Johnson v. Root

13 F. Cas. 798, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 291
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1862
DocketCase No. 7,409
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 F. Cas. 798 (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. 798, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 291 (circtdma 1862).

Opinion

CLIFFORD, Circuit Justice.

This was an action of trespass on the case for an alleged infringement of certain letters patent. Letters patent were granted to the plaintiff on March 7, 1S54, for a new and useful improvement in sewing machines; but the- original patent was subsequently surrendered and canceled, and on February 26, 1856, a new patent was issued to him on an amended specification, to continue for the term of fourteen years from the date of the original patent. Suit was commenced on April 28, 1S56, and the plaintiff alleged that the defendant, on March 4, in the same year, and at divers other times before the date of the writ, did unlawfully and wrongfully, and without the consent of the plaintiff, make, use, and vend to others to be used, the improvement secured to him in his reissued letters patent. Defendant pleaded that he was not guilty, and filed, under the act of congress [5 Stat. 117], certain specifications of defense, denying that the machine he sold infringed the plaintiff’s patent, or that the plaintiff was the original and first inventor of any thing embodied in his, the defendant’s machine, and on that issue the parties, on March 26, 1861, went to trial, Testimony was introduced on both sides, and under the instruction of the court the jury returned their verdict in favor of the plaintiff, assessing damages in the sum of five hundred dollars. [Case No. 7,410.] Motion for new trial was duly filed by the defendant, for the following reasons: First. Because the verdict is against the law and the evidence. Second. That the verdict is against the evidence and the weight of the evidence. Third. That the jury have neglected and refused to apply the instructions given them by the court, respecting the thing patented, in the third claim of the patent declared on in the case; as well upon the question, whether the plaintiff was the original and first inventor of the thing patented, as upon the question, whether the defendant had infringed thereon. Fourth. That the damages found by the-jury are grossly excessive, and in plain contravention of the explicit and repeated instructions of the court to allow nominal damages. Another reason assigned, is the refusal of the court to instruct the jury as requested by the defendant; but in the view taken of the case it will not be necessary to consider it, and it is therefore omitted. Representations in writing, and under oath, were subsequently made to the court by the defendant, as a foundation for a further motion for new trial. Those representations were in substance and effect as follows: 1. That the plaintiff, during the progress of the trial, and before the verdict had been rendered, and while the court was not in session, and out of the presence and hearing of the defendant and of his counsel, by himself and his agents, made communications to, and received communications from, jurors impaneled in the case, touching the merits thereof. 2. That the plaintiff, by himself and his agents, did unduly and unlawfully influence and bias the minds of jurors impaneled to try said cause, by acts, conduct, and declarations, done and made with that unlawful intent, while the court was not in session, and out of the presence and hearing of the defendant and his counsel. 3. That jurors impaneled to try the cause, privately declared, and made known to the plaintiff and his agents, that they had determined to render a verdict in favor of' the plaintiff, and so declared and made known such determination, before the testimony on the part of the defendant had been all exhibited, and before the counsel of the defendant bad been heard, and before the jury had received the instruction of the court, and before the ease had been committed to them. 4. That the trial was not by an impartial jury, such as the defendant had a constitutional and lawful right to have. Leave was granted to the defendant to make proper proofs of the respective representations, upon giving due notice to the plaintiff or his counsel, it appearing that all the matters set forth had come to the knowledge of the defendant and his counsel since the last adjournment of the court. Testimony was accordingly taken by both parties in open court, on October 17, 1861, and the same by agreement, was duly reported for the consideration of the court. Parties were duly heard during the same term, upon the several matters involved in the respective motions, and the case has been held under advisement to the present time. Some brief reference to the positions assumed by the respective parties at the trial will be indispensable, in order that the precise nature of the questions presented under the first motion, may be clearly and fully understood. When the case came on for trial, the plaintiff proposed to open his whole case to the jury, as well such matters as were in reply to the defenses stated in the specifications of defense, as those which were immediately necessary to make out a prima facie case, and no objection being made by the defendant, the parties were allowed, perhaps unadvisedly, to proceed in that way.

Application for a patent was filed by the plaintiff on March 31, 1853, but his original patent was not issued until March 7 in the following year. His charge against the defendant was that he had infringed the third [801]*801claim of the reissued patent as already explained. Omitting the first and second claims as unimportant in this investigation, it reads as follows: “What I claim as my invention and desire to secure by letters patent is: Third. The feeding of the material to be sewn, by means of a vibrating piercing instrument, whether said instrument be the needle itself,, or an independent instrument in the immediate vicinity thereof, substantially as herein described.” To maintain the issue on his part, he introduced his reissued letters patent, together with the model of the patented machine furnished to the patent office. He also introduced the machine which he alleged the defendant sold, and which he claimed was a violation of the exclusive right secured to him, and upon the introduction of the machine, the defendant admitted that he sold the machine at the time and place alleged in the declaration, but denied that the machine infringes the third claim of the plaintiff, or that the plaintiff was the original and first inventor of any thing embodied in that machine. Two questions, therefore, were presented: First. Whether the plaintiff was the original and first inventor of any thing embodied in the machine sold by the defendant, called machine K. Second. Whether the machine sold by the defendant, and given in evidence by the plaintiff, infringed the third claim of the plaintiff’s reissued letters patent. Defendant set up that the machine sold by him was constructed under certain patents granted to A. B. Wilson, or to his assigns, and that the invention of 'Wilson was prior to that of the plaintiff’s, which was one of the important questions in the case. Wilson made the application for his first patent on March 18,1850, and the patent was issued on November 12, in the same year. His second application was on July S, 1851, and the second patent was issued August 12, in the following year. Patentee assigned his interest to Wheeler, Wilson, Warren, and Woodruff, before the date of the third application, which was made on February 7,1852, and the third patent was issued on June 15, in the same year. Other patents subsequently issued to A. B. Wilson, or his assigns were also admitted, as showing that the three inventions already mentioned, were still under the protection of subsisting patents, and had not become public property.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Buffington's Iron Bldg. Co. v. Eustis
65 F. 804 (Eighth Circuit, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 F. Cas. 798, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-root-circtdma-1862.