Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co. v. Willis

10 F. Cas. 754, 1 Ban. & A. 5658
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan
DecidedNovember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 F. Cas. 754 (Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co. v. Willis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan 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. Willis, 10 F. Cas. 754, 1 Ban. & A. 5658 (circtedmi 1874).

Opinion

EMMONS, Circuit Judge.'

In ordinary circumstances, the condition of judicial opinion in reference to all the points involved in the record would render unnecessary their discussion upon principle, and in a case where such rulings have been so numerous, and directly upon the points, and so elaborate in argument, it is unusual to do more than refer to them generally, as settling the points in issue. Such, however, is the exceptional feeling and excitement existing in the minds of the numerous defendants in suits brought on this patent in this and adjoining districts, resulting, we believe, from the want' of knowledge on their part of the real history of previous litigations, and the character and number of opinions which have been already pronounced, that it is deemed a duty by my brethren- and myself to reproduce that which we are well aware is already familiar to the bench and bar. It will attract the attention here of all those interested in these litigations, while the sources from which such information is to be obtained are inaccessible to, or at least are not examined by, them. It was asserted with much earnestness and confidence by defendant’s counsel that a careful review of the judgments already pronounced sustaining the complainants’ patent, and contrasting the record before us with those upon which such opinions were based, would result in our taking up the questions before us and deciding them upon principle, wholly unembarrassed by judicial action elsewhere. We have listened for three days to an argument of great ability and research, and with much confidence retain the opinion we entertained at the outset, that in all the subordinate federal jurisdictions these questions should be deemed at rest until the court of last resort should reverse some of the judgments already rendered. We think the learned counsel for the defendant much underrated the effect which it is our duty to give to judgments pronounced by co-ordinate courts, where precisely the same points are brought [755]*755in litigation before ns. The learning hpon this subject is familiar, but the motives with which we discuss these matters at all will be, subserved by referring to a few of the leading judgments upon this subject here. Those to which we refer have applied the principle, in patent cases, but it is by no means peculiar to them. It is a principle of general jurisprudence, a disregard of which would' produce a conflict of opinion in the federal judiciary, alike unseemly and impolitic.

In Washburn v. Gould [Case No. 17,214], Justice Story, sitting in the Massachusetts circuit, said: “The rule of comity always observed by the justices of the supreme court in cases which admitted of being carried before the whole court was to conform to the opinions of each other, if any had been given.” Justice McLean had previouslygiven a ruling upon the same point in the Ohio circuit in Brooks y. Bicknell [Id. 1,941], and Justice Story therefore said, “although his mind was not without much difficulty on this point, he should rule for the plaintiffs, in accordance with the opinion of Mr. Justice McLean.” In American Wood Paper Co. v. Fiber Disintegrating Co. [Id. 320], before Benedict, J., Eastern district of New York,, there had .been previous suits on the same five patents in other districts, and especially -a suit in the Eastern district of Pennsylvania, which decided the points in issue as to two of the patents. Judge Benedict said, as to these two patents, “The determination of the court in the case referred to furnishes an authority from which I should not feel ■at liberty, had I the inclination, to dissent.” In Goodyear v. Berry [Id. 5,556], Leavitt, J., Southern district of Ohio, a patent had been sustained in several other circuits. Judge Leavitt says: “In so far as principles involving the validity of these patents have been settled by these decisions, they will be regarded as final and authoritative on this court.” In Tighlman v. Mitchell [Id. 14,042], Southern district of New York, Blatchford, J., quotes with approbation our remarks in Tighlman v. Werk [Id. 14,046], Southern district of Ohio, 1868, in which it is said, “Although the record in this case in reference to some views which a superior court may possibly take contains some material additional proofs, still they are not such as to authorize the same court to overrule its former deliberate adjudications, and to disregard the judgments of a co-ordinate one in a case in all respects substantially like it.” In Goodyear Dental Vulcanite Co. v. Root [Id. 5,597], Justice Hunt, sitting in the Northern district of New York, considers as authoritative the previous decisions in Massachusetts on the same patent. To the support of the generality sustained by these judgments it is unnecessary to say that nuns erous citations might be added, all showing that, in the opinion of the most enlightened jurists, we should be guilty of grossly violating well-established judicial usage and propriety should we disregard the adjudications already made in reference to the validity of the patent before us.

The principle which inclines a court to adhere to its own decision of a similar point, although subsequently convinced it was erroneous, though not in all respects applicable here, furnishes a strong analogy, and a reason on which our own actions should be based. See Bam, Leg. Judgm. 203 et seq. It there abundantly appears that the adherence to decisions is by no means confined to those which precede it in. the same tribunal. Those of coordinate courts are equally influential. The queen’s bench, common pleas, • and the exchequer, where there is a common appellate court to review the decisions of each, follow with the utmost respect each other’s adjudications. - -

Upon reasons having much influence here, •appellate courts often follow a series of adjudications made by subordinate tribunals .where they have been acquiesced in, and have become, in some sense, a rule of property. It is not because they are obligatory but from the unfitness of shifting rules. This is by- no means closely applicable here, where judgments are recent and-refer to the individual rights of the complainant. But-many of the evils, it is quite apparent, which this class of judgment seeks to ¿void would be produced should we disregard the rule. In the elaborate treatment of this general subject in the book to which we have referred, both by the English and American authors, it is significant that they make no distinction between prior decisions of the same and coordinate tribunals. It is enough to call for the ’application of the principle that the courts havé the same jurisdiction under the same government to decide the same points that there is a common appellate court finally to adjust the difference between them.

If one system of coordinate courts more than another calls for the application of this general principle it is that of the circuit courts of the United States. .They all have similar special jurisdiction, and are all, in an eminent degree, looked to for all those rules of right and property- created under the federal statutes, and in reference to the subjects coming within the federal constitution. Although divided in jurisdiction geographically, they constitute a single system; and when one court has fully considered and deliberately decided a question, every suggestion, of propriety and fit public action demand it should, be followed until modified by the appellate court. ■ .

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 754, 1 Ban. & A. 5658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodyear-dental-vulcanite-co-v-willis-circtedmi-1874.