Dietz v. Wade

7 F. Cas. 684, 1859 U.S. App. LEXIS 681

This text of 7 F. Cas. 684 (Dietz v. Wade) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dietz v. Wade, 7 F. Cas. 684, 1859 U.S. App. LEXIS 681 (circtddc 1859).

Opinion

MORSELL, Circuit Judge.

An interference in the matter of this case was declared by the commissioner on the 3d of July. 185S, between the patent, granted to Wade and Burnham, April 6. 1858, and the application of the above named M. A. Dietz filed on 22d of June last for the above mentioned improvement, and upon hearing before him he decided priority of invention to said Wade and Burnham, the said patentees, and the application of said Dietz was rejected. Prom this decision, Dietz has appealed, and the question is now submitted to me by the parties upon written arguments. Mr. Dietz has filed his reason of appeal, which is general, upon the grounds of error both as to the.law and fact. As the commissioner has made no objection to this irregularity7, it will be passed over. He has laid before mo all the original papers and evidence in the case, together with the grounds of his decision and the reasons of appeal.

The issue between the parties being the question of priority only, the decision now to be made must depend upon a correct view of the evidence to be drawn from the testimony offered by the parties,-with-a -due .application of the rules of law thereto. The substance of the testimony on the part of the appellant, I proceed to state:

Auguste Kaistner; He worked with a Dietz as a lamp manufacturer ten years. Commenced working on flat wick lamps May, 1857. The deflector was soldered to the chimney band. It did not answer the purpose. The soldering melted, and deflector fell down, and destroyed the lamp. Mr. Dietz gave him an idea, and an order, that the deflector must be fastened to the chimney band without being soldered; told witness to make a roller by which the deflector would be fastened to the chimney band by pressure. The chimney band is fixed together with the deflector by the roller. The roller presses the chimney band down, and at the same time makes a groove in which the deflector is fixed. Dietz told him that the deflector must be fastened to the groove in the chimney band. The groove in the chimney band was to be formed first before the deflector was fitted or placed. The groove was formed by fixing them together at the same time. Witness understood the description or plan sufficiently well to have made one. This communication was made in the beginning of September, 1S57. In assigning his reason for stating that as the date at which Mr. Dietz first communicated to him this plan, he says that [685]*685lie fixes the date because his father lost his employment at that time. In answer to cross interrogatories, he states the particular date at which his father lost his employment, which he says was on Saturday, sometime in September. An almanac being shown to him he then states “I believe it was the 5th. I know it was the first Saturdayin the month.” This was the 5th. Witness gives a full and minute description of the roller, and its operation, as given to him by Dietz, and states that experiments were made for the purpose of getting up the machine for carrying this plan into operation, which Dietz thought would be best for the purpose, and to be so made as to suit the purpose; that at the request of Mr. Dietz he worked upon a roller formed with a groove to be used for the purpose of making a groove in the chimney band; that he worked on it upon the 15th of October last, or thereabouts; that Mr. Dietz gave him the order to do it, and that he, having charge of the shop, put his brother Henry at it; that it was perfect and complete, so as to operate in the present form, between the 10th and 15th of November last. The lamp top A being shown to him. he says it is identically similar to that testified to by him on the first day of May. 1S57. The lamp top B being shown to him. he says that it does embody the plan communicated to him by Mr. Dietz for the purpose of securing the deflector to the chimney band by a groove in the latter. In answer to a question in which he is asked whether Mr. Dietz has in any way changed that mode of securing the deflector to the chimney band since he-(Dietz) first communicated it to him, and. if so, in what respects, he says that it is the same, always was the same; nothing changed, with the exception of the milling around the groove. In answer to cross interrogatory. “Were any lamp tops made by Mr. Dietz without solder before that machine was completed ?” he answers none were made; that they were prepared to manufacture them about the 15th of November; that they made experiments in or about the middle of October. On his cross-examination as to his knowledge that it was on the 5th of September when the description of the improvement was made to him by Dietz, he answers that he knows that it was the first Saturday in the month; that he went out with his brother on the 21st September on a target excursion. His father was anxious to go with him, but he having left his employment a fortnight previous, and no living, he had not the means. On further cross-examination he says he knows it was a fortnight, because there were two days between. In answer to a direct interrogatory he says, on experimenting. they found the roller was not perfected the first time; they could not get the deflector to stay tight; but there was no other alteration, than a little change in the groove.

Henry Kaistner: He says, in September. his brother and himself commenced to alter the burners. “I commenced in September to work on these new (machines) burners, on the alteration for the glass holders. The alteration consisted so that the heaters (deflect- or) should not be soldered.” He proceeds to give a description of the machine by which the groove was formed; gives a rough sketch marked “Exhibit C,” and of its operation. He says he fixes the time to be in September by the circumstance that he turned out on a target excursion on the 21st September. At that time his brother and himself spoke about these things. His brother first spoke to him about it. That the machine spoken of by him was completed so as to turn out perfect work about the middle of October. He finished it.

Charles .H. Dietz: He says that he was acquainted with an improved mode of attaching the deflector to the chimney band claimed to have been invented by M. A. Dietz. It consists in fastening the cone to the chimney band without solder by means of a groove in the chimney band. The lamp top Exhibit 1 is shown to him. He says it embodies the improvement first described. He became acquainted with said improvement: about the middle of August, 1857. It was described to witness by Michael A. Dietz. His means of determining the time, “that he started for the western country about the 1st of September (the 5th of September, not -later), and some three weeks previous to that he described to him (witness) the mode putting the cone into the chimney band without-solder by means of a groove.!’. -Says he has no interest; that M. A. Dietz has no connection with the firm of Dietz & Co. “When the first improved lamp tops were got up, it was with the groove-turned in plain, which in some instances allowed the cone or deflector to turn on the chimney band, which was objectionable; and M. A. Dietz then milled them or made a roughness in the groove, to prevent that turning. The lamp top marked 'Exhibit No. 2' inow shown to him) embodies and shows the milling or roughness just described.” On cross-examination he says: “I meant to say that we commenced to manufacture the flat wick lamp in spring of ’57; commenced manufacturing the lamp top with the improved attachment by means of a groove in the fall of 1857. Have manufactured them ever since.” Early in the fall of 1857. he said, he had improved the lamp top. to fix the cone in the chimney band. To a cross interrogatory. “How long since the improved lamp tops have been made by M. A.

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. 684, 1859 U.S. App. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dietz-v-wade-circtddc-1859.