Goodyear v. Central R. Co.

10 F. Cas. 664, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 626
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 F. Cas. 664 (Goodyear v. Central R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodyear v. Central R. Co., 10 F. Cas. 664, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 626 (circtdnj 1853).

Opinion

GRIER, Circuit Justice.

It will not be necessary to give an abstract of the several averments of the bill, and answer, in order to a correct application of the question involved in the present motion. The possession under Goodyear’s patent is of sufficient duration and exclusiveness to be the foundation of an interlocutory injunction, even if the verdict and judgment in the suit against the agents of Day were not in the case. There is no allegation or pretense that those proceedings were collusive; and it can not be said to detract from the moral or legal effect of a verdict and judgment, that the plaintiff made so plain a case that the defendant felt compelled to abandon his defense, and plead guilty.

The defendants do not deny that they use car springs made of the substance called “vulcanized rubber,” nor aver that such rubber was manufactured by the patentee, or any licensee under him; but they rely upon the three following objections, viz: 1. That these are not proper parties to the bill. 2. That the rubber used in the car springs was made by a process in which steam is the chief agent; and is therefore no infringement of the complainants’ patent 3. That the complainants’ patent is for a process of curing rubber, and not for the product or manufacture; and consequently that the use of the product is no infringement of the patent.

1st. The same objection as to parties has heretofore been taken in this court, and overruled. The assignments to Dorr and Judson, of certain undivided interests, or shares in the patent, appear at first to contain language apt and sufficient to transfer the legal title; but a further examination of the instrument shows that the intention of the parties is only to confer on them an interest in the profits. The whole power of disposal, and consequently the whole legal title is in Goodyear. The New England Car Spring Company, who have the sole right of using this substance for the manufacture of car springs, are the party in interest. Their right is wholly equitable, as their license, though exclusive, does not amount to a legal transfer of a several title to a portion of the patent The right, franchise, or monopoly granted by a patentee, is by statute made divisible in the category of its locality only. The owner of the legal title to the patent, and the party equitably entitled to the damages, as the person immediately injured by the infringement, being parties to the bill, it can not be successfully objected to for want of proper parties.

2nd. Where the question of infringement is one that admits of doubt, or where the facts are in dispute, the court will not decide it summarily, on the motion for a preliminary or interlocutory injunction. In this case, the defendants are amply able to re-; spond in damages, and an injunction is not necessary on the ground of any irreparable injury to the complainant, likely to occur before a final decree. But the question as now stated, admits the facts; and its solution will depend on the construction of the patent It is, therefore, as fully before us as it can be on final hearing; and the parties have, I presume, no desire to protract litigation. In the case of Goodyear v. Day [Case No. 5,569], the specific proposition was not be, fore the court, and was, therefore, not decided. But assuming the general doctrines asserted by the court in that case to be correct, there will be little difficulty in the de5 cisión of this question. It requires only the specification of complainants’ patent, in order to discover whether the process admitted to have been used in manufacturing the vulcanized rubber used by defendants is substantially the same with that described in the patent, “and to see whether in reality, in substance and effect, the defendants have availed themselves of plaintiff’s invention, in order to make that fabric or manufacture;” or whether it is not the mere following out the invention or discovery of the plaintiff, with some variation of the means.

Before plaintiff’s discovery, many attempts had been made to use the substance called caoutchouc, or India rubber, in the manufacture of certain goods, in order to have the benefits of its qualities of elasticity and impenetrability by water, imparted to certain fabrics. These had all failed in a great measure because this substance became soft and clammy by heat, and stiff and hard by cold. It was then deemed of great importance to discover some method, if possible, by which these bad qualities might be removed, and its valuable ones retained. That this substance was capable of such a change in its qualities was a fact which science could not demonstrate “a priori,” much less point-out the means of effecting it. Its discovery must necessarily be empirical, or the result of patient experiment, and judicious observation of phenomena.

That sulphur and some metallic oxydes could be used beneficially in drying the fabric, had been discovered; but no one had ever succeeded in producing a compound or [667]*667substance having all the good qualities of caoutchouc, but unaffected by changes of temperature. The patience, energy, and perseverance of Mr. Goodyear, at length succeeded in mating the discovery, that, by exposing this substance in combination with sulphur and some metallic oxydes (of which white lead was found to be the best), to a high degree of heat, for a certain length of time, the result so much desired could be obtained. The fabric, product, or manufacture which was the result of this process, was found to be almost indestructible; its elasticity under pressure was vastly increased; heat would not soften it, nor cold harden it, nor water penetrate it It was a great and useful discovery, rather than an invention. It was not a mere composition of known substances, like a patent medicine; nor the production of a known result, substance, or fabric, by newly-discovered means or process. We know substance only by its qualities.

The fabric or product having qualities which can not be found combined in any other substance, may be called a new substance. But whether we call it a fabric or a manufacture, substance, or product, is immaterial. It is a new product, the result oi a new process discovered by the plaintiff. What forms the essence or substance of this discovery ? What is the sine qua non, or that without which this composition of matter can not be produced? The specification says it is the application of a high degree of heat —between 212° and 350° of Fahrenheit. You may vary the proportions of sulphur, or. change the metallic oxydes, and succeed more or less, if the exposure to heat between these points be continued for a sufficient length .of time. But no mere changes in the combined materials will have a beneficial effect without this application of a high degree of artificial heat. Now it must be abundantly evident to the most simple apprehension, that any person having the benefit of plaintiff’s discoveries, starting from the platform erected by him, may possibly vary - the process and obtain the same result He may use salts of zinc for salts of lead; arsenic or magnesia for sulphur; or heat by steam instead of air; and many other variations of the relative proportions of the materials might be discovered to be equal to those patented.

Yet it must be equally evident that such person is pirating the plaintiff’s invention. Suppose that before Goodyear’s discovery, a manufacturer had taken to a chemist’s laboratory some India rubber, sulphur, and white lead, and asked him to make him a compound having the qualities now exhibited by the substance known as “vulcanized rubber.” He would have received an answer denying the possibility of making such a compound by any process known to scientific men.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 664, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodyear-v-central-r-co-circtdnj-1853.