Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co. v. Brightwell

11 D.C. 74
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 26, 1879
DocketEquity. 5,060
StatusPublished

This text of 11 D.C. 74 (Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co. v. Brightwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co. v. Brightwell, 11 D.C. 74 (D.C. 1879).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hagner

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complaint was filed in July, 1876. It alleges the granting of a patent in 1864 to Dr. Cummings for an improvement in artificial palates and gums, and the reissue of that natent in 1865, and subsequent reissues and assignments, in virtue of which the complainants are its present proprietors. It refers at considerable length to a number of cases decided in the different courts of the country in which* as it is said, the validity of the patent with respect to the use of hard rubber or vulcanite has been distinctly affirmed. [75]*75It also avers that in other enumerated cases, decisions have been made declaring that the use of celluloid in the fabrication of such articles is an infringement of the patent ; that the defendant has been guilty of infringement in the manufacture of dental plates of vulcanite, of rose pearl and of ■celluloid ; and it prays for an injunction and account against him in the ordinary form.

The defendant filed an answer, a supplemental answer and a further answer in the nature of a cross-bill. In these .pleadings he alleges that the Cummings patent, and the subsequent reissues, are invalid, because of manifold irregularities attending the proceedings in the Patent Office ; that Cummings was not originally entitled to the patent, because he was not the inventor, but obtained whatever knowledge he ..possessed on the subject surreptitiously from others; and the pleadings set forth that several persons, among whom are Nelson Goodyear, Hearing and Bevin, were prior inventors of the matter claimed in the patent. He further insists that ■the patent ought not to have been issued, because the matter claimed had been in public use for more than two years before the application of Cummings, and with his knowledge, and that whatever claim Cummings may have had to the invention in its inception, was abandoned by him during the interval between 1862 and 1864. He avers that the judgments in some of the suits mentioned in the bill should not be regarded as binding, because they were undefended, or • decisions were rendered therein by collusion of parties. He denies that celluloid and rose pearl are equivalents of the hard rubber or vulcanite, which was claimed by Cummings ■in his patent and specifications, the substances and processes of using the same being different, and he admits that he has made sets of artificial teeth in bases composed in some instances of vulcanite or hard rubber, and in others of celluloid.

A large number of witnesses were examined by the parties, and by agreement certain portions of the record in the 'Gardiner case were admitted in evidence, and Dr. R. Finley •Hunt was permitted to explain in the presence of this court [76]*76the method pursued by him in the manufacture of artificial" plates and gums from celluloid.

All the questions involved were elaborately argued by the-distinguished counsel who appeared for the parties, and have been carefully examined by this court.

The first question presented for our consideration is-whether, upon the facts of this case, the defendant is liable for an infringement in the use of dental plates of hard rubber or vulcanite; and this involves the inquiry as to the validity of the Cummings patent for any purpose whatever.

When the bill was filed in this cause there had been no decision upon the question by the Supreme Court of the United States. But since that time the case of Smith vs. Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Company has been determined by that court, and an elaborate and able opinion pronounced by Mr. Justice Strong (three judges dissenting), declaring that there was no abandonment by the patentee of his original application ; that the invention was never abandoned to the public, and that the reissued letters-patent of 1865 are valid. 3 Otto, 486.

It is claimed on the part of the complainants that this decision is a final determination of the point, which is henceforth to be regarded as res adjudícala.

This view is so clearly in the direction of the principle of' public justice, that declares it to be the interest of the. Kepublic that there should be an end of the strife, that we should without further discussion adopt it as settling this - point, except for the earnestness with which it is insisted on the part of the defendant, that the cáse now presented differs so materially in many important particulars from Smith’s case, when that was before the Supreme Court, that we should be justified upon the facts before us in declaring the patent invalid.

It is true, that on every suit, for an infringement, it incompetent for the defendant to dispute the validity of the original patent, a.nd present in defence such objections as-are set forth in the answers in this case. But we do not think that this principle would justify a circuit court in [77]*77deciding upon such objections, virtually to reverse a judgment carefully enunciated by the Supreme Court, upon a state of facts similar in character. In Smith’s case, the defendant set forth all the objections to the patent which are here insisted upon ; its want of originality, its abandonment by Cummings, and the imperfections and irregularities attending its issue. The present defenses, though differing-as to the names of the persons by whom it is alleged the improvement claimed was invented, and as to the witnesses-who are examined, many of whom appear, so far as we can ascertain, to have testified for the first time m this case, are yet the very matters which were passed upon, though on a different state of proof, by the Supreme Court. The circumstance that Nelson Goodyear is named in this case for the first time as the inventor ; that additional persons are-designated in this case as having been acquainted with the prior use of the thing patented, or that a number of witnesses not heretofore examined, testify in this case in support of these pretensions, and that Cummings, so far from having been prevented by poverty from prosecuting his-claim before the Patent Office, as was established by the testimony in Smith’s case, was abundantly able to incur such necessary expenses, are not sufficient to bring us to the opinion that, upon these additional allegations and facts, the Supreme Court would reverse their rulings announced after careful consideration of similar defences. There are probably few cases of patents affecting important interests,, where the question of want of originality has not been raised, and doubtless in many instances with entire sincerity and honesty on the part of the claimants. When necessity.,, the real mother of invention, demands some improvement upon the existing methods, men of getrius in all parts of the world are stimulated to a simultaneous examination of the-same subject, and the tide of invention advances all along the coast of scientific enquiry with a nearly uniform movement. Such is the well-known history of the concurrent investigations that resulted in Morse’s invention of the telegraph. When the Supreme Court, in the case of, O’Reilly [78]*78vs. Morse, 15 How., 62, determined the validity of the Morse patent, there were but five claims of prior inventors ¡considered by the court. But the consideration of these rival pretensions involved a thorough examination of the entire question, and resulted in a deliberate judgment in favor of Morse.

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Related

O'Reilly v. Morse
56 U.S. 62 (Supreme Court, 1854)

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11 D.C. 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodyear-dental-vulcanite-co-v-brightwell-dc-1879.