O'Reilly v. Morse

56 U.S. 62, 14 L. Ed. 601, 15 How. 62, 1853 U.S. LEXIS 273
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 30, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by332 cases

This text of 56 U.S. 62 (O'Reilly v. Morse) 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
O'Reilly v. Morse, 56 U.S. 62, 14 L. Ed. 601, 15 How. 62, 1853 U.S. LEXIS 273 (1854).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice TANEY

delivered the opinion of the court.

In proceeding to pronounce judgment in this case, the court is sensible, not only of its importance, but of the difficulties in some of the questions which it presents for decision. The case was argued at the last term, and continued over by the court for the purpose of giving it a more deliberate examination. And since the continuance, we have received from the counsel on both sides printed arguments, in which all of the questions raised on the trial have been fully and elaborately discussed.

The appellants take three grounds of defence. In the first place they deny that Professor Morse, was the first and original inventor of the Electro-Magnetic Telegraphs described in his two reissued patents of 1848. Secondly, they insist that if he was the original inventor, the patents under which he claims have not been issued conformably to the acts of Congress, and do not confer on him the right to the exclusive use. And thirdly, if these two propositions are decided against them, they insist that the Telegraph of O’Reilly is substantially different from that of Professor Morse, and the use of it, therefore, no infringement of his rights.'

In determining these questions we shall, in the first instance, confine our attention to the patent which Professor Morse obtained in 1840, and which was reissued in 1848. The main dispute between .the parties is upon the validity of this patent; and the decision upon it will dispose of the chief points in controversy in the other.

In relation to the' first point, (the originality of the invention,) many witnesses have been examined on both sides.

It is obvious that, for some years before Professor Morse made his invention, scientific men in different parts of Europe were earnestly engaged in the same pursuit. Electro-magnetism itself was a. recent discovery, and opened to them' a new and unexplored field for their labors, and-minds of á high order were engaged in developing its power and the purposes to which it might be applied.

[107]*107Professor Henry, of the Smithsonian Institute, states in his testimony that, prior to the winter of 1819 - 20, an electro-magnetic telegraph — that is to say, a telegraph operating by the combined influence of electricity and magnetism — was not possible; that the scientific principles on which it is founded were until then unknown; and that the first fact of electromagnetism was discovered by Oersted, of Copenhagen, in that winter, and was widely published, and the account everywhere received with interest.

He also gives an account of the various discoveries, subsequently made from time to- time, by different persons in different places, developing its properties and powers, and among them his own. He commenced his researches in 1828, and pursued them with ardor and success, from that time until the telegraph of Professor Morse was established and in actual operation. Aud it is due to him to say that no one has contributed more. to enlarge the knowledge of electro-magnetism, and to lay the foundations of the great invention of which we are spéaking, than the professor himself.

It is unnecessary, however, to give in detail the discoveries enumerated by him — either his own or those of others. But it appears from his testimony that very soon after the discovery made by Oersted,'it was believed by men of science that this newly-discovered power might be used to communicate intelligence to distant places. And before the year 1823, Ampere of Paris, one of the most successful cultivators of physical science, proposed to the French Academy a plan.for that purpose. But his project was never reduced to practice. And the discovery made by Barlow, of the Royal Military Academy of Woolwich, England, in 1825, that the galvanic current greatly diminished in power as the distance increased, put at rest, for a time, all attempts to construct an electro-magnetic telegraph. Subsequent discoveries, however, revived the hope; and in th§ year 1832, when Professor Morse appears'to have devoted himself to the subject, the conviction was general among men of scienee everywhere that the object could, and sooner or later would be, accomplished.

The great difficulty in their way was the fact that the galvanic current, however strong in the beginning, became gradually weaker as it advanced on the wire; and was not strong enough to produce a mechanical effect, after a certain distance had been traversed. But, encouraged by the discoveries which were made from time to time, and strong in the belief-that an electro-magnetic telegraph was practicable, many eminent and scientific men in Europe, as well ■ as in this country, became deeply engaged in endeavoring to surmount what appeared to be the chief obstacle to- its success. - And in this state ' of [108]*108things it ought not to be a matter of surprise that four different magnetic telegraphs, purporting.to have overcome the difficulty, should be invented and made public so nearly at the same time that each has claimed a priority; and that a close and careful scrutiny of the facts in each case is necessary to decide between them. The inventions were so nearly simultaneous, that neither inventor can be justly accused of having derived any aid from the discoveries of the other.

One. of these inventors, Doctor Steinhiel, of Munich, in Germany, communicated his discovery to the Academy of Science in Paris, on the 19th of July, 1838, and states, in his communication, that it had been in Operation more than a year.

Another of the European inventors, Professor Wheatstone, of London, in the month of April, 1837, explained to Professors Henry and Bache, who were then in London, his plan of an electro-magnetic telegraph, and exhibited to them his method of bringing into action a second galvanic circuit, in order to provide a remedy for the diminution of force in a long circuit; but it appears, by the testimony of Professor Gale, that the patent to Wheatstone and Cooke was not sealed until January 21, 1840, and their specification was not filed until the 21st of July in the same year ; and there is no evidence that any description of it was published before 1839.

The remaining European patent is that of Edward Davy. His patent, it appears, was sealed on the 4th of July, 1838, but his specification was not filed until January 4,1839; and when these two English -patents are brought into competition with that of Morse, they must take date from the time of filing their respective specifications. For it must be borne in mind that, as the law then sto’od in England, the inventor was allowed six months tó file the description of his invention after his patent was sealed; while, in this country, the filing of the specification is simultaneous with the application for patents.

The defendants contend that all, or at least some one of these European telegraphs, were invented and made public before the discovery claimed by Morse; and that the process and method by which he conveys intelligence to a distance is substantially the same, with the ’exception only of its capacity for impressing upon paper the marks or signs described in the alphahet he invented.

Waiving, for the present, any remarks upon the identity or similitude of these inventions; the cour' is of opinion that the . first branch of the objection cannot be maintained, and that Morse was the first and original inventor of the telegraph described in his specification, and preceded the three European inventipns relied on by the defendants..

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 U.S. 62, 14 L. Ed. 601, 15 How. 62, 1853 U.S. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oreilly-v-morse-scotus-1854.