Earth Closet Co. v. Fenner

8 F. Cas. 261
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 15, 1871
DocketCase No. 4,249
StatusPublished

This text of 8 F. Cas. 261 (Earth Closet Co. v. Fenner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Earth Closet Co. v. Fenner, 8 F. Cas. 261 (circtdri 1871).

Opinion

KNOWLES, District Judge.

Upon the pending motion in this cause, the parties have been fully heard at chambers. It is for a special, that is, a preliminary injunction, prayed for in the complainants’ bill, charging an infringement of certain letters patent; and-the state of facts, in view of which it is pressed, is substantially this:

On May 28, 1860, letters patent were issued from the patent office of Great Britain to the Rev. Henry Moule, of Fordington, in the county of Dorset, clerk, and James Bannehr, of Exeter, agent, for the invention of “improvements in the nature and construction of closets and commodes for the reception and removal of excrementitious and other offensive matter, and in the manufacture of manure from them.” And it would seem that as early as October or November, 1807, there was in circulation, in London, a pamphlet of twenty-four pages, issued by a “Moule Patent Earth Closet Company,” giving the public full information in regard to earth closets and commodes, their utility, convenience, and economy, and showing, by numerous wood-cuts, the form- and structure of the articles manufactured for sale by the company. On the title page of the pamphlet, among the names of the company’s officers, are those' of “Messrs. H. J. & J. W. Girdle-stone, Consulting Engineers.”

On March 29, 1869, said Moule and Henry J. Girdlestone made application to the commissioner of patents of the United States, who, on June 15,1869, issued to them letters patent for a new and useful “improvement in deodorizing apparatus for water closets,” which letters patent the grantees, on August 9, 1869, transferred and assigned to one Joseph W. Beach, who, on September 2,1869, assigned them to the complainants, the “Earth Closet Company,” a corporation under the laws of Connecticut.

On March 24, 1870, this corporation filed a bill of complaint in this court against the present defendants, charging an infringement of their said patent, to which the defendants answered, on May 17, 1870, in such terms that the complainants, after filing a general replication on July 4, withdrew their suit on October 17, 1870, paying defendants’ costs, having already, on surrender of the patent of June, 1869, procured a reissue thereof on October 4, 1870 (No. 4,137), in which the invention is denominated an “improvement in deodorizing apparatus for closets,” the patentees’ specifications and claims having been amended and enlarged in such manner as to sustain a charge of infringement against the defendants, as the users, without license, of two of the three improvements, specified and claimed as such under the reissue.

On October 15, 1S70, the complainants filed a second bill, now pending, charging an infringement of their patent as thus reissued, and praying an account and an injunction, and also a preliminary injunction. On January 12, the complainants moved, in effect, that a preliminary injunction issue, and, on February 16, at chambers, this motion was heard.

The defendants, it is proper to add in this connection, in their affidavits, admit that, in the spring of 1869, they did manufacture earth closets of the form and kind depicted in the pamphlet above referred to, and that some of these thus manufactured had been sold since the reissue of the patent; denying, however, that since that reissue any of these articles had been made by them. They further say that no one of these closets made by them, saving some twenty or twenty-five, made prior to the date of the Moule & Girdle-[263]*263stone patent (June 15, 1869), comprised “an oscillating hopper,” which, as they contend, was and is the only portion of the mechanism covered by that patent, as originally granted, and therefore the only portion covered de jure by the reissue of October, 1S70.

Such being the facts, the complainants, presenting their reissue patent of October, 1870, as a valid patent from and after the date of the original (June 15, 1869), contend that, under existing laws and the rules of practice in the circuit courts of the United States, they are entitled to the injunction asked.

In opposition to this claim, the defendants submit several propositions, which they contend are tenable, in view of the facts admitted and in proof, and the law, as found in the Statutes at Large and in the recorded adjudications of the federal judiciary. Thus they say:

1. The said patent is void, inasmuch as the reissue is not for the same invention described in and protected by the original patent, which, say they, was simply for an “oscillating hopper,” and not for the “chuck-er” or “deflector” specified in the reissue, and which alone have been used by the defendants.

2. Said patent is void, inasmuch as the so-called improvements of Moule & Girdlestone are in truth but modifications of the apparatus patented in 1860, to Moule & Bannehr —covered by and included in that patent— and therefore not patentable in the United States in 1869. This, they argue, was the view of Moule and his associates, the owners and controllers of the English patent, wherefore no patent for these was ever taken out in England. And if this be not a tenable position, then, as an alternative one, they contend that these improvements, by whomsoever devised, were abandoned to public use — given to the world — by the publication of the pamphlet referred to, with its pictorial illustrations, shown by the evidence to have been in circulation in November, 1S67, but believed to have been (as the defendants hope to show conclusively at a future day) in circulation, in substance, at a much earlier date.

3. Said patent is void, inasmuch as the reissue was granted to the complainants, without the oaths of the inventors that they were the inventors of the chueker and deflector, specified as patentable improvements in the reissue, though ignored as such (as defendants contend) in the original patent,. granted upon their oaths. In a word, say' the defendants, Moule & Girdlestone obtain a patent in June, 1869, making oath that' they were the joint inventors of certain mechanism, so described that the defendants could, without infringing the patent, continue the business in which they had engaged prior to its issue; and, in October, 1870, that patent is surrendered by its owners, and a reissue granted to them, without the inventors’ oath, under which (if the reissue be a valid patent) the defendants are bound, and may be compelled to abandon that business.

To these positions of the defendants, the complainants reply that their patent is prima facie proof of title on their part, and that this is not rebutted, or even appreciably weakened, by the proofs or arguments of the defendants; contending that upon some points the patent is in itself conclusive and unimpugnable proof, and upon others that the evidence of the defendants is pointless or unreliable. That the first and second points are legitimate grounds of defense to the bill, as well as to this motion, is not controverted; and that some of the questions presented are questions of evidence, of fact, and not of law, must be admitted in deference to the ruling of the supreme court in Bischoff v. Wethered, 9 Wall. [76 U. S.] 812. They are, moreover, questions upon which much testimony can and probably will be offered, and in regard to which it is to be anticipated even experts the most .skilled and most truthful may differ. Hence I shrink from passing upon them, unaided by illumination from any other quarter than the affidavits of the two defendants and a zealous amateur adviser on the one side, 'and those of J. W. Beach (grantor of the complainants), C. W. Waring (agent of the complainants), and C. W.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. Cas. 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/earth-closet-co-v-fenner-circtdri-1871.