Le Roy v. Tatham

63 U.S. 132, 16 L. Ed. 366, 22 How. 132, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 707
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 19, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 63 U.S. 132 (Le Roy v. Tatham) 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
Le Roy v. Tatham, 63 U.S. 132, 16 L. Ed. 366, 22 How. 132, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 707 (1860).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McLEAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from the final decree of the Circuit Court of the United States for the southern district .of New York, on a bill filed by the appellees to restrain the infringement by the appellants of a patent for making lead pipe, and for general relief.

A suit at law was commenced, after the filing of the bill, on or about the 10th of May, 1847, to recover damages for the same infringement.

This action was twice tried — once on the 3d May, 1848, and resulted in a verdict for the appellants, which was set aside by the court, and a new trial awarded. It was tried in May, 1849, when the jury gave a verdict for the respondents for $11,394 in damages. Exceptions were taken to the charge, and the judgment was reversed; and a new trial ordered in December term, 1852. 14 How., 156.

Before this decision was made, and in January, 1852, it was stipulated between the counsel for the respective parties that the testimony taken on the last trial in the action at law should be read; and it forms the principal part of the evidence on both sides in this suit.

The action at law was not to be tried again; but the suit in equity was prosecuted in its stead.

The patent under which the plaintiffs claim bears date the 14th March, 1846; and in their schedule they say: “Our invention consists in certain improvements upon and additions to the. machinery used for manufacturing pipes and tubes from lead or tin, or any alloy of soft metals, capable of being forced; by great pressure, from out of a receiver, through or between apertures, dies, and cores, when in a set or solid state, set forth in the specification of a patent granted to Thomas Burr, of Shrewsbury, in Shropshire, England, dated the ,11th of April, 1820, recited in the Repertory of Arts, &c., London, &c„”

The bill alleges that John and Charles Hanson, of England, were the inventors of the improvements specified, on or prior *135 to the 31st of August, 1887; that on the 10th of January, 1840, the Hansons assigned to H. B. & B. Tatham, two of the defendants in error, the full and exclusive right to said improvements; that on the 29th March, 1841, letters patent were granted for the improvements to the Tathams, as the assignees of the Hansons; that afterwards H. B. & B. Tatham assigned to Q-. N. Tatham, the remaining defendant, an undivided third part of the patent.

On the 14th March, 1846, the said letters patent were surrendered, on the ground that the specifications of the improvements claimed were defective; and a new patent was issued, which granted to the patentees, their heirs, &e., for the term of fourteen years from the 31st August, 1837, the exclusive right to make and vend the improvements secured.

The defendants denied the infringement charged.

A great number of facts were proved, showing the success ful manufacture of lead in the mode stated in the specifications, and particularly that “pipes thus made are found to possess great solidity and unusual strength, and a fine uniformity of thickness and accuracy' is arrived at, such as, it is believed, has never been attained by any other machinery.” And they say the essential difference in the character of this pipe, which distinguishes it, as well as that contemplated by Thomas Burr, from all others heretofore known or attempted, is, that it is wrought under heat, by pressure and constriction, from sot metal, and that it is not a casting formed in a mould.

“ And it ivas proved, that in all the modes of making lead pipe previously known and in use, it could be made only in short pieces; but that, by this improved mode, it could be made of any required length, and also of any size; and that the introduction of lead pipe made in the mode described had superseded the use of that made by any of the inodes before in use, and that it was also furnished at a less price.” And it was proved that lead, when recently become set, and while under heat and extreme pressure, in a close ve.ssel, would reunite perfectly after a separation of its parts.

In «the case of the Househill Company v. Neilson, Webster’s Patent-Gases, 683, it is said: “A patent will be good, though *136 the subject of the patent consists in the discovery of a great, general, and most comprehensive principle in science or law of nature, if that principle is, by the specification, applied to any special purpose, so as thereby to effectuate a practical result and benefit not previously attained.”

Mr. Justice-Clerk Hope, in his charge to the jury, said: “ The specification does not claim anything as to the form, nature, shape, materials, numbers, or mathematical character, of the vessel or vessels in which the air'is to be heated, or as to the mode of hekting such vessels.”

Now, in this casé it must not be forgotten that the machinery was not claimed as a part of the invention; but the jury were instructed to inquire “ whether the specification was not such as to enable workmen of ordinary skill to make machinery or apparatus capable of producing the effect set forth in said letters patent and specification; ” and that, in order to ascertain whether the defendants had infringed the patent, the jury should inquire whether they “ did, by themselves or others, and in contravention of the privileges conferred by the' letters patent, use machinery or apparatus substantially the same with the machinery or apparatus described in the plaintiffs’ specification, and to the effect set forth in said letters and specification.”

Now, as no specification was claimed in regard to the machinery, it is not perceived how the patent could be infringed, unless upoh the principle that, having Claimed no- specific .mode of applying the heat, he could use any mode he might prefer, in defiance of the rights of other patentees.

Now, this cannot be law : certainly it is not law under the patent act of this country. That act requires the making and constructing “ the thing, in such full, clear, and exact terms as to enable any person, skilled in the art or science to which it appertains, to make, construct., and use the same.”

Alderson B. Webster’s Patent Cases, 342, says: “The distinction between a patent for a principle and a patent which can be supported is, that you must have an embodiment of the principle in some pi’actical mode described in the specification of carrying into actual effect.; and then you take out *137 your patenl, not for the principle, but for the mode of carrying the principle into effect.”

“It is quite true, that a patent cannot be taken out solely for an abstract philosophicá.1 principle — for instance, for any law of nature or any property of matter, apart from any mode of turning it to account. A mere discovéry of such a principle is not an invention, in the patent-law sense of the term.” Web. Cases, 683.

However brilliant the discovery of the new principle may be, to make it useful it must be applied to some practical purpose. Short of this, no patent can be granted. And it would n&t seem to be á work of much labor for a man of ingenuity tg describe what he has invented.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 U.S. 132, 16 L. Ed. 366, 22 How. 132, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/le-roy-v-tatham-scotus-1860.