Johnson v. Root

13 F. Cas. 823, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 351
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1858
DocketCase No. 7,411
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 F. Cas. 823 (Johnson v. Root) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Root, 13 F. Cas. 823, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 351 (circtdma 1858).

Opinion

SPRAGUE, District Judge

(charging jury). It is the duty of the court to decide all questions of law which may arise in the progress of the trial, and to give instructions to the jury on those questions. It is the province' and duty of the jury to decide all questions of fact; and any observations that the court may make as to the facts in the case are only designed to aid you in applying the law to the facts, and further, perhaps, to aid you, as far as the court may, in arriving at the questions which you are to decide, and the points that it may be material for you to take into consideration, in order correctly to apply the law which shall be laid down to you. And, gentlemen, in a case which has occupied so great a length of time, where the evidence has been so multifarious, both in kind and in detail, it may be of some importance, if we can, to disembarrass the case of considerations not in controversy, and questions not bearing, directly or indirectly, upon points really at issue, or to be decided by the jury. I shall not go into details of the evidence, gentlemen. That is for your consideration. All questions of the force and effect of the testimony, of the credit which you shall give to tne witnesses, of the facts which you shall consider to be established, of inferences to be drawn from them, are matters for the jury alone. The law is to be given to you by the court, including the construction of written documents, and especially of the plaintiff’s patent, depending, sometimes, however, upon the technical use of terms, if there be such, which have a use different from the usual and ordinary acceptation of the terms, and which may be matters of fact for the jury.

The suit is by Mr. Johnson against Mr. Root, for an alleged infringement of a patent. The patent has been produced, and is prima facie evidence of the right of the plaintiff to all that is contained in it, giving it its true and proper construction. The defense alleges that, in the first place, the defendant has not infringed — -that is, has not used the invention which is secured to the plaintiff by his patent. (I shall employ the word “use,” gentlemen, although, in strictness, what is complained of is, that the defendant has sold one of the machines embracing the invention of the plaintiff; “use” is a shorter term, and I shall, therefore, employ it.) After stating that he has not used the plaintiff's invention, as secured in his patent, the defendant says, in the second place, that if the machine which he has sold does embrace that which is in the plaintiff’s patent, then the plaintiff’s patent is not valid, because the plaintiff was not the first inventor. These, gentlemen, are the two grounds of defense, and the two general questions which you will have to determine. First, did the defendant infringe? and, second, if he did, was the plaintiff the first inventor of that which the defendant has used?

And in order, gentlemen, to determine the question which I take up first, because it was the first presented in the order of the trial, in order to determine whether the de-[825]*825íendánt has used the plaintiff's invention, as secured by his patent, the first step is to ascertain,' as clearly as you may, what it is to which the plaintiff has a right, under his patent. And here 1 would observe that there is no part of the plaintiff’s patent which it is alleged the defendant has infringed, •except that relating to the feeding of the material to be sewed. There are two other things embraced in his patent, relative to the seam, which, however, you have no occasion to trouble yourself about in the present case, unless they should, in any degree, throw light upon the third claim of his patent — that in relation to the feed. In determining what it is that the plaintiff has secured to him by his patent from the government, the court looks, in the first place, at what is called, technically, the claim, which is the summing up, at the close of the patent, or specincation preceding; the claim being in the terms: "What I claim to have Invented, and wish to secure by letters patent, is —,” and then a condensed statement of what he wishes to have secured to him by his patent. But in construing that, we take into view the whole of what precedes it in the specification, and also such extraneous facts presented by the evidence, as may aid in giving the true construction to the patent, particularly the documents from the patent office which have preceded the granting of the patent itself. Now, that third •claim is for this: “The feeding of the material to be sewed, by means of a vibrating, piercing instrument, either the needle itself, or some other instrument in the immediate vicinity thereof, substantially as herein described.” It is upon that this whole controversy turns; it is that claim which embraces all the right that the plaintiff has. I say all the legal right. And here I would observe, gentlemen, that the evidence and the arguments on both sides have, very prop■erly. gone into the inquiry, what was the invention? — what was done by the plaintiff from one time to another? That is all very proper, because it may aid in giving a construction to his patent. But his legal right is that which is secured to him by his patent; and if he has invented any thing else, meritorious or otherwise, still if it is not •embraced in the patent, then he can maintain no suit upon it; he is necessarily confined to that which is granted to him by the •deed from the government, which is called a patent.

Now, in the first place, gentlemen, this is not a patent for a result. It is not a patent for an abstract idea, or an abstract principle. You take the words of the claim itself to lead you. The object to be obtained is the feeding of the material to be sewed. The means are. a vibrating, piercing instrument. either the needle itself, or an independent instrument in the immediate vicinity thereof, substantially as therein described. Now, this patent is for means — a mechanism to accomplish a certain end. The first thing, then, which you will observe is, what is secured to the plaintiff. In looking at the means and mechanism to secure the end, it is, in the first place, the instrument — a vibrating, piercing instrument. And, to call your attention further to what things are in controversy, you will observe there is no controversy here as to the instrument used by the plaintiff and defendant, each being a vibrating instrument. There is no controversy that it is used in the immediate vicinity of the needle, and, therefore. I shall, for the sake of brevity, and of calling the attention to those matters which are in controversy— speak of it as the "piercing instrument”— the piercing being a matter in controversy. The patent does not stop there. What is embraced in it, and what is the essential part of it. is not merely the feeding of the material by such an instrument, but it is the instrument, followed afterward by the words, “as herein described.” Both these are essential parts of this patent.

Upon the question of infringement, then, the inquiry is, in the first place, does the defendant, for the purpose of feeding the material, use substantially the same instrument therein described, and substantially in the manner therein described? If he does not use the same instrument — substantially the same instrument — and when I leave out the word “substantial,” you will always understand that it is embraced — if he does not use substantially the same instrument, he does not infringe. If he uses the same instrument, and does not use it substantially in the manner therein described, he does not infringe; both of those going to constitute the invention which the plaintiff has secured to himself.

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Bluebook (online)
13 F. Cas. 823, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-root-circtdma-1858.