Parks v. Booth

102 U.S. 96, 26 L. Ed. 54, 12 Otto 96, 1880 U.S. LEXIS 2002
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 26, 1880
Docket233
StatusPublished
Cited by93 cases

This text of 102 U.S. 96 (Parks v. Booth) 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
Parks v. Booth, 102 U.S. 96, 26 L. Ed. 54, 12 Otto 96, 1880 U.S. LEXIS 2002 (1880).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Clifford

delivered the opinion of the court.

Power to promote the progress of science and useful arts by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive ■right to their respective writings and discoveries is expressly vested.in Congress by the Constitution. Pursuant to the power there conferred, the enactment of Congress provides that the original jurisdiction of patent cases shall be exclusive in the circuit courts or the district courts exercising circuit court, powers. Rev. Stat.,-sects. 629-711.

Provision is also made that a party, whose rights, secured by valid patent are invaded by infringement, may seek his remedy in an action at law or by a suit in equity, at his election. 5 Stat. 124; 16 id. 206 ; Rev. Stat., sect. 4920.

Federal courts vested with jurisdiction in such cases have power, in their'discretion, to grant injunctions' to'prevent, the violation of any right secured by a patent, as in other cases of equity cognizance.

.' Sufficient appears to show that a patent in • due form was issued to the complainant, on the 20th of September, 1859; for a new and useful improvement in grain-separators, which- consisted in the employment and use of a series of inclined screens and boxes, ■ having a proper shake-motion communicated to them, in connection with a fan air-blast spout, -the whole being arranged in a manner set forth in the specification.

Without entering much into details, it will suffice to say .in' *98 'this connection that the object of-the improvement was to subject grain to a thorough screening operation. Machines were constructed under the- patent and were .put in operation at various places, but on the 25th of September of the next year it was surrendered and reissued, and -on the 29th of November, four years later, it was surrendered a second tim,e, when the patent in suit was issued to the complainant, which is a second reissue. Having removed the defects in the prior patents, the complainant alleges that he immediately, put the machines on sale ; that he has ever since been in possession of the right secured by the patent; and that he would have made large profits from the manufacture and sale of the- same had he ' not been prevented from so doing by the respondents.

Two claims are made by the complainant.- He charges that the -respondents have-largely infringed his exclusive right, and are still engaged in making and selling machines which are constructed in the-same manner as the patented improvement,.and accomplish the same object by the same mode of operation.

• Service was made, and the respondents appeared and filed an ans-wer. Their principal defences are as follows i 1. That the' complainant is not the original and' first inventor of the patented improvement. 2. That the alleged invention had been in public us'e and on sale for more than two years -prior to- the application by the complainant for a patent. 3. That the reissued patent described in the bill of cpmplaint is.not for the same invention as the original.

Proofs were taken, hearing had, and the Circuit Court entered a decree in favor of the complainant, and sent the cause’ to a master to compute the profits, gains, and advantages which the respondents have received, or which have arisen or accrued to them from the infringements of the said patent. . Diie report was- made,, by the Master, to whose report certain exceptions were filed by the respondents. Exceptions were also filed by the complainant, but, inasmuch as he .did not appeal, they will not be re-examined.' Those filed by the respondents, which are still the subject of complaint, will receive due consideration.

Both parties appeared, and were.heard in support of their respective exceptions, all of which wer.e. overruled by the Circuit Court except the fourth exception filed by the respondents. *99 Matters of the kind being settled, the Circuit Court entered a final decree in favor of the complainant in the sum of $11,184.42, with costs of suit. Prompt appeal was taken by the respondents to this court, and since the cause was entered here they have filed the assignment of errors set forth in their brief.

All such matters as are deemed material to the several defences pleaded in the answers will be carefully considered, without entering into the details of the argumentative -portion of the 'errors assigned.. When reduced to specific propositions, the errors assigned may be stated as follows: 1. That the complainant is not the original and first inventor of the patented improvement. 2. That the supposed improvement was n.ot the proper subject of a patent, because, it did not involve any invention. 3. That the Circuit Court erred- in-finding that the respondents had infringed the reissued patent of .the'com/plainant. 4. That the Circuit Court erred in overruling the exceptions of the respondents to the- Master’s report. 5. That the Circuit Court erred, in -allowing damages to .the complainant in addition to profits.

' Redréss for the -infringement of a patent may be sought by a suit in equity as well as by an action’at few, and the- required allegations and proofs are substantially the same in one form of remedy as in -the other. ■ Neither damages nor profits can be' recovered unless, the'complaining party alleges and proves that ■he or the-person under whom he claims was the original and first inventor of the patented improvement, and that the same has been infringed' by the party against whom the suit' is brought. Both of those allegations must be proved to maintain • the suit; but the patent,, if ■ introduced in - evidence by the ■complaining party, affords him prima facie evidence that the patentee was the original and first inventor. That presumption, in the absence of any satisfactory proof to the contrary, is ^sufficient to. entitle him to recover if he proves the alleged.infringement.

Evidence to overcome that presumption may be introduced by the defending party in case due notice of such an intention is given to the party that instituted the suit, ..as required by the act of- Coneress. Rev. Stat., sect. 4920. Notices of the kind *100 were g ven by the respondents in their answers, and the assignment cf errors calls in question,the decision of the Circuit Court in that regard, which is the first question presented for re-examination, in the record.

Questions of the kind cannot well be decided without first ascertaining what the patented improvement is that is described in the first pleading of the complaining party,; and that becomes necessary in this case, both in determining the issue of prior, invention and the issue of infringement. Attempt having-failed to show that the reissued patent is'not for the same invention as the original, the question as to the nature of the improvement ’-ay be determined by the examination of the specification drawings of the patent in suit.

Two claims are annexed to the specification.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 U.S. 96, 26 L. Ed. 54, 12 Otto 96, 1880 U.S. LEXIS 2002, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parks-v-booth-scotus-1880.