Magic Ruffle Co. v. Douglas

16 F. Cas. 394, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 330
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 F. Cas. 394 (Magic Ruffle Co. v. Douglas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Magic Ruffle Co. v. Douglas, 16 F. Cas. 394, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 330 (circtsdny 1863).

Opinion

SHIPMAN, District Judge

(charging jury). This suit is brought by the plaintiffs to recover damages for an alleged infringement of certain letters patent, issued in conformity with the act of congress [5 Stat. 117], and purporting to secure to the original patentees the exclusive use of the inventions therein described. The suit embraces three distinct patents, which are easily distinguished by the several names of “Separator,” “Double Peed,” and“Ruffle” patents. The first named two are for machines, or improvements on machines. The last is for a new article of manufacture, or for an improvement in an article of manufacture. Although the patents were issued to the Messrs. Arnold in the first instance, they subsequently passed into the hands of the present plaintiffs by valid assignments, and whatever rights were originally granted to the patentees now belong to these plaintiffs; and they are entitled to the same redress as the patentees would have been had they still continued to own the patents, and brought the suit themselves.

As I have already stated, the three patents are all embraced in the suit; no doubt, out of abundant caution on the part of the plaintiffs, in order to meet any evidence of infringement of each and all that might be developed on the trial. It appears, however, from the evidence, and is conceded by the plaintiffs, that but two of the patents have been infringed, viz: the separator patent and the ruffle patent. That these two have been infringed by the defendants, there can be no reasonable doubt on the evidence. In other words, there can be no reasonable doubt, on the evidence before you. that the defendants have used a machine, or mechanical contrivance, substantially like that described in the separator patent, the exclusive use to which purports to be granted to George B. and Alfred Arnold, which grant, by assignment, belongs to the plaintiffs in this suit. It is equally clear that they have extensively manufactured ruffles substantially like those described in the ruffle patent, the exclusive right to manufacture which purports to have been granted to George B. Arnold, and which grant belongs, by assignment, to these plaintiffs. You will therefore not be perplexed with what is often a difficult question in patent cases, viz: whether there has been an infringement or not. The great question, then, for' the court and jury is, whether or not these patents are valid grants of right? This is the great question, stated as a whole, but a proper examination of the case requires that we should address our attention to several distinct and separate inquiries. I will now point out these several inquiries, and dispose of such of them as properly belong to the court to decide, and submit to the jury such as belong to them to decide.

We will first look at the ruffle patent. The object of every patent is to secure to the pat-entee, his heirs and assigns, the exclusive property in the invention set forth in the specification, free from all control or invasion by others. The patent is granted upon inquiry, according to the forms of law, and assumes the patentee to be the original and first inventor, and therefore gives him the exclusive property in his invention, for the benign and just object of rewarding him for his creative labors and ingenuity, and stimulating the inventive genius of others. The exclusive property in his invention is secured to him only for a limited period, subject, on certain conditions, to a limited renewal. After that, his invention becomes the property of the public. The public who thus, through the law, secure to the inventor the exclusive property in his invention for a limited period, receive in return either new, more valuable, or cheaper productions during the lifetime of the patent, and from its expiration the free enjoyment of any benefits which may flow from it forever thereafter.

Now let us examine this ruffle patent, and see what it purports to grant. This is a question of law, to dispose of which belongs to the court, and not to the jury. This patent is simple, and I can not better describe the invention than to adopt the language of the claim, and say, that it purports to grant the exclusive right to manufacture and sell “the ruffle therein described, as a new article of manufacture, the gathered cloth A (the ruffled strip) being secured to the binding B (the band), by the single series of stitches C, which perform the double duty of securing the gathered cloth to the binding substantially as therein set forth.” The distinguishing features of this article, by which it is materially different from all other ruffles known before, are the single series of stitches, and the unvarying regularity of the plaits or gathers — thus dispensing with the- gathering thread, avoiding the injurious process of whipping or scratching the fabric with a sharp needle, and the perforations in the ruffled piece which the needle and thread make in gathering, before sewing on the band, and by pulling out the thread after it was sewed on, or in case the thread was left in, by dispensing with its presence. I repeat, the ruffle patented differs from those that existed before, by the uniformity of the plaits, and by the absence of all whipping or scratching with the needle, with all perforations, except those made by the permanent stitches, and by the absence of an appendage in the shape of a useless thread, in the ruffle after it was finished. The regularity of the plaits, it is obvious, improved the beauty of the fin[396]*396ished article, and the employment of only one series of stitches, one stitch of the series being struck through each plait at the instant of its formation, dispensed with the effect of the whipping process, with the perforations made by the needle in running the old gathering thread, and effectually dismissed the thread from the finished article, wherever it was formerly left in. It is the exclusive right to manufacture this article that this patent purports to grant to Mr. Arnold.

The patent is prima facie evidence that he was the original and first inventor of this article. The defendants deny this, and allege that the same article was made before the plaintiffs or the patentee made it. The bui--den of proof is on the defendants to show to your satisfaction that this article was made befox-e the patentee made it. It is not enough that they raise a doubt in your minds on that point: they must satisfy you of the fact. The evidence which they offer relates to three kinds of ruffles, viz: old ones made by hand, those made by Chittenden at New Haven, and the bustle tops on Union skirts made by the defendants.

As to the old style of ruffles made by hand, it is difficult to discover from the evidence how they could have been made, except by the slowest process, without the gathering thread, and the perfox-ations of the needle consequent upon its use, or how any approach to uniformity of plaits could have been obtained without whipping or scratching the ruffled piece. You have heard all the evidence on this point, and it is for you to determine whether satisfactory evidence has been submitted to you, that hand-made ruffles were like those which I have stated to you this patent describes.

As to the ruffles alleged to have been made by Chittenden on his machine, and by him given to his wife. Precisely what the character of those raffles was, if they were made before this “magic ruffle,” may be somewhat difficult for you to determine. No specimen of them has been shown to you. How — -that is. in what precise form — they were made, does not appear.

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Bluebook (online)
16 F. Cas. 394, 2 Fish. Pat. Cas. 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magic-ruffle-co-v-douglas-circtsdny-1863.