Mathews v. Flower

25 F. 830, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2349
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan
DecidedOctober 26, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 F. 830 (Mathews v. Flower) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mathews v. Flower, 25 F. 830, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2349 (circtedmi 1885).

Opinion

Brown, J.

It is scarcely necessary to say that this case ought not to be embarrassed by a reconsideration of the questions involved in Flower v. Detroit, 22 Fed. Rep. 292. That was a bill by the present defendants against a corporation which was making use of hydrants claimed to be protected by plaintiffs’ patent; and the case turned upon the validity of a patent issued to.Thomas B. Bailey, March 14, 1876, (reissue No. 6,990,) which had been purchased by the defendants. The several points raised upon the argument of this case were considered with great care, and we see no reason for revising our rulings. We proceed to take up the several pleas in their order.

1. That in 1S58 Mathews and Bace procured patent No. 19,206, and afterwards and in 1872 Mathews, as the assignee of such patent, procured a reissue of the same, (No. 4,887,) and to procure such reissue stated that the invention consisted in a loose ease or jacket around the body of the hydrant, by which Mathews, as far as he could do, secured to himself a grant for the said invention, which is the same invention as that described in the letters patent sued upon, so that it results that the said Mathews is estopped from claiming any rights or equities in any way to said invention. If it were true that complainants had previously obtained a patent for the same invention secured, to them by the patent in suit, and that this prior patent had expired, it would doubtless be a complete answer to this bill, since a man cannot have two patents for the same invention. James v. Campbell, 104 U. S. 356; Suffolk Co. v. Hayden, 3 Wall. 315; Morris v. Huntington, 1 Paine, 348. And this disability extends, not only to what is claimed in the first patent, but to that which is described therein as the patentee’s invention. If a man cannot have a patent for what another has claimed or described in a prior patent, much less can he have one for what he himself has claimed or described; [831]*831for he thus shows that he has anticipated himself. James v. Campbell, 104 U. S. 356, 382. The question, then, is whether, in their reissue No. 4,887, Eaee and Mathews actually claimed or described the invention subsequently secured to them by the patent in suit. In this prior patent the invention is said to consist—First, in the employment of a loose case or jabket around the body of the hydrant, whereby both the hydrant and the easq, or the hydrant alone, may be detached, and removed or withdrawn, as hereinafter set forth. The drawing, however, shows this loose case or jacket to be surrounded at its upper end by an elbow projecting from the supertorrene portion of the hydrant, so that, while it permits the hydrant to be withdrawn without disturbing the case, it does not obviate the danger of breakage to the hydrant by the elevation of the case through the action of the frost. The claim, too, is for a protecting case or jacket, E, surrounding the body of the hydrant, and forming a separate and removable part from the elbow, D, substantially as and for the purpose set forth.

The invention described in reissue No. 10,452 is said to consist in an improvement upon this patent, “in which the distinguishing feature is a detached case or jacket surrounding the hydrant-stock and imbedded in the ground, but moro specifically in combining a case or jacket with the hydrant-stock; the said jacket being loosely fitted to said hydrant-stock, and adapted to have end-play to compensate for the heaving by frost, sliding both at top and bottom, and keeping a dead-air space between said hydrant-stock and jacket; further, in so forming and connecting the loose caso or jacket above specified, that it extends above the surface of the ground, and conforms to the general outline of the hydrant itself, and may bo driven back to place upon the elbow at the bottom when the frost has expended its force.”

The claim is for (1) “the detached case or jacket, B, combined with a hydrant to have, end-play or vertical motion, to compensate for heaving by frost; the said caso, B, forming a comparatively close sliding joint with the hydrant both at top and bottom, the upper part of same passing outside of the main stock of the hydrant, so that any change in its position can be easily ascertained, and the case driven back to its place without disturbing the hydrant.”

The object of tlio first patent was a secure a loose case or jacket around the hydrant, so that the hydrant might he withdrawn without disturbing the case. The improvement consisted in so connecting the ease with the hydrant that the upheaval of the case a few inches by the frost would not injure or break the hydrant. Unless a person who patents a new article or device is thereafter estopped from patenting an improvement upon such article or device, there is no estoppel in this case.

2. That patent No. 96,959, the original of the reissue in suit, has . been declared void by the supreme court in the case of Mathews v. Machine Co,, and consequently the complainants had no patent to [832]*832amend when they applied for this reissue, and the same is void. It is true that the opinion of the supreme court was that this patent could not be sustained because the claim was too broad; but such are precisely the patents which, by Rev. St. § 4916, the commissioner is authorized to reissue; that is, in the language of 'the act: “When-, ever any patent is * * * invalid * * * by reason of the patentee claiming as his ownt invention or discovery more than he had a right to claim as new.” If defendants’ proposition were sound, the whole provision with respect to reissues would be nullified. The case of Jones v. McMurray, 2 Hughes, 527, is not controlling. In that case the supreme court had declared the whole invention disclosed in the original patent void for want of novelty, and not merely invalid for want of a proper specification and claim, as in this case.

3. If the third plea be not a substantial repetition of the first, in somewhat different language, we are unable to understand it, and it is therefore overruled.

4. That after the filing of the application for the original patent in this case, October 29, 1868, it was rejected on reference to the prior patent of Bailey of March 10, 1868, which covered and anticipated all the alleged claims of Race and Mathews; that this decision has never been reversed or modified, and therefore is an adjudication and estoppel of record. The answer to this is that this action was superseded by the actual issue of patent No. 96,959 to Race and Mathews. We do not'understand there is anything in the action of the commissioner in rejecting an application which operates as an estoppel or as res adjudicata upon the parties in this court. Unless it be a good defense to a patent that the application for it was once rejected, this is not a good plea.

5. That Race and Mathews were duly notified that the patent to Bailey anticipated all the claims to the loose casing described in their application of October, 1868, and that on receiving such notice Mathews says, in his deposition on file in the case of Flower v. Detroit, that he thereupdn called upon Bailey, and asked him to disclaim the same in favor of Race and Mathews because they were the inventors of it, and that Bailey refused to do so, wherefore the complainants are estopped, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
25 F. 830, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathews-v-flower-circtedmi-1885.