Northwestern Fire Extinguisher Co. v. Philadelphia Fire Extinguisher Co.

18 F. Cas. 394, 1 Ban. & A. 177, 10 Phila. 227, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 1880
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 6, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 F. Cas. 394 (Northwestern Fire Extinguisher Co. v. Philadelphia Fire Extinguisher Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwestern Fire Extinguisher Co. v. Philadelphia Fire Extinguisher Co., 18 F. Cas. 394, 1 Ban. & A. 177, 10 Phila. 227, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 1880 (circtedpa 1874).

Opinion

McKENNAN, Circuit Judge.

Suit brought on letters patent, reissued to Dawson Miles, administrator of P. F. Carlier, deceased, and Alphonse A. C. Vignon, No. 4,994 dated July 16, 1872 (original patent No. 88,844, dated April 13, 1869), for improvement in extinguishing fires.

The claims of the reissued patent are as follows: “1. The improvement in the art of extinguishing fires, hereinbefore described, by throwing upon the fire or conflagration, a properly directed stream of mingled carbonic-acid gas and water, by means of the pressure or expansive force exerted by the mass of mingled gas and water from which the stream is derived. 2. We claim a strong vessel, provided with proper plug or lid, by which an orifice in it can be closed, and a stop-cock, through which its contents can be ejected, and a flexible tubing or hose for directing the stream as ejected at the will of the operator, these parts being substantially as described, and capable of operating as specified. 3. We claim a strong vessel provided with a proper plug or lid for closing an orifice in it, and also with a stop-cock, in combination with another vessel or tube, the combination being substantially such as specified, and the construction being substantially such as described, so that the vessels may keep separately the ingredients for making carbonic-acid gas, and that when their’ contents are mingled, they may be discharged in a stream of carbonic-acid gas and water. 4. We claim, in combination with the vessel’s lid or plug and stop-cock combined, and capable of operating as in the above third claim, a hose and nozzle, so applied, as described, that the mingled stream of carbonic-acid gas and water may be suitably directed, as hereinbefore set forth. 5. As the preferred arrangement of our apparatus, we claim a strong vessel, provided with a lid or plug and a stop-cock near the bottom thereof, in combination with a vessel or tube arranged in the interior thereof, -the arrangement being substantially as described. 6. We claim a strong vessel provided with a lid or plug and a stop-cock,- in combination with a vessel or tube arranged in the interior thereof, and a rod passing through the wall of the outer vessel, and capable of operating substantially as described. 7. We claim a strong vessel provided with a lid or plug and a stop-cock, in combination with a vessel or tube arranged in the interior thereof, and a rod and cock or valve, the whole being and operating substantially as described. 8. We claim the elements of parts of a whole apparatus specified in the fifth claim, and arranged as therein specified, in combination with a flexible hose and nozzle, and with handles or [396]*396loops, whereby the apparatus may be supported and the stream directed, substantially as specified. 9. AVe claim, in combination. a strong vessel, a lid or plug for closing the same, a stop-cock near the bottom of the vessel, a hose and nozzle, and handles or loops, whereby a volume of water charged with carbonic-acid gas may be confined and transported, and a stream thereof directed, in the manner and for the purposes descrii • ed. 10. The keeping of the acid and alkali or alkaline solution in separate and distinct vessels, but in such proximity to each other that they may be immediately brought into contact when the apparatus is required for use, one mode of accomplishing which we have above set forth. 11. A closed receptacle, made of suitable material, containing one of the gas-generating ingredients, piac»> •within the main reservoir, containing the other gas-generating ingredient, to be discharged of its contents in the manner herein set forth, or by other equivalent means.”

This bill is founded upon a reissued patent to Dawson Miles, administrator of the estate of Phillipe F. Carlier, deceased, and Alphonse A. C. Vignon, as joint inventors of an “improvement in extinguishing fires.” They» are described as residents of the city of Paris and subjects of the emperor of France at the time of the invention. The answer denies that there was any person named Phillipe F. Carlier, and avers that Francois Phillipe Carlier was the name of Vignon’s associate in the alleged invention; and for this misnomer it is urged that the patent is void.

It was the opinion of the judges in Humble v. Glover, Cro. Eliz. 328, that an omission or mistake of the Christian name of a grantee rendered the grant void; and so the rule is stated by Lord Bacon. Maxims, 107. But even then a different rule prevailed with regard to wills; for extrinsic evidence was admitted to ascertain the person, when two were of the same name, or when there had been a mistake in the Christian name of the devisee. Cheyney’s Case, 5 Coke, 68; Ulrich v. Litchfield, 2 Atk. 372. Lord Coke, however, held — 2 Co. Litt. (Thomas’ Ed.) p. 255— that a misnomer of a grantee would not avoid the grant, where he was so otherwise described as to individuate him; and he says: “So it is, if lands be given to Robert, earl of Pern brook, where his name is Henry; to George, bishop of Norwich, where his name is John; and so of an abbott, etc., for in these and the like cases there can be but one of that dignity or name.”

Chief Justice Kent refers approvingly, in Jackson v. Stanley, 10 Johns. 137, to this statement of Lord Coke, and says: “In all the cases which I have seen, where there was a misnomer, there was some description connected with the name, and there was no other person who set up a title in competition. under the erroneous name.” But he does not hold the admission of parol evidence to identify the grantee to be erroneous. Indeed it is the obvious sequence of his argument, that such evidence would have been held admissible, to show the person intended by the patent in question, if any description had been connected with his name. So, therefore, in the subsequent case of Jackson v. Goes, 13 Johns. 524, Chief Justice Thompson says: “The identity of the grantee, as well as of the thing granted, must, generally speaking, partake, more or less, of a latent ambiguity, explainable by testimony dehors the grant. It cannot be that this inquiry is restricted to the single case of ambiguity occasioned by there appearing to be two persons bearing the name of the patentee.”

It may, therefore, be stated, as the result of these and numerous other judicial decisions, that a grant is not necessarily void by reason of an error in the Christian name of the grantee, and that where it contains any other matter descriptive of the person for whom it was intended, extrinsic proof of such matter is admissible to identify the grantee, and, if he is thus indentified, effect will be given to the grant accordingly.

Whatever may have been Carlier’s proper Christian name — Phillipe Francois or Francois Phillipe, or only Francois — the patent contains a further designation of the pat-entee, by which his identity can be certainly determined; and so it is not necessarily void. It describes him as a joint inventor with Alphonse A. C. Vignon of the specific invention set forth in it, and thus it is clear upon the face of the patent, that a person named Carlier, who sustained that relation to Vig-non, was the intended patentee. Now, there is no evidence, that there ever was but one person named Phillipe Francois or Francois Phillipe Carlier, and there is no controversy, that a person bearing one or the other of these Christian names was associated with Vignon in the invention claimed. Indeed the answer concedes this, for it admits that Francois P. Carlier, either conjointly with Vignon, or separately, did discover and invent improvements, in connection with apparatus, for extinguishing fires.

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Bluebook (online)
18 F. Cas. 394, 1 Ban. & A. 177, 10 Phila. 227, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 1880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-fire-extinguisher-co-v-philadelphia-fire-extinguisher-co-circtedpa-1874.