Goodyear v. Mullee

10 F. Cas. 701, 5 Blatchf. 429, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 209, 1867 U.S. App. LEXIS 750

This text of 10 F. Cas. 701 (Goodyear v. Mullee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodyear v. Mullee, 10 F. Cas. 701, 5 Blatchf. 429, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 209, 1867 U.S. App. LEXIS 750 (circtsdny 1867).

Opinion

BLATCHFORD, District Judge.

Both of the defendants have been infringing these patents for several years, at three places in Pennsylvania, and at New York City, and the various establishments in which they have been working have been broken up by the process of the courts. All the establishments in which Miller has worked since 1862 have been factories engaged in infringing these patents. They are skilful workmen, fully acquainted with the process and the article described in the Goodyear patents. Mullee learned the business of making combs in the factory of the plaintiff [Conrad) Poppen-husen. On the 22d of December, 1862, the defendants, having been engaged in infringing these patents, and having thus rendered themselves liable to suit therefor, entered into a written agreement with the plaintiff Pop-penhusen, who is the sole licensee, under the patents, for the manufacture and sale of combs and other articles, which agreement, after reciting that Mullee and Miller had rendered themselves liable to a suit for their infringement of the patents, and that it was deemed expedient by the parties that a settlement should be made to prevent all future legal proceedings, contained the following provisions: (1) Mullee and Miller admitted the validity of the patents, and agreed that they would never, during the existence of the patents, or of any extension of them, “engage, either directly or indirectly, or in any way, shape or manner, in the manufacture of any article, of any kind, made of what is known as vulcanite', or the hard compound of India rubber or other vulcanizable gums, or in the sale of the same, and will not aid, assist or abet any one who is engaged, or may hereafter engage, in the manufacture or sale of such articles;” (2) Poppenhusen released Mul-lee and Miller from all damages which he had sustained by reason of their infringements of the patents, and agreed that he would never at any time collect such damages from them. Notwithstanding this agreement, the defendants went on .persistently infringing the patents, by making India rubber combs in violation of them. For such an infringement by them this suit was brought, which resulted in the injunction, the alleged violation of which is complained of. These facts are referred to, for the purpose of showing how little favor or consideration the defendants are entitled to, and how improbable it is, that, if they have in fact violated the injunction, they have done so innocently and unwittingly.

In regard to Mullee, it appears, that since the injunction was served upon him, he has made and sold combs composed of India rubber and sulphur vulcanized by a high degree of artificial heat, and having the properties possessed by the article described in the Goodyear patents. These combs he made at Ches-terville. in Pennsylvania, and brought to New York as samples to obtain orders, where some of them were sold by his agent, from whom he received the pay therefor. The only de-fence set up by Mullee, in excuse for this act, is, that, in the combs in question, the India rubber and sulphur are combined in the proportion of eighteen ounces of sulphur to sixteen ounces of India rubber, and that the combs are made by a process used for combining the India rubber with the sulphur, whereby it is possible to combine as much as twenty-two ounces of sulphur with sixteen ounces of India rubber, and then vulcanize the 'compound by a high degree of artificial heat, so as to produce a useful article of hard India rubber. It is alleged that this process and the article resulting are not covered by the Goodyear patents, and that, therefore, Mullee, in making the combs in question, has not been guilty either of violating the injunction or of infringing the patents. It is important, therefore, to inquire as to what is covered by these patents.

Nelson Goodyear, in December, 1849, fiied in the patent office a caveat, containing a description of the invention for which he applied for a patent in December, 1850, and for which he obtained the patent on the Oth of May, 1851. It was reissued in two parts on the 18th of May, 1858. In the caveat he states, that his “invention or discovery consists in the production, by means of a composition of India rubber and sulphur subjected to intense heat, of a new and useful substance, hitherto unknown, resembling, in hardness, bone or horn, but more extensively applicable, and less costly in use, than either of those substances;” that “the main and indispensable ingredients of the composition are India rubber, or caoutchouc, and sul-phur;” that of these he takes “certain proportions, say equal parts by weight of each,” and mixes them “thoroughly in any convenient manner;” that “these proportions may, however, be considerably varied, without changing materially the product;” that “no precise rule of proportions can be given, or definite limits assigned, when sulphur alone is combined with rubber;” and that “a much less quantity of sulphur than four onces to a pound of rubber wotfid be insuffl. cient in any case.” In the patent of May, 1851, after describing the process of compounding the India rubber and sulphur and combining with them other ingredients, he states as follows: “The proportions specified of both these compounds may be considerably varied, without materially changing the result, but in no case will a much, less quantity of sulphur than four ounces to every pound of caoutchouc be sufficient, in which respect, particularly, my compounds differ very essentially from every other composi[703]*703tion of India rubber in use, as, in all other rubber ■ compositions, the least quantity of sulphur that will suffice to cure the article, is aimed at”

The patents of May, 1S58, are a division into two reissues, one, No. 556, for the process, and the other, No. 557, for the product No. 556 states, that the improvement covered by that patent “consists in thoroughly mixing India rubber, or other vulcanizable gum, with sulphur, whether with or without auxiliary ingredients, in the proportion of about four ounces to a pound of sulphur to a pound of the gum, and then subjecting the same to a high degree of artificial heat, as in the said vulcanizing process of Charles Goodyear, un. til the compound shall have acquired the re^ quired hard and tough property - found, in various- degrees,- in ivory, bone, tortoise shell and horn, and the spring-like property, under flexure, found in whalebone.” No. 557 states, that the invention covered by that patent “consists in the production of a new manufacture or artificial substance haying the hard and tough properties- found, in various degrees, in ivory, bone, tortoise shell and horn, and the spring-like property, under flexure, of whalebone, and which, in the process of manufacture, is plastic, so that it can be moulded or modelled with facility into any desired shape, and which, when completed, may be wrought and polished to as high a degree as any of the native substances for which it is a substitute, which said manufacture or artificial substance is produced by the admixture of Indian rubber, or other vulcan-izable gums, and sulphur, in the proportions of one pound of the gum to about from four ounces to a pound of sulphur, whether alone or with other substances, and then subjected to a high degree of heat, which should not be less than from 260° to 275° Fahrenheit's scale, during a period of six or more horns, or until the required degree of hardness has been obtained.” No. 556 and No.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 701, 5 Blatchf. 429, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 209, 1867 U.S. App. LEXIS 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodyear-v-mullee-circtsdny-1867.