In re Barratt's Appeal

14 App. D.C. 255, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3559
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedFebruary 9, 1899
DocketNo. 114
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 14 App. D.C. 255 (In re Barratt's Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Barratt's Appeal, 14 App. D.C. 255, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3559 (D.C. Cir. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Morris

delivered the opinion of the Court:

On February 28, 1896, the present applicant, William T. Barratt, filed an application in the Patent Office for letters patent for a certain alleged invention claimed to have been made by him in needle cylinders for knitting machines. [256]*256His claims were rejected by each, and all the tribunals of the Patent Office, and upon appeal by Barratt to this court the decision of the Commissioner of Patents adverse to the applicant was affirmed. In its opinion in the case this court said:

“There is no broad line of demarcation between the exercise of mechanical ingenuity and that of the inventive faculty, and it is not always easy to tell where the one begins and the other ends. In the meager record of the case before us that difficulty is enhanced by the fact that very much is left for us to conjecture as to the condition of the art to which this alleged invention appertains at the time when the improvement was devised, and the diagrams introduced into the record do not remove the difficulty. Without entering into details we think that, while the appellant’s device commends itself to our favorable consideration, and may upon a judicial investigation wherein proof is more fully supplied and the condition of the art more clearly set forth, be found entitled to the merit of patentable novelty, we should hesitate in this ex parte proceeding to reverse the concurrent decisions of all the tribunals of the Patent Office, which we think should not be done except in a very clear case. At most there is but a suspicion that the appellant’s device may rise to the dignity of invention. Upon full proof in a court of equity that suspicion may possibly become certainty. We have not now the data before us that would warrant us in so regarding it in this proceeding.” 11 App. D. C. 177.

Thereupon the applicant, instead of resorting to a bill in equity, as he was authorized by law to do, filed a new application in the Patent Office for the same subject matter that had been set forth in his previous application, but with more full and ample specifications and drawings, a more thorough showing of the prior condition of the art, and evidence bearing on the patentability of the alleged invention. And it is this second application that is now before us upon appeal from the Commissioner of Patents, after rejection by all the [257]*257tribunals of the Patent Office, mainly upon the ground that by the former decision of this court the matter was res adjudicatei., It may be added, also, that one of the board of examiners who agreed with his associates in regard to the ground on which they rested their decision, filed a concurrent op'nion in which he held that the alleged invention disclosed no patentable novelty. The Commissioner of Patents, who rendered two opinions in the case, held in the first of them that the matter was res adjudicata; and then, upon a motion for rehearing, at the request of the applicant, he also passed upon the question of the patentability of the alleged invention, in which he affirmed the theory of the want of patentable novelty. From his decision the case now comes to us on appeal.

While the rules that govern the finality and conclusiveness of adjudications at the common law do not apply, in the strict sense, to administrative or quasi-judicial action in the Executive Departments of Government, yet in administrative action, as well as in judicial proceeding, it is both expedient and necessary that there should be an end of controversy. Sometimes, the element of finality is inherent in the nature of the action taken; as, for example, when letters patent have been granted, they may not be recalled, and the rights of the parties holding them again investigated. Where rights have become vested as the result of legitimate executive action, such action is necessarily final, and it is not competent thereafter for executive action to divest them, either by way of a review of the proceedings or by any new proceedings instituted with that view. Especially is this principle applicable to the proceedings of the Patent Office, which are so nearly akin to judicial proceedings as to be most appropriately designated as quasi-judicial. In fact, it is only by regarding these proceedings as substantially judicial that we can sustain the validity of the legislation which authorizes appeals to this court from the decisions of the Commissioner of Patents.

[258]*258When in a court of law there has been one investigation and thereupon one adjudication, such action becomes final, and can only be reviewed, if at all, by way of appeal. No subsequent suit for the same subject matter and between the same parties can be sustained. What good ground is there for any different course of procedure in the Patent Office? When an application for a patent has been considered and allowed, and the patent has been issued, there can be no ■question whatever of the finality of such action. The right of the patentee can never thereafter be questioned in the Patent Office, except to the limited extent specially authorized in cases of interference. When, on the other hand, an application for a patent is after due -examination rejected, and fmalty determined against the applicant after exhaustion of the manifold right of appeal allowed to him by the great liberality of the patent laws, why should a second application be allowed or entertained? Is there any reason why the determination of the matter should not be regarded as conclusive? If a second application could be regarded as proper, why not ten or twenty successive applications? Where are the applications to stop, and what would become of the public business, if it were in the power of one person to obstruct the operations of the Patent Office by repeated- and persistent applications? These questions answer themselves. Renewed applications are authorized by the patent law under special circumstances in the place of abandoned and forfeited applications; but these are analogous to proceedings at common law to reinstate cases that have been dismissed on technical grounds. But there is no provision of law for a second application, where a previous application has been adjudicated and a patent denied. The absence of such a provision is sufficient evidence that the right to have a second application considered after refusal of a patent upon a previous application does not exist, especially when the fact is recalled that the law in its very great liberality [259]*259provides still another method for the applicant to establish, his claim by tbe way of a bill in equity.

The force of this position is appreciated by counsel for the applicant, who seeks to sustain the course here pursued upon the theory that the new application is substantially different from tbe previous one, and that it is made in compliance with the spirit, if not with the letter, of the opinion of this court in the former case. That opinion suggested to the applicant to file a bill in equity, as he was authorized by law to do, not a new.application, for which there is no warrant in law. The new application does not make a different case. The case is the same precise case. The subject matter of invention is the same. The claim is the same. Only the specifications and drawings are more full; and the state of the art at the time of the alleged invention is more fully and satisfactorily shown.

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Bluebook (online)
14 App. D.C. 255, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-barratts-appeal-cadc-1899.