Dick v. Lederle Antitoxin Laboratories

43 F.2d 628, 6 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 40, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1340
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 16, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 43 F.2d 628 (Dick v. Lederle Antitoxin Laboratories) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dick v. Lederle Antitoxin Laboratories, 43 F.2d 628, 6 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 40, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1340 (S.D.N.Y. 1930).

Opinion

CAFFEY, District Judge.

I have listened for five weeks to the presentation of this ease. I have reached definite conclusions in my.own mind.

I regret that time is not available for more reflection; also for the preparation of a careful statement of my views. I have explained to you, however, why, at least why according to my methods of work, it is necessary for me promptly to dispose of matters committed to me. In the condition of the calendars of this court it is essential to get rid of one case before going on to another, certainly in all instances except where the circumstances are quite exceptional.

Moreover, I think that litigants are entitled, as of right, to prompt decisions. I think also that I am more apt, particularly in dealing with the facts, to render a just decision when all the evidence is freshly in mind and when I still retain clear impressions of the proper weight to be given to the testimony of the various witnesses, due to exhibitions of bias in manner of testifying or to any of the other characteristics in the giving of testimony with which lawyers are familiar.

As I have also said to you, it does not seem to me that a judge can rightly be charged with the duty of deciding a case right. All that he owes, as I feel, is to give a full and fair hearing and then to exercise his best judgment. He is not responsible for the creation or for the continuance of the conditions under which he is compelled to work. He must be practical and perform his functions as best he can under those conditions.

It is for the reasons stated that I am going to dispose of this case right now.

With minor exceptions, I shall confine myself to what I conceive to be the issues of the ease and what it is required that I pass on in order to determine those issues. At a later stage I shall make some remarks, not perhaps strictly within those issues, but which, according to my feeling, are appropriate to a proper discharge of my judicial duties. There is a special reason why, save as indicated, I shall refrain from going further than is required in order to dispose of the issues. This I will point out hereafter.

I shall perhaps engage in some repetition. I do that in an effort to make plain what I am endeavoring to say. I shall deal almost exclusively with the facts. I do not think that it would be of value, at least not of value according to my purpose, for me, in this connection, to engage in any discussion, and certainly not in any extensive discussion, of the law.

My purpose is to make clear to counsel, and in the event of an appeal clear to the Circuit Court of Appeals, the grounds that have led me to take the action which I shall take in this ease.

As I see it, there are here six questions:

(1) Are the matters on which the plaintiffs rely patentable?

(2) Has it been shown that there was invention?

*630 (3) Are the processes relied on useful?

(4) Were they anticipated either by the Dochez patent or by publications?

(5) Was the patent impaired or invalidated by occurrences in the Patent Office?

(6) Has infringement been established?

From the statement by defendant’s counsel at the opening, I gathered an impression, which I gained also from the answer, that it was the contention of the defendant that there was nothing in the patent which was properly the subject of a patent.

In that apparently I was in error. I understand now, from the brief of defendant and from the oral argument, that substantially the contention of the defendant on this branch of the case is that the matter covered by the seventh claim is not the subject of a patent. As I construe the patent in suit, as worded and as elucidated by what I have •listened to, and considering the claims as they must be considered in connection with the specifications, there is no ground whatever upon which it can be maintained that any of the matters described in the claims outside of the seventh is not a process. Each such process is, within the meaning of the patent laws, an art.

When we turn to the seventh claim, referred to by defendant’s counsel as the skin test, it seems to me also that there as well the patent describes merely a method or a means by which a practical result can be obtained. It is an operable means or method, as demonstrated by its extensive use. It follows, as I understand the discussion of the eighth claim in the Morse Case, and as I understand the Morton Case, that such means or method is the proper subject of a patent.

I have previously said that I shall not' engage in any extended discussion of the law. It would be useless at this stage. It is not needed in order to dispose of the case. I have merely indicated the ground on which I reached the conclusion that in every respect, so far as concerns the claims relied on by the plaintiffs in the trial of this ease, they embrace only processes or methods or means, each of which is the proper subject of a patent.

Was there invention?

As I view this case, it can be disposed of without going into a branch of the testimony to which a great deal of time has been given.

As I conceive it, even if long prior to the work of the Dicks, or the work of Dr. Dochez, it had been settled and determined and accepted by the world that an identified germ was the cause of scarlet fever and there were no dispute about that, the patent involves invention. It rests on the extraction of a soluble toxin. In and of itself such extraction constituted, in my view, an addition to the world’s knowledge, a benefit to humanity, and an advance over what theretofore had been known.

That, as I conceive it, discussing this branch of the case now .within the narrow limits to which for the moment I have assigned it, is the key to this invention. The rest follows as a consequence or as a detail.

The scope of the patent, as I understand it, is nowhere better stated than in Exhibit 31 by the plaintiffs themselves, where in their article of July 12, 1924, they stated what they deemed to be the discovery. They there said: “The discovery of this toxin offered a scientific basis for: (1) the development of a skin test for susceptibility to scarlet fever; (2) preventive immunization, and (3) the production of an antitoxin.” That I believe to be the truth.

The evidence of the newness of what was accomplished, and of what would follow from the separation off of, and the finding of a method by which there could be separated off, this toxin comes from all sorts of sources and in all sorts of ways.

There was quick acclaim from the public. It came from laymen. It came from scientific men. It came from physicians. It came from institutions. It came from the government.

I shall make some comment later on Dr. Dochez. I agree with plaintiffs’ counsel that nothing could truthfully or properly be said about Dr. Doehez except in his praise. I turn now, however, to evidence that comes from him on this, branch of the ease, as to whether what I have referred to as, in and of itself, constituting an invention was an invention.

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Bluebook (online)
43 F.2d 628, 6 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 40, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dick-v-lederle-antitoxin-laboratories-nysd-1930.