Livingston v. Woodworth

56 U.S. 546, 14 L. Ed. 809, 15 How. 546, 1853 U.S. LEXIS 302
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 16, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 56 U.S. 546 (Livingston v. Woodworth) 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
Livingston v. Woodworth, 56 U.S. 546, 14 L. Ed. 809, 15 How. 546, 1853 U.S. LEXIS 302 (1854).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellees, on the 24th of July, 1848, obtained from the court above mentioned an injunction to restrain the appellants from using or vending one or more planing machines substantially the same in construction and mode of operation as the machine which had been patented to William Woodworth, deceased.

In their bill they allege the originality of the invention of the patentee, the extension of the patent after his death for the space of seven years beyond its original limitation to the appellee, William W. Woodworth, as administrator of the inventor, and the grant by said administrator to the appellee, Brooks, of the exclusive right to construct and use the invention within certain specified limits for the entire period of that extension. The bill further alleges a second extension by act of Congress of the patent to the said administrator for the term of seven years from the 27th day of December, 1849; but states that in consequence of doubts entertained as to the correctness of the specification, and of the fact of said letters-patent having been found to be inoperative, they were duly surrendered, and new letterspátent bearing date on the 8th day of July, 1845, were issued to the appellee, William W. Woodworth and his assigns, for the residue of the term of 28 years from 27th of December, 1828; that subsequently to this last renewal the appellee, William W. Woodworth, had granted to the appellee, Wilson, and to his assigns, all the right and title acquired by him by the issue of the last letters-patent with the amended specification. That the appellee, Brooks, by his deed of the 20th of July, 1847, had granted and assigned to the appellee, Tyler, one half Brooks’s right in the patent to Woodworth for the'term ending on the twenty-seventh of December, 1849, to be used within the town of Lowell, and not elsewhere. That the appellee, Wilson, by deed of the'20th of May, 1848, assigned and confirmed to Brooks and his assigns, the exclusive right of constructing and using *554 twenty planing machines according to the letters-patent with the amended specification, and gave authority to Brooks, in Wilson’s name, to execute all such deeds of confirmation to the assignees of any rights and privileges within the county of Middlesex as' he should deem fit, and that in virtue of this power and authority, he, Brooks, did by his deed of July 1st, 1848, grant and confirm to the appellee, Tyler, in the name and behalf of the said Wilson, as well as in his own name, all the rights and privileges described in the deed from Brooks to Tyler of the 20th of July, 1847. The bill further alleges that the appellants were then using, and for some time had used, within the city of Lowell, one of the machines substantially the same in construction and mode of operation as the planing machine in the said last mentioned letters-patent described, the exclusive right to make, usé and vend which, is by law vested in the appellees. The bill also charges that theretofore two actions at law had been instituted in that court, the one against a certain James Gould, and the other against Rodoiphus and James, Edwards and Cyrus Smith, for the violation of the exclusive privileges granted to the plaintiffs in those- actions under patent last aforesaid, by using a machine substantially the same with the said planing machine invented by the said William Wpodworth, and that, |Upon issues made up in both these actions, the jury found that the defendants had infringed the patent, and subjected them to the payment of damages. It avers the use, as before stated by the appellants of their machine, to be an infringment of the Woodworth patent, and a violation of the exclusive rights and privileges of the appellees; and concludes with a prayer that the appellants may be decreed to account for and pay over to the appellees all gains and profits which have accrued from using their said machines since the expiration of the said original patent; that they may be restrained, by injuwtion, from using or vending any one or more of said machines; that the machine or machines, in the possession or under the control of the appellants, may be destroyed or delivered over to the appellees, who ask also for general relief.

The appellants, by their answer state, that during a part of the time which has elapsed between the autumn of 1841 and April 1st, 1844, they have used in their mill at Lowell a single planing machine constructed according to a patent granted to James H. Hutchinson on the 16th of July; 1839, which machine, in some of its combinations, substantially resembles the machine specified in the patent granted to Woodworth in 1845, but is unlike any machine specified in the patent to Woodworth in 1828. ' They aver, also, that the planing business had been carried on as aforesaid, in virtue of the Hutchinson machine,, at *555 Lowell, with the full knowledge of the. appellee, Brooks, and without objection from him until within a short time previously; and that they had no knowledge or belief of any infringement by them of the patent to Woodworth, until after the decision in Gould’s case; after which decision, they were informed that the patent to Woodworth had been surrendered and reissued with a new specification, the validity of which reissued patent had not, within their knowledge or belief, been established until the decision of the suit against the said Edwards and Smith. The answer denies the originality of Woodworth’s claim, by averring that James, Joseph, Aaron, and Daniel Hill, and Leonard Gilson, in the District of Massachusetts, as early as 1827, and John Hale of-Bloomfield, in the State of New York, in the year 1828, nad knowledge of and had made and used planing machines essentially the same and prior to the pretended invention of William Woodworth, deceased. ■

' At the May term of the court, 1849, this cause coming on. to be heard upon the bill, the answers, replications, and exhibits, by the consent of the parties it was decreed by the court, that the appellees (the complainants below) were entitled to the perpetual injunction and to the account prayed for by the bill; said account to commence at such time as shall be found by the master, and be • confirmed by the court. The decree proceeds that, the master in taking said account shall have power to require the parties to produce before him, on oath, all books and papers .relating thereto, and to hear, such oral evidence as either party may produce, and oh the motion of either of the parties, to examine either of the other parties, upon interrogatories. And all farther directions are reserved until the .coming in of the master’s report.-

In pursuance of this decretal order, upon the examination of the parties on oath, and upon evidence produced aliimde,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 U.S. 546, 14 L. Ed. 809, 15 How. 546, 1853 U.S. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingston-v-woodworth-scotus-1854.