Doughty v. West

7 F. Cas. 966, 6 Blatchf. 429, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 580, 1869 U.S. App. LEXIS 1296

This text of 7 F. Cas. 966 (Doughty v. West) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doughty v. West, 7 F. Cas. 966, 6 Blatchf. 429, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 580, 1869 U.S. App. LEXIS 1296 (circtsdny 1869).

Opinion

BLATCHFORD, District Judge.

The bill in this case is founded on reissued letters patent, granted to the plaintiff on the 1st of August, 1865, .for 14 years from the 4th of October, 1859, for an “improvement in skeleton skirts.” The patent was originally issued, -October 4th, 1S59, to the -plaintiff and James Draper, as assignees of said Draper, as inventor. On the 27th of December, 1859, it was reissued to the plaintiff, and said Draper, and James Brown and William King, the then owners of it Subsequently, and before the granting of the reissue of 1S65, the entire interest in the patent, and in the reissue of 1859, was assigned to the plaintiff. He brought a suit in equity on the reissue of 1859. in this court, against two of the defendants who are defendants in this suit [967]*967That suit was brought to a final hearing before Mr. Justice Nelson and Judge Ship-man. It appears, from the opinion of the court in that case, Doughty v. West [Case No. 4,029], delivered by Judge Shipman, and concurred in by Mr. Justice Nelson, that the plaintiff contended that the reissue of 1859 covered all skeleton skirts, with the perpendicular tapes woven singly, between the hoops, and woven double, or with pockets,: for the reception of the hoops. The court ’ held, however, that the claim of the reissue of 1859, as drawn, was limited to a skeleton skirt in which the hoops were fastened in the loops or pockets by some kind of material put. on in a soft state, and adhering by sticking, and which subsequently became hard, such material being put into the pocket, or upon the hoop within the pocket, so as, when hardened, to keep the hoop rigidly in place. In other words, the court regarded the reissue of 1859 as covering only the mode of fastening the hoops in the loops in the perpendicular tapes by such adhesive material The court ■ then added: “If the invention is broad: enough to include all skeleton skirts with the ; perpendicular tapes woven singly between the hoops, and woven double, or with pockets, for the reception of the hoops, then his patent should be reissued to cover that invention; and there is no possible difficulty about doing it. If there is something in the state of the art which will show that he is not the inventor to that extent, then he can obtain no such reissue. If he is the inventor ' of a skeleton skirt of that character, with the perpendicular tapes woven singly between the hoops, and woven double, or with pockets, for the reception of the hoops, which hoops are inserted either while in process of being woven, or after they are woven, and then fastened in any manner, there certainly can be no possible difficulty in describing, and it is the duty of the patentee to accurately describe it” Again, the court says: “If the patentee invented and was the first to make a skeleton skirt, woven singly between the hoops, and double at the place of insertion of the hoops, fastened at the pockets—and that is the simple description of the invention claimed—then he was entitled to it.” Again: “It not very unfrequently happens, that patentees, by mistake, limit the invention described, and make it narrower than the invention made. If that -is the case, and it can be seen, on the reissue of the patent, that the invention extends beyond the construction the court gives it, it can be made the subject of trial hereafter. If the pat-entee has made the invention thus broadly claimed, it will hereafter present a simple issue for trial, as the patent can be made to cover it without difficulty.” This decision was rendered in June, 1SG5, and the present reissue was granted on the 1st of -August, 1SC5.

The specification of this reissue limits the j invention to an improvement in skeleton | i | skirts, that is, as it defines them, skirts consisting of a series of tapes extending from the waist down, and a series of horizontal and parallel hoops secured to the side of the tapes, by stitching, by tying, or by rivet-clasps. The object of the invention is stated to be to remedy the defect which arose from the fact that the fastening by which the hoops were secured to the side of the tapes was liable to break, and permit the hoops to fall and drag on the ground, being a source of inconvenience and often of serious accidents. The remedy is effected, says the specification, “by making the skirt of a series of tapes woven along their length, alternately, as single and as double tapes, to form loops or openings, at the required distances apart, for the reception of the hoops, which are no longer dependent upon the means of fastening to the side of the tapes, and cannot fall, even if not fastened.” It also says: “A skeleton skirt, when thus fabricated, needs no fastening of the hoops to the tapes to hold them up, and the only fastening required is to prevent the tapes from sliding laterally on the hoops, so that, if such fastening should give way, the hoops will still be held up by the tapes.” The specification then states, that the inventor has found glue to be a suitable means for securing the hoops in the loops of the tapes, to prevent the tapes from sliding laterally on the hoops, as the weight of the hoops has no tendency to rupture the fastening, as in skeleton skirts known prior to his invention; and that the hoops may be inserted in the act of weaving the tapes, or the tapes may be woven with the loops, and the hoops be inserted afterwards. The specification then describes the manner in which the tapes can be woven as single tapes for the required distance between two hoops, and then be woven double for a little more than the width of a hoop, and then a hoop be inserted between the two series of tapes, and then the weaving of the tapes as single be resumed, and the hoop be thus inclosed in the loops so formed. It further states, that the loops may be formed by the weaving of the tapes in the same manner, and the hoops may be inserted afterward. The claim is as follows: “The new manufacture of skeleton skirt, substantially such as described, consisting of a series of tapes woven, in the -direction.-of their length, in alternate sections, as single and double tapes, with the hoops inserted in the loops formed by weaving the tapes as double tapes, and there secured, to prevent the tapes from sliding laterally on the hoops.”

The bill charges, as an infringement of the patent, the making and selling of skeleton skirts by the defendants. One of the principal defences set up to the bill is, that Draper was not the original and first inventor of what is covered by the last reissue, and much testimony has been introduced by the defendants for the purpose of [968]*968establishing the existence, before the time of the invention of Draper, of skeleton skirts similarly constructed. The main questions discussed on the hearing were, whether Draper was an original, and, if so, the first inventor of the improvement claimed in the last reissue, and whether he made such invention before the time when he applied for his original patent. On these points the plaintiff has clearly made out his case, to my entire satisfaction. Without discussing the evidence at length, it is sufficient to say, that it establishes that Draper made the invention of a skirt such as is claimed in the present reissue, as early as June, 1856; that neither the Morrow skirt nor the Hartley skirt anticipates the invention; that neither the Hough skirt, nor the skirt defendants’ Exhibit No.

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. Cas. 966, 6 Blatchf. 429, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 580, 1869 U.S. App. LEXIS 1296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doughty-v-west-circtsdny-1869.