Merrill v. Yeomans

94 U.S. 568, 24 L. Ed. 235, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1908
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 23, 1877
Docket209
StatusPublished
Cited by184 cases

This text of 94 U.S. 568 (Merrill v. Yeomans) 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
Merrill v. Yeomans, 94 U.S. 568, 24 L. Ed. 235, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1908 (1877).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant’ in this case, who • was complainant in the Circuit Court, obtained a patent, in May, 1869, for a new and useful invention, which relates to the heavy hydrocarbon oils; and he sued the appellees, who were defendants in that court, for an infringement of his patent.

The defendants were dealers in oils, and not manufacturers .of them. If the appellant’s patent was for a new oil, the product of a mode of treating the oils of that character which he describes in his application, the defendants may be liable; for they bought and sold, without license or other authority from him, an oil which is proved to be almost if not quite identical with the one which he produced. If, however, appellant’s patent is only for the mode of treating these oils invented and described by him, —in other words, for his new process of making this new article of hydrocarbon oil, — then it is clear the defendants have not infringed the patent, because they never used that process, or any other, for they manufactured none of the oils which they bought and sold.

[569]*569The counsel for appellant here maintain that his patent is for the new article, and is not for the process, though he de-. scribes it fully, by which that article is produced. The appellees insist, with equal earnestness, that the patent is exclusively for the process by which the new oil is made.

The issue thus presented must be decided solely upon a correct construction of the plaintiff’s patent, and the accompanying specifications, in which, as required by the act of Congress, he makes the statement of his invention.

No such question could have arisen if appellant had used language which deafly and distinctly points out what it is that he claims in his invention.

We use the word “ claim ” as distinct from “ description.” It must be conceded that the appellant’s specification describes with, minuteness and precision both the instrumentality and the process by which he makes the oil in question. And in regard to a part of the apparatus which he uses, he makes a distinct claim for its invention ; and that is not in dispute here. He also describes with fulness and accuracy the process of distillation by which he. produces this oil. He gives the temperature to be used, the mode of heating, the degree of rapidity or delay to be used in distilling, the introduction, and the advantage of that introduction, of superheated steam into contact with the oils to be distilled during the process.

He also describes, though in short terms, the article produced, the main feature of which he declares to be. its freedom from •the offensive odor which, before his invention, seemed to be an inseparable quality of those oils ; ,and he mentions some of the more important uses'to which this deodorized oil is applicable in the arts.

It is fairly to be inferred from this statement, that, if all which is described as new in these specifications is really so, the inventor has a fight to a patent for three inventions: — ■

1. For a modification or improvement in the distilling apparatus.

2. For a nevr process or mode of distilling heavy hydrocarbon oils, by which they are deprived of their offensive odors.

3. For the product of this new process of distillation; namely, the deodorized heavy hydrocarbon oils fitted for use in the arts.

[570]*570When a man supposes he has made an invention or discovery useful in the arts, and therefore the proper subject of a patent, it is, nine times out of ten, an improvement on some existing article, process, or machine, and is only useful in connection with it. It is necessary, therefore, for him, in his application to the Patent Office, to describe that upon which he engrafts his invention, as well as the invention itself; and, in cases where the invention is a new combination of old devices, he is bound- to describe with particularity all these old devices, and then the new mode of combining them, for which he desires a patent. It thus occurs that, in every application for a patent, the descriptive part is necessarily largely occupied with what is not new, in order to an understanding of what is new.

The act of Congress, therefore, very wisely requires of the applicant a distinct and specific statement of what he claims to be new, and to be his invention. In practice, this allegation of the distinct matters for which he claims a- patent comes at the close of the schedule or specification, and is often accompanied by a disclaimer of any title to certain matters before described, in order to prevent conflicts with pre-existing patents.

This distinct and formal claim is, therefore, of primary importance, in the effort to ascertain precisely what it is that is patented to the appellant in this case. ■

In this part of his application he makes two separate claims, the second of which relates to a modification of the distilling apparatus, and is not in dispute here. Turning our attention to the first claim, we are compelled to say'that the language is far from possessing that precision and clearness of statement ■ with which one who proposes to secure a monopoly at the expense of the public ought to describe the thing which no one but himself can use or enjoy, without paying him for the privilege of doing so. It' is as follows: —

“I claim the above-described new manufacture of the deodorized heavy hydrocarbon oils, suitable for lubricating and other purposes, free from the characteristic odors of hydrocarbon oils, and having a slight smell like fatty oil, from hydrocarbon oils, by treating them substantially as is hereinbefore described.” The word “ manufacture ” in this sentence is one which is used with equal propriety to express the process of [571]*571making an article, or the article so made. “ The manufacture of hydrocarbon oils ” means primarily the making of hydrocarbon oils. It may mean the thing made also. Are there other words in the sentence calculated to throw light on the meaning of this one ?

“ I claim the above-described new manufacture of hydrocarbon oils, ... by treating them substantially as hereinbefore described.” It seems to us that the most natural meaning of these words is, that “ I claim this new mode of manufacturing hydrocarbon oils, by treating them as hereinbefore described.” This is the meaning which would first suggest itself to the mind. If the product is meant, the words “ by treating them substantially as hereinbefore described ” are useless. They are not only useless, but embarrassing; for, by the well-settled rules of construing all instruments, some importance must be attached to them; and, if they are to be regarded at all, they must either refer to the process of making the oils for which the applicant is claiming a patent, or they are intended to limit his claim for a patent for the product to that product only, when produced by treating the oils in the manner before described.

The counsel for appellant disclaim this latter construction, and allege that the patent covers the oil described, by whatever inode it may be produced. It is necessary to insist on this view, because it is made to appear in the case that the oils sold by defendants were produced by a process very different from that described by appellant.

We can see no reason why the applicant for the patent, if he had in his mind a claim for the article produced, should have intended so to limit his claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 U.S. 568, 24 L. Ed. 235, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merrill-v-yeomans-scotus-1877.