Hoskin v. Fisher

125 U.S. 217, 8 S. Ct. 834, 31 L. Ed. 759, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 1928
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 19, 1888
Docket169
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 125 U.S. 217 (Hoskin v. Fisher) 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
Hoskin v. Fisher, 125 U.S. 217, 8 S. Ct. 834, 31 L. Ed. 759, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 1928 (1888).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Blatchford

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in equity, brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of California, by Frank H. Fisher and Joshua Hendy against Richard Hoskin and others, for tho infringement of reissued letters patent No. 8876, granted to Frank II. Fisher, September 2, 1879, on an application filed March 29,1879, for an “improvement in hydraulic mining apparatus,” the original patent, No. 110,222, having been granted to Fisher, December 20, 18.70. This reissue was a second reissue, and it appears that there was a first reissue, No. 5193, dated December 17, 1872, granted on the surrender of the original patent, and that the second reissue was granted on the surrender of the first reissue.

The bill of complaint sets forth the fact of the surrender of the original patent and the granting of the first reissue, and that the first reissued patent'is “ready in court to be produced ” , by the plaintiffs, “ or a duly authenticated copy thereof!” 'The bill also sets forth that the second reissue “was issued for the same invention as that described in the original letters patent.”

There was only one claim in the original patent, as follows: “The swivel-jointed nozzle and .pipes A B D E, combined, as described, with the lever F, working through slotted post/ strap i, lever e, and pawl and racket j 1c, for the purpose specified.”

The second reissue contains three claims, as follows : 1. The swivel-jointed sections A B and ball-and-socket-jointed section D E, combined, as described, with the lever F, work-i ing through slotted posts f strap i, lever C,' and pawT and ratchet^' K, for the purpose set forth. 2. A ball-and-socket joint for connecting the discharge-pipe of a hydraulic mining apparatus with the end of a swivel section, B, substantially *219 as above described. 3. The discharge-pipe E, having a semi-cylindrical or ball-shaped enlargement at its base, in combination with a corresponding cup-shaped .socket, I), on the end of the horizontally-swivelling section B, .substantially as and for the purpose described.”

The claim of the original patent and the first claim of the. second reissue are substantially alike. It is not alleged that the defendants have infringed the first claim of the second reissue, or that their apparatus would have infringed the claim of the original patent.. The contention is that they have infringed claims 2 and 3 of the second reissue.

The answer sets up that the second reissue contains new matter, which was not contained in the original patent, and which describes and claims that of which' Fisher “ was not the inventor; ” -that Fisher did not discover or invent or make any hydraulic machine which machine or combination included either a ball-and-socket joint, or ball-and-socket-join ted sections, or a discharge-pipe having a ball-shaped enlargement at its base; that his original patent did not contain any description of either of those devices, and did not claim them in any combination or otherwise; that all that is said 'in the second reissue about a ball-and-socket-jointed section, and ball-and-socket joints, and a discharge-pipe with a ball-shaped enlargement at its base, is new matter, which Avas not contained in the original patent,'and .was inserted in the second reissue by Fisher fraudulently and for the sake of deceiving and misleading the public, he Avell knowing that no part of it Avas his invention, and also lmoAving that it Avas not contained in the original patent; and that, by reason of such fraudulent insertion of such neAV matter, the second reissue is void.

Issue Avas joined and proofs Avere taken on both sides, and, on the 17th of March, 18S2, the case having been heard by the Circuit Judge, an interlocutory decree Avas entered in favor of the plaintiffs, adjudging the second- reissue to be ,valid, and that the defendants had infringed upon the 2d and 3d claims of it, and awarding a decree to the plaintiffs' for profits and damages, and ordering a reference to a master to ascertain them, and a perpetual injunction in regard to the *220 second and third claims. Afterward, a rehearing was ordered by 'the Circuit Judge, to be had upon the same testimony. The rehearing was had before the Circuit Justice and .the Circuit Judge, and, on the 4th of September, 1882, an interlocutory decree was entered in the same terms as the first interlocutory decree. On the report of the master, á final decree was entered, March 7, 1884, awarding to the plaintiffs a sum of money as profits derived by the defendants from the infringement.

It is to.be gathered from the record that Fisher had at some timé brought a suit against one or both of the present defendants named Craig, for the infringement of the first reissue, and at the commencement of the taking of evidence on the part of the plaintiffs in the present suit, the. following stipulation is found entered on the record: “It is stipulated and agreed by and between the counsel for the respective parties herein, that the evidence taken and on file in this court in the case of Fisher v. Craig, number 1144, shall be considered in evidence in this case, reserving, however, to each party the right to introduce such additional evidence as they may desire. It is further agreed, that, in case any exhibits introduced in evidence in said case of Fisher v. Craig shall be missing from the files, the same may be supplied, each party supplying his own exhibits.” It does not appear by the record, to what extent the evidence taken and on file in the same court in the case of Fisher v. Craig, thus referred to, was used on the hearing of the present case. There is found in the record a paper marked “Exhibit No. 5,” being a certified copy from the Patent Office, certified March 8, 1873, of the original patent granted to Fisher, with its specification and drawings. There is no separate memorandum in the record of the introduction of this original patent in evidence; but, as it is found in the record, under a certificate of the clerk of the Circuit Court that it is a part of the record and of the proceedings in the cause, we must accept it as such, and, if necessary, assume it to have been a part of the evidence taken and on file in the case of Fisher v. Craig, and covered by the stipulation above referred to. That stipulation was to the effect that the evi *221 dence in Fisher v. Craig should “be considered in evidence in this case.”

The first reissue is not found in the record.' The plaintiffs do not appear to have put it in evidence, although the bill avers that it is ready in court to be produced by them, or a duly authenticated copy of it. Nor does it appear that the defendants put it' in evidence, although, as the suit of Fisher v. Craig was founded upon it, it is to be inferred that it must have been part of the evidence taken and on file in that case, and which, by the stipulation, was to be considered in evidence in this case. Nevertheless, neither party has brought it before us.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 U.S. 217, 8 S. Ct. 834, 31 L. Ed. 759, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 1928, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoskin-v-fisher-scotus-1888.