Gear v. Grosvenor

10 F. Cas. 130, 6 Fish. Pat. Cas. 314, 1 Holmes 215, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1735
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedMarch 11, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 F. Cas. 130 (Gear v. Grosvenor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gear v. Grosvenor, 10 F. Cas. 130, 6 Fish. Pat. Cas. 314, 1 Holmes 215, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1735 (circtdma 1873).

Opinion

SHEPLEY, Circuit Judge.

This is a bill for an injunction dhd account based tipon letters patent granted to Nathaniel Gear, November 8, 1853, for a machine for turning and cutting irregular forms, and extended for the additional term of seven years, from November 8, 18G7. The answers of the defendants allege, that the extension of the letters patent was procured by fraud, misrepresentation, and in violation of law.

It is well settled that a patent from the government can not, in a collateral proceeding, be impeached for fraud in procuring its issue; this can only be done in a direct proceeding to set it aside. Eureka Co. v. Bailey Co., 11 Wall. [78 U. S.] 489; Rubber Co. v. Goodyear, 9 Wall. [76 U. S.] 796.

Defendants, however, claim, that while they are precluded from relying upon any fraud or misrepresentation made to the commissioner of patents, while in the lawful exercise of his functions in judicially determining upon a matter in which he had acquired jurisdiction, they have a right to aver and prove the nullity of his decision, for want of jurisdiction of the question upon which it is made. As a matter of fact, they contend that the notice, required by law to be published sixty days previous to a hearing before the commissioner of patents on an application for extension of letters patent, was fraudulently suppressed, and never published in the manner required by law.

Defendants also claim, that even if the order and notice in the proceedings for obtaining the extension were published in compliance with the terms of the order of the commissioner, the publication was not made as required by the terms of the law then in force. The order of the commissioner was as follows: “Ordered that this notice be published in the Republican and the Intelli-gencer, AVashington, D. C., and in the AArasli-ington County News, Marietta, Ohio, once a week for three successive weeks; the first of said publications to be at least sixty days previous to the day of hearing.” Defendants claim this was not a publication “for at least sixty days,” required by the act of 1SG1 [12 ‘Stat. 246]. For this reason, as well as by reason of the alleged suppression of the publication of the notice as ordered, it is contended that the commissioner of patents never acquired jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and that the extension was granted without authority of law.

[132]*132If. the defense, of want of validity of tlm extension by reason of informality in the order of notice, or fraudulent suppression of publication of the notice ordered, be one which is open to the defendants in a suit brought for alleged infringement of the extended patent, it may well be doubted whether the allegation in the answer in this case is sufficient to let in the defenses set up. The allegation, that “the same was procured by fraud, misrepresentation, and in violation of law,” is simply an allegation of a conclusion of law from facts, which facts are not pleaded. There is nothing in the allegation in the answer which would take the defense out of the scope of the decisions of the supreme court, that the act of the commissioner can not be impeached for fraud.

But if the defense were well pleaded in the answer, and the facts were alleged, which are relied upon to establish the fraud and the absence of jurisdiction, I do not think they would avail the defendants in this proceeding. The act of 1S3G, c. 337, § 18 [3 Stat. 117], made it the duty of the commissioner of patents, whenever a patentee made application in writing to the commissioner for an extension of his patent beyond the term of its limitation, to cause to be published in one or more of the principal newspapers in tlie city of Washington, and in such other paper or papers as he may deem proper, published in the section of country most interested adversely to the extension of .the patent, a notice of such* application, and of the time and place when and where the same will be considered, that any person may appear and show cause why the extension should not be granted. The act of 1848-, c. 47, § 1 [9 Stat. 231], vested in the commissioner of patents, solely, the power to extend patents, previously vested in a board composed of the secretary of state, commissioner of patents, and solicitor of the treasury, and provided for a reference of the case to the principal examiner having charge of the class of inventions to which the case belongs, after application made to the commissioner, “and sixty days’ notice given thereof.” The law of 18G1, e. 8S, § 12, required all applications for the extensions of patents to be filed at least ninety days before the expiration thereof, “and notice of the day set for the hearing of the case shall be published, as now required by law, for at least sixty days.”

As has been previously stated, the commissioner, in the case of this application, ordered the notice to be published “for three successive weeks, the first of said publications to be at least sixty days previous to' the day of hearing,” — and the claim is, that the publication should have been made for sixty days successively before the hearing, and not having been so ordered or made, the commissioner had no jurisdiction.

It should here be noted, that it appears that the construction put upon the act of 1SG1 by the commissioner in this case, in ordering the notice, was in accordance with the invariable practice of the office, no change having been made, after the passage of that act, in the forms of the orders of notice as issued, since the passage of the act of 1S4S. The construction given to a statute by the officers appointed to execute it, and acted upon by them for a long term of years, though not conclusive, is entitled to great consideration by the court. Union Ins. Co. v. Hoge, 21 How. [62 U. S.] 35-66; Edwards’ Lessee v. Darby, 12 Wheat. [25 U. S.] 210.

But it is not necessary to place the decision on this ground. The jurisdiction of the commissioner over the subject-matter commences with the filing of the petition, which makes it his duty to exercise that jurisdiction by causing a proper notice to be published. Before such order is issued, he must, in the exercise of that jurisdiction, have determined whether the publication should be in one or more of the.principal newspapers in Washington; what newspapers in Washington were “principal newspapers” in the sense of the statute; what “other paper or papers he may deem proper” for the publication, in the particular case before him; and what “section of country is most interested adversely to the extension of the patent.” It. is plain from this examination of the statute, that the filing by a patentee of the petition for extension, and the payment of the required sum for expenses, confers the jurisdiction. The subsequent acts — of selecting the papers in which publication shall be ordered, and the number and locality of the-papers, and issuing the order, and adjudicating upon the question whether that publication has been made according to law — are all in the exercise of the jurisdiction previously acquired.

It is insisted that the certificate of the commissioner granting the extension, shows upon its face a want of jurisdiction, and that the notices were not given as required by the act of 1SG1. The certificate of the commissioner is, that, in accordance with the provisions of the act of 183G and the act of 1848, he “did, on this 30th day of September, 1SG7, decide that said patent ought to be-extended.” It contains no recitals respecting the notices issued, or the mode of their publication. Such recitals in a patent, whether original, reissued, or extended, are unnecessary.

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189 F. 405 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 130, 6 Fish. Pat. Cas. 314, 1 Holmes 215, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gear-v-grosvenor-circtdma-1873.