Pike v. Potter

19 F. Cas. 683, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 55

This text of 19 F. Cas. 683 (Pike v. Potter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pike v. Potter, 19 F. Cas. 683, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 55 (circtdri 1859).

Opinion

PITMAN, District Judge.

The object of the patent laws is to secure to inventors the exclusive right, for a definite period, to their inventions and discoveries. To enable a person to obtain a patent, he must make application to a commissioner, and deliver to him a written description of his invention or discovery, so carefully explained as to enable others, skilled in the art or science to which it appertains, to make, construct, compound, and use the same; and in case of any machine, he must explain the principle, and the several modes of its application, so as to distinguish it from othqr inventions, and shall particularly specify the part or combination which he claims as his invention or discovery. This specification is annexed to, and is made part of, the patent What the patent is for, is ascertained by the construction of the language of the specification by the court; and it is the duty of the court to give it such a liberal construction as will secure to the inventor the exclusive right to his invention and discovery as stated and described in the specification.

In this case, as his specification states, the invention of Mr. Sehooley is not for a machine, but for a process or method of curing meats, and preserving fruit and provisions by means of circulating currents of air, artificially dried by ice or its equivalent, through the room where the curing takes place, and substantially as set forth in this specification, and for the purposes therein stated.

I have no doubt of what the invention is, or that it is sufficiently described. It is stated in the specification that the improvement “is particularly ajiplieable to the construction of pork houses, for the purpose of curing meats in the summer season,” etc., and it is contended by the defendant that if is for nothing else. It is so contended, not. only from the language of the specification, but also from the correspondence between the commissioner and Mr. Sehooley, from which it appears that the commissioner refused to grant a patent under the original specification, because it had already been discovered as applicable to domestic refrigerators, and that Mr. Sehooley then agreed that his patent should only be for curing meats in pork houses, as described in the specification, and an offer was made to produce the correspondence. It was objected to by the plaintiff, but I admitted it on the ground that if the patent was issued. with such an agreement (not to extend it to domestic refrigerators), to extend it to domestic refrigerators would be a fraud upon the government, and extend their grant beyond what was the original intention of the parties; and if at law such evidence is not admissible, certain I am that a court of equity would not grant an injunction in the face of such evidence. The testimony, therefore, has been admitted by me, and the question is whether it proves that the commissioner refused to grant this patent because it was claimed to be applicable to domestic refrigerators; and whether Mr. Sehooley admitted that he had no right to extend it to domestic refrigerators, for want of novelty in that department, and that he obtained the grant with that understanding, and that it ought not tó be extended to domestic refrigerators, it is obvious, and it must be apparent to all lawyers, that if it could not, for [685]*685want of novelty, be extended to domestic refrigerators, it could not be extended to pork bouses; and that may help us somewhat in the construction of this correspondence.

An application was made (as appears from the letter that accompanied it), on January 19, 1855; and this letter states that it was “an application for an improvement in curing meats and for preserving all kinds of fruits and provisions,” and this is so stated in tlie first specification of Hr. Sehooley. This specification is almost verbatim, like the one annexed to the patent, in all those parts that have been criticised by the defendant as going to show that the patent was granted only for curing as described in the one for pork houses, and it contains this clause: “My improvement is applicable to ice chests and refrigerators of any and every form heretofore invented, and is particularly applicable to pork houses, for the purpose of curing meats,” etc. The words “is applicable to ice chests and refrigerators of any and every form heretofore invented,” are not to be found in the new specification; but they have been stricken out as appears from the evidence, or rather, lines have been drawn through them, and the phrase is left now “is particularly applicable to the construction of pork houses.”

On February 2, 1855, a letter was written from the patent office, and signed by the commissioner of patents, to Mr. Sehooley, in which he says: “Your application for alleged improvement in apparatus for preserving meats, etc., has been examined and is found not to contain any patentable novelty. For substantially the same device, you are referred to the application of Thaddeus Fairbanks for a refrigerator, rejected February 26, 1847, and withdrawn September G, 1847, and also the application of A. S. Lyman, for a patent for a disinfecting ventilator, rejected February 27, 1854.” It appears that the application of Lyman was for ventilators and refrigerators, and more particularly for refrigerators. It is apparent from this letter, that their refusal to grant a patent to Mr. Sehooley, as applied for, was not because he had stated in his specification that his patent was applicable to ice-chests and refrigerators of every form; but because the same device was found in the application referred to, and therefore contained no patentable novelty, and of course it was the duty of the commissioner to refuse the patents, if such was his opinion.

The answer of Mr. Sehooley, by his attorney, Mr. Stoughton, is an argument to show that this was not true, and after an attempt to convince the commissioner of error, he says: “To remove all difficulties on the part of the office, I propose, on the accompanying sheet of amendments, to erase, for the present, from the specifications, all allusions to refrigerators or ice-boxes, but to reserve to myself the right to renew my claim to those under a new application at some future day. My invention will then rest upon what can not be called either a refrigerator or an ice-box.”

This is not an admission that his invention can not be extended to refrigerators, on the ground that the same device had already been used, but a denial of this, and a proposition to say nothing about them in his specification, provided that the patent would be granted to him. This proposition was made, he says, “to remove all difficulty on the part of the office;” but this proposition did not remove all difficulties on the part of the office, for the difficulty was not that the specification had been extended to refrigerators, but that the device substantially existed before, and of course was not a novelty; but so far was this from satisfying the office, that in the letter of the commissioner, dated February 22, 1S55, he says: “Upon examination, etc., it is still found that your claim covers the device of A. S. Lyman, with the only addition and difference,” etc. The difference I will not remark upon, it is not material, whatever may be the opinion of the court; whether there would be a substantial difference' or not is of no importance; it seems to have been waived by the opinion of the office afterward. “Currents of air,” he says, “produced are no novelty, as is proven by the remarks filed by yourself on the 19th instant (I will observe that I could find no such admission, and therefore there was no such evidence as affecting Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F. Cas. 683, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pike-v-potter-circtdri-1859.