whatsoever, ■but specially—from, at, or near that point below the top of them, at which the flux has been calcined, and the deoxydation is about to begin.

The explanatory, or practical reference which is added in the specification, to a point one-third, below the top of the furnace, mates this even more plain. For, the indication of a point, ascertainable by simple measurement, as the one that will in most cases conform the structural arrangement to the rule deduced from scientific principle, is almost a declaration in terms, that the patentee had in view a particular point, and did not mean lo apply his claim to all points below the charges alike.

So far, then, as the motion for an injunction asserts, as its basis, that the defendants are using a device which has been specifically described and claimed in the patent, it can not be sustained, since it is conceded that the defendants do not take out the gases “at or near the point at which the calcination is perfected, while the deoxydation has not yet begun.” nor at or “about one-third of the hight of the tunnel,” measured from the top. But the question still remains, whether the defendants are not violating the patent substantially; deriving from it information essentially connected with its subject-matter; and only so far varying their structure in form and proportion as to elude its terms.

There is no doubt, that he who has discovered some new element or property of matter, may secure to himself the ownership of his discovery, so soon as he has been able to illustrate it practically, and to demonstrate its value. His patent, in such a case, will be commensurate with the principles, which it announces to the world, and may be as broad as the mental conception itself. But, then, the mental conception must have been susceptible of embodiment, and must have been, in fact, embodied in some mechanical device, or some process of art. The abstract must have been resolved into the concrete. The patent must be for a thing—not for (an idea merely.

This limitation, it may be said, denies to some of the more important products of mind what it concedes to others of lower grade. But it is not the less true on that account. Men may be enriched, or made happy. hy physical, as well as by moral or political truths, which, nevertheless, go without reward for their authors. He who devised the art of multiplication could not restrain others from using it after him. without paying him for a license. The miner who first found out that the deeper veins were the richer in metal, could not compel his neighbor to continue digging near the surface.

The more comprehensive truths of all philosophy, whatever specific name we give to them, can not be specially appropriated by any one. They are almost elements of our being. We have not reasoned them out, perhaps, and may be even unconscious of their action; yet they are about us, and within us, entering into and influencing our habitual thoughts, and pursuits, and modes of life— contributing to our safety and happiness. And they belong to us as effectively as any of the gifts of Heaven. If we could search the laws of nature, they would be, like water and the air, the common- property of mankind; and those theories of the learned which we dignify with this title, partake, just so far as they are true, of the same universally diffused ownership. It is their application to practical use which brings them within the domain of individuals; and it is the novelty of such an application that constitutes it the proper subject of a patent.

But the contract of the public is not with him who has discovered, but with him who also makes his discovery usefully known.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 F. Cas. 547, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/detmold-v-reeves-circtedpa-1851.