Hogg v. Emerson

47 U.S. 437, 12 L. Ed. 505, 6 How. 437, 1848 U.S. LEXIS 320
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 11, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 47 U.S. 437 (Hogg v. Emerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hogg v. Emerson, 47 U.S. 437, 12 L. Ed. 505, 6 How. 437, 1848 U.S. LEXIS 320 (1848).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WOODBURY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error brought under some peculiarities which are first to be noticed..

. It comes here by virtue of the 17th section of the general* patent law of July 4th, 1836. (A Statutes at Large, 124.)

That section grants a writ of error- from decisions in actions on patents, as in ordinary cases, and then adds the privilege of it “in all other cases in which the court shall deem it reasonable to allow the same.” This was doubtless intended to reach suits where the amount in 'dispute was less than $ 2,000, on ae-. count of the importance of the points sometimes raised, and the convenience of having the decisions oh patents uniform, by being finally settled, when doubtful, by. one tribunal, such as the Supreme Court.

The judges below, in - this case, deemed it reasonable, that only a certain portion of the questions raised at the trial, concerning the validity of the patent; should come here, and the record was made up accordingly.

But -the appellants contend for their right to bring here all the questions which arose in the cáse, and this is a preliminary point to be settled before going into the merits. The present is believed to be the first writ of the kind, which has given occasion for settling the construction of any part, of the above provision; and therefore, without the aid of precedent, after due consideration of the words and design of the statute, we have come to the conclusion, that the position of the plaintiffs in error, in this respect, is the correct one, and that when a court below deem it “ reasonable ” to allow a writ of error at all,-under the discretion vested in them by this special provision, it must be on the whole case.

*478 The word “reasonable” applies to the “eases,” rather than to any discrimination between the different points in the cases.

It may be very proper for the court below to examine those points separately and with care, and if most of them present questions of. common law only, and not of the construction of the patent acts, and others present questions under those acts which seem very clearly settled or trifling in their character, hot to grant the writ of error at all. It might, then, well be regarded as not “ reasonable ” for such questions, in a controversy too small in amount to make the writ a matter of right to persons, if standing on an equal footing with other suitors. But we think, from the particular words used rather than otherwise, that the act intended, if the court allowed the writ as reasonable ” at all, it must be for the whole case, or, in other words, must bring up the whole -for consideration.

We shall, therefore, proceed to eximine all the questions made at the trial, which it is supposed are relied on, and are now before us on the original writ and a certiorari issued since.

Looking to the declaration, the action is for á violation of a patent for an .“ improvement in the steam-engine, and in the mode of propelling therewith either vessels on the water or carriages on the land.”

The evidence. offered at the trial was a patent for “ a new and useful improvement in the steam-engine,” “ a description whereof is given in the words of the said John B. Emerson himself, in. the schedule hereto annexed, and is made a part of these presents.”

In the schedule annexed is described fully what he says he invented, viz., — “certain improvements in the steam-engine, and in the mode of propelling therewith either vessels on the water or carriages on the land.”

The first question arising on this statement is, whether the evidence proves Such a patent as is set out in the writ to have been violated by the respondents.

If the patent is to be ascertained from the letters alone, or rather from what is sometimes called their title or heading, without reference, to the schedule annexed, .the evidence is undoubtedly defective, as the writ speaks of a patent for an “ improvement, in the steam-engine and in the mode of propelling ” vessels, &c., therewith, — while the letters themselves, in their title Or heading, speak only of a patent for “ a new and useful improvement in the steam-engine.” But the schedule annexed and referred td for further description, after “ improvement in the steam-engine,” adds, and in the mode of propelling therewith ” vessels, &c.

It can. hardly be doubted, therefore, that the improvement *479 referred to in the writ and in. the letters-patent, with the.schedule V>r specification.'annexed, was in truth one and the same.

Coupling the two last together, they constitute- the very thing described in the writ. But whether they can properly be so united here, and the effect of it to remove the difficulty, have been questioned, and must therefore be further examined; We are apt to be misled, in this country, by the laws and forms bearing on this point in England being so different in some respects, from what exist here.

There the patent is first, issued, and contains no reference to the specification, except a stipulation that one shall, in the re-: quired time, be filed, giving a more minute description of the matter patented. (Webster on Pat. 5, 88; Godson on Pat. 6, App.) It need not be filed under two to four months, in the discretion of the proper officer: (Godson on Pat. 176.)

Under these circumstances* it will be seen that the patent, going out aloné there, must in its title or heading be fuller than here, where it goes out with the minute specification. But even there it may afterwards be aided, and its matter be made more clear, by what the specification contains. They are, says Godson on Pat. 108, “connected together,” and “ one may be looked at to understand the other.” See also 2 Hen. Bl. 478; 1 Webst. Pat. R. 117 ; 8 D. & E. 95.

There, however, it will not answer to allow the specification, -filed separately and long after, to be resorted to for supplying any entire omission in the patent; else something .may be. thus inserted afterwards which had never been previously examined by the proper officers, and which, if it had been submitted to them in the patent and examined, might have prevented the allowance of it, and which the world is not aware of, seeing only, the letters-patent without the specification, and without any reference whatever to its contents. 3 Brod. & Bingh. 5.

The whole facts and law, however, are different here. This patent issued March 8th, 1834, and is therefore to be tested by the act of-Congress then in force, which passed February. 21st, 1793. (1 Statutes at Large, 318.)

■in the third section of that act it is expressly, provided, “ that every inventor, before he can receive a patent*” “ shall deliver . a written description of his invention,” &c.thus giving priority very properly to the specification rather than the patent.

'This change from the English practice existed in the first patent law, passed April 10th, 1790 (1 Statutes at Large, 109), and is retained in the last act. of Congress on this subject, passed July 4th, 1836 (5 Statutes at Large, 119).

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Bluebook (online)
47 U.S. 437, 12 L. Ed. 505, 6 How. 437, 1848 U.S. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogg-v-emerson-scotus-1848.