Hoffheins v. Brandt

12 F. Cas. 290, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 218
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland
DecidedJuly 15, 1867
StatusPublished

This text of 12 F. Cas. 290 (Hoffheins v. Brandt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoffheins v. Brandt, 12 F. Cas. 290, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 218 (circtdmd 1867).

Opinion

GILES, District Judge.

This case presents some interesting questions. They have been argued with that ability which is universally recognized as belonging to the counsel engaged in the cause; and I have tried to do justice to the arguments by a patient review of the authorities to which I was referred, and by a thorough examination of the evidence. The suggestion was made, at the commencement of the hearing, that possibly the case ought to go to a jury, as it involved the question of the originality and usefulness of the invention; but an examination of the pleadings and evidence showed, that the case had been prepared to be submitted, on final argument, here, for trial; and the grant of jurisdiction, by the act of 1836 [5 Stat. 117], seems to the court to be as full in equity a» at law. There at one time prevailed, in the circuit courts of the United States, the idea [291]*291that the court, as a court of equity, would interfere in aid of a patentee only where his patent was sanctioned by general acquiescence for many years, or had been maintained at law, by the verdict of a jury, who had passed upon the novelty and utility of the invention, when called in question. But I think that the current of decisions of the last few years has been otherwise; and that courts of several of the circuits have held (and these decisions, too, have been made by the presiding judges of those circuits, who are members of the supreme court) that the grant of jurisdiction is as full in equity as it is at law. To sustain that view, I refer to Allen v. Blunt [Case No. 215]; Nevins v. Johnson [Id. 10,136]; Sanders v. Logan [Id. 12.293].

I proceed, then, to the discussion of the case at bar. This is a bill filed on the equity side of the circuit court of the United States for the district of Maryland, praying an injunction to restrain the infringement of the •complainants’ patent for a horse-rake, and asking for an account. I would here incidentally remark, that while the jurisdiction is full and ample, that remedy only can be .granted in equity which a court of equity is competent to give. A party can sue at law for damages for an infringement, but in •equity he can obtain no such damages. His right may be maintained and protected for the future, and an account may be required. I recite the bill as it should have been framed. A slight mistake occurs in its statements. I read it as corrected by the counsel .at bar. It states that:

“Harvey W. Sabin, who was at the time the original and first inventor of a new and useful improvement in horse-rakes, and a citizen of the United States, made application, in writing, to the commissioner of patents of the United States for letters patent for said improvement, and having then and there.after fully complied with all the requisitions of the acts of congress in such ease made and provided, did thereupon obtain letters patent of the United States in due form of law, bearing date on the third day of December, in the year 1850, granting to the said Harvey W. Sabin, his heirs, administrators, or assigns, the full and exclusive right .and liberty of making, constructing, using, .and vending to others to be used, the said improvement in horse-rakes, for the term of fourteen years from the said third day of December, in the year 1850. That the said Harvey W. Sabin having departed this life, letters testamentary were duly granted to ■Calesta E. Sabin, by the prothonotary of Niagara county, in the state of New York; and that the term of fourteen years being about to expire, the said Calesta E. Sabin, ad-ministratrix as aforesaid, made application to the commissioner of patents to have the ■said letters patent extended for the further term of seven years; and the said Calesta E. .Sabin having brought herself within the scope of the provisions of the act of congress authorizing the extension of letters patent, and complied with all the requisitions of the acts aforesaid, the said letters patent were extended by the said commissioner of patents seven years from December 3, 1854.’' That subsequently to said extension:. “The said Calesta E. Sabin, by an assignment duly executed and recorded, conveyed all the interest of the said Harvey W. Sabin, his heirs, administrators, or assigns, in the said letters patent, extended as aforesaid, to Charles Mason, Robert W. Fenwick, and De Witt C. Lawrence, of the city of Washington.” The bill further states: “That the said assignees having surrendered the said letters patent, the same were canceled and new letters were ordered to be issued to the said assignees on four amended specifications, which were accordingly issued, bearing date on the twenty-eighth day of March in the year 1865, and numbered, respectively, Nos. 1912, 1913, 1914, and No. 1915, as will appear by reference to copies of the said reissues duly authenticated. * * * That the said Mason, Fen-wick & Lawrence, did, on the nineteenth day of May, 1805, by an instrument duly recorded, assign to” the complainants “all their right, title, and interest in and to the letters patent, so as aforesaid reissued on four amended specifications, by which said assignment” the complainants “became and now are entitled to all benefit and advantage from said letters patent, the extension and reissues aforesaid. That ever since the said nineteenth day of May aforesaid, the defendant, well knowing the premises, and fully aware of the rights of” the complainants, “but contriving to injure them and deprive them of the benefits and advantages which they otherwise would have derived, and without the license of” the complainants, “and wholly without any authority whatsoever, has unlawfully made, constructed, and used, as well as vended to others to be used, the new and useful improvements in those rakes, which are particularly specified and described in reissues No. 1914 and No. 1915, aforesaid. * * * That the defendant continues to manufacture and sell said rakes, though warned and requested to desist therefrom.” And the complainants therefore pray for an account, and a perpetual injunction, etc.

The answer of George W. Brandt sets up several defenses. First and principally, fraud in procuring the extension of said letters patent, and in surrendering the same and obtaining the four reissued patents for the invention made, or alleged to be made, by Harvey W. Sabin. The circumstances on which this charge of fraud is based are set forth in the answer as follows:

“That said Messrs. Mason, Fenwick & Lawrence are a firm who have been engaged for some years in business in the city of Washington, in the District of Columbia, as solicitors for patents, and in practice generally, as patent lawyers; and that the re[292]*292spondent having occasion for legal advice in relation to his rights and interest, as assignee of a certain patent previously granted to one Randall Pratt, consulted and retained said firm as his legal advisers in that behalf; and that the relation of attorney and client was thus created between said Messrs. Mason, Fenwick & Lawrence and the respondent, and said relation was subsisting at the time of the alleged granting of letters of administration on the estate of the said Harvey W. Sabin, and at the alleged assignment to the said Messrs. Mason, Fenwick & Lawrence, and at the time of the alleged surrender of the patent so granted to the said Harvey W. Sabin, and at the time of the said reissues, marked as stated in said bill, No. 1912, No. 1913, No. 1914, and No. 1915.

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Bluebook (online)
12 F. Cas. 290, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffheins-v-brandt-circtdmd-1867.