Ex parte Spence
This text of 22 F. Cas. 913 (Ex parte Spence) 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.
Opinion
It is extremely difficult to ascertain from examining the reasons of appeal filed in the cause what are the precise points of error upon the merits of the claim which are relied on by the appellant. If the real object of the appellant in his two first reasons be to complain that the investigation made by the office was only superficial, and that the reasons for the conclusions arrived at by the office were two obscurely or imperfectly communicated to him by writing, it is here to be observed that the judge upon appeal is only charged to scrutinize the conclusions which the office may have reached in any case, and not the processes by which such conclusion may have been attained; that the law does not require the commissioner to submit to an exhibition of experiments at the discretion of the applicant, but. confides in that officer’s exercise of such means of informing his judgment as his own mind may direct. And, moreover, while it is certainly the duty of the commissioner. enjoined by the statute, to give a party such reasons and' make such suggestions as will enable him to judge of the expediency of abandoning or modifying his application, yet these requirements of the statute are only directory to the commissioner, and not proper matter for the appellate tribunals. But in this case the several office letters of August 9th. 13th, and 26th. appear to have fully answered these directions of the statute; and, were the matter complained of inquirable on appeal, the appellant could not prevail in tie face of those letters.
Nor do 1 perceive any error in the judgment of the office upon the third and fourth reasons assigned. The third reason is calmly an Impeachment of the well-settled rule that a pat[914]*914ent shall not be granted for the application of an old contrivance to a new purpose, or in technical language, for “a double use.”
The reference to the patent of October 28, 1887, to John Morris, which is assailed in the fourth reason of appeal; appears to me to take away from applicant .all color of claim tu a patent which he might otherwise have, urged upon the ground that the references embraced in the matter of the third .reason did not show a boiler with double sides. But. independent of that reference, the case appears destitute of real merit. I cannot perceive any function of a patentable nature performed by or claimed in the specification for this part of the combination. The prolongation of the flange to the bottom prevents the escape of steam in no more effective way than would a flange of the ordinary length, carefully made and adjusted to the size of the boiler. I entirely concur in the view expressed on that branch of the case in the office letter of August 13th.
Finding no error in the decision of the office upon any of the reasons assigned, I must affirm the decision of the commissioner.
Now, therefore, I hereby certify to the Honorable Wm. D. Bishop, commissioner of patents, that, having assigned the 7th of October for hearing the foregoing appeal, and the appellant having been heard by. counsel, I have read and considered the several reasons of appeal, the response of the commissioner to those reasons and the arguments in the case; and, having fully considered the premises, I hereby adjudge and determine that the decision of the office be affirmed, and the application of George S. G. Spence for a patent for an improvement in culinary boiling apparatus as claimed be finally rejected.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
22 F. Cas. 913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-spence-circtddc-1859.