Iawes v. Antisbel

11 F. Cas. 856, 2 Ban. & A. 10
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan
DecidedFebruary 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 F. Cas. 856 (Iawes v. Antisbel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iawes v. Antisbel, 11 F. Cas. 856, 2 Ban. & A. 10 (circtedmi 1875).

Opinion

LONGYEAR, District Judge.

The patent carries with it a presumption of novelty of the thing patented, and the burden of rebut[857]*857-ting that presumption is upon the defendant. In order to defeat the patent on the ground of want of novelty, the proof of prior use or previous knowledge must be such as to establish the fact clearly and satisfactorily, and beyond a reasonable dpubt. Where the proofs are contradictory, mere preponderance is not sufficient to sustain the allegation. The preponderance in such case must be such as to remove all reasonable doubt.

In Wood v. Cleveland Rolling Hill Co. [Case No. 17,941], Mr. Justice Swayne said: “When the defence is made, it is the duty of courts and juries to give it effect. But such testimony should be weighed with care, and the defence allowed to prevail only when the evidence is such as to leave no room for a reasonable doubt upon the subject.”

In Parham v. American Button Hole, etc., Co. [Case No. 10,713], heard before Mr. Justice Strong and Circuit Judge MeKennan, the latter, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “The evidence must establish clearly the priority of a completed and useful machine over the complainant’s, or it is unavailing — to doubt upon this point is to resolve it in the negative.”

In Sayles v. Chicago & N. W. Ry. Co. [Case No. 12,415], Drummond, J., in a case nicely balanced on the evidence sustained the patent. In Crouch v. Speer [Id. 3,438], Nixon, T., held that the defendant not only assumed the burden of proof of his allegation of .want of novelty, but that his undertaking was to show affirmatively prior knowledge and use under such circumstances as to give the public the right of a continued use as against the patentee, and that he fails to do this when his evidence is frequently contradicted, and is inconsistent with itself. These doctrines I believe to be well grounded In principle as well as established by repeated and uniform adjudications.

The invention in question is what is commonly known as the “Advertising Hotel Register,” the book being constructed so as ro have inserted advertisements at the top and bottom, and on the margin of each page, with a blank space for the registering of names of guests, or on each alternate page, leaving the opposite page blank for registering of such names, or on both pages of each alternate leaf, such leaf, being sometimes made óf bibulous or blotting paper.

The proofs showed that the complainant perfected his invention and put it into practical use, as early as in May, 1S66, and it was to that date the proofs as to prior use and previous knowledge related.

No advertising hotel register book purporting to antedate complainant’s invention was put in evidence. Such a book, duly verified, would be the best evidence possible. Each page would be an intelligent speaking unimpeachable witness to its own chronology, and the book itself the best evidence of the date of its use. The case is left to stand exclusively upon the recollections of witnesses, and at a distance in'time from eight to twenty years, and unaided in any single instance by any contemporaneous memorandum or writing whatever. I shall recur to this peculiar aspect of the case in another part of this opinion.

The places where, and the persons by whom, such prior use and previous knowledge are alleged to have taken place and to have existed, and as to which proofs have been made, will be taken up in the order in which they were alleged in the amended answer.

1. Prior use in the Exchange Hotel, at Stur-gis, in the state of Michigan, by E. W. Pen-dleton. Pendleton, with five others, testifies to the use of an advertising register in the hotel named, prior to May, 1866, viz., in 1864 and 1865, and nine witnesses testify to the contrary. That registers of some kind were used in that hotel during the years of 1864 and 1865, and that advertising registers were used in it after May 1866, the testimony on both sides is entirely agreed. The vital question is whether the registers used in 1864 and 1865 were advertising registers, or, what is the same thing, whether the conceded use of advertising registers commenced in that hotel before May, 1866. As to this question the testimony is in direct and irreconcilable conflict. The testimony was taken at a distance of time of from eight to ten years. The witnesses on both sides testify from memory alone, unaided by any memorandum or writing whatever of the fact itself or of concurrent facts. The uncertainty of memory as to dates under such circumstances is well understood; and where, as in this case, the event in question was not one calculated to fix itself in the memory of the persons called to testify, except Pendleton, on account of any interest it was to them, and those persons have equal means of knowledge, are of equal credibility, and apparently of equally sound memory, and they positively disagree, it may well be said in a case like the present that prior use is not made out in the clear and satisfactory manner requisite, as we have seen, in such cases.

Again, Pendleton was subpoenaed by complainant to produce all the hotel registers used in that hotel during the period in question. In response he produced a plain register commencing in April, 1861, and ending April 1, 1864, and also a portion of another, which he testified commenced, according to his best impression, December 20, 1866, and ended in July 1867; but for the period between April, 1864, and December, 1866, he produced no register of any kind; and of the register which he says he thinks, it is his impression, commenced December 20, 1866, there is, according to his judgment, one third missing. Now these are certainly very suspicious circumstances, especially in view of the fact, as appears by his testimony, that he was a defendant in one of the numerous suits then pending, in behalf of this same com[858]*858plainant, for an infringement of the patent here in question. It is true, he attempts, to explain the absence of the register, which he says he used (and which he says was an advertising register) during the period between the first register produced and the mutilated one, April 1, 1864, to December 20, 1866; but his explanations appear to the court to be mere guess-work, and are far from satisfactory. He speaks of it having been given to a boy, or, perhaps used up in the house to clean lamps with, but nothing with that degree of certainty requisite in such cases. And as to the missing portion of the register ending July, 1867, he is still more indefinite and unsatisfactory, and in fact offers no explanation whatever which can be considered as such in a case like the present. The importance of requiring strict proof that there was used in that hotel a register between the two produced, becomes the more apparent when we consider that the hiatus from April 1, 1864, the close of the register he does produce, to December 20, 1866, when he thinks the one produced (the mutilated one) commenced, is only two years and a little over seven months, and the length of the time the latter register continued after the latter date is only about six months, making in all just about three years, which is just the length of time the first register produced lasted, and he says they were just about of equal size, thus affording a strong presumption that if the missing portion of the mutilated register had been produced it would have covered the entire time it is pretended an advertising register was used.

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Related

McDonald v. Whitney
24 F. 600 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 F. Cas. 856, 2 Ban. & A. 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iawes-v-antisbel-circtedmi-1875.