Putnam v. Hickey

20 F. Cas. 77, 5 Fish. Pat. Cas. 334, 3 Biss. 157, 1872 U.S. App. LEXIS 1440

This text of 20 F. Cas. 77 (Putnam v. Hickey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Putnam v. Hickey, 20 F. Cas. 77, 5 Fish. Pat. Cas. 334, 3 Biss. 157, 1872 U.S. App. LEXIS 1440 (circtedwi 1872).

Opinion

MILLER, District Judge.

Complainant, in his bill, states that he was the original and first inventor of a new and useful improved bottle-stopper fastener, for which letters patent were issued to him bearing date March 15, 1859; and that he surrendered said patent, and reissued letters patent were received by him, dated January 19. 1864, designated as reissue No. 1,690, which granted to complainant for the term of fourteen years, from March 15, 1850, the full and exclusive right and liberty of making, constructing, using, and selling to others to be used, the said invention, described in the amended specification.

In the schedule referred to in the letters patent, it is stated that “fastenings for bottles” have heretofore been in use in which a strap of metal has extended over the cork from a hinge or joint formed on each side of the neck of the bottle by a second metallic strap. The nature of the invention consists in forming the fastener of wire, bent in such a manner that if the pressure upon the cork is sufficient to bend the wire-fastener, it will retain the cork more firmly, and the cork will require to be pushed in before the fastener can be pushed aside, thus causing the pressure to render the fastener more secure, instead of more liable to failure.

Joints are formed for securing the fastener and forming a hinge, upon which it may be turned aside, by bending- the ends of such wires at right angles, or nearly so, to the sides of the fastener. Wire is used to attach this fastener to the bottle, in which the eyes are formed for receiving the ends of the fastener, and on which the fastener swings, thus producing by one piece of wire a much more simple, effective, and cheap attachment than any before made.

The schedule further represents that the fastener is of two pieces of wire. Bent wire of about one-tenth of an inch in diameter embraces the stopper or cork of the bottle. The two sides are nearly straight, curved a little in one direction to fit the enlargement upon the neck of the bottle. The lower ends are turned outward, in this manner forming the pin for the hinge. The middle portion of this wire is bent so as to stand nearly at right angles to the sides, the horizontal parts being nearly parallel, and a space between being left sufficient for the piston that presses the cork into the neck of the bottle for the purpose of holding the carbonic-acid gas in solution, with which the liquid is charged. In the wire that surrounds the neck of the bottle are loops into which these ends are inserted, and which, together, form a hinge upon each side of the neck of the bottle, allowing .the wire to be turned back, thus leaving the stopper free.

Complainant claims to secure by letters patent: “1. Forming the fastener at the part that comes over the cork of a piece of wire of a 13-form, with the ends returned and -connected to the bottle, in order that the pressure on the cork or stopper may cause the fastener to hold more securely, as specified. 2. A wire-fastener for a cork or stopper, in which the ends of the wire are bent nearly at right angles to form the joint or hinge on which the fastener is turned, substantially as specified. 3. Forming the eyes for the reception of the fastener by means of a wire bent as set forth. 4. A wire-fastener for the stoppers of bottles, fitted so that it can be pressed aside from over the stopper, as set forth, in combination with a band or fasten-iug attaching the same to the neck of bottle, as specified.”

The defendants are charged in the bill with unlawfully and wrongfully making and selling, at the city of Milwaukee, large numbers of bottle-stopper fasteners, made substantially as described in the reissued letters patent, with a prayer for an injunction and for an accounting.

Defendants, in their answer, do not deny making, using, and selling an article similar to that patented to complainant, but they deny the making, using, or selling any invention for which the complainant has or has had the exclusive right or privilege to make, use, of sell, or in violation of any rights or privileges under the said reissued letters patent; or any cork-fastener containing or embracing any invention of the complainant, or any material part thereof.

It is alleged in the answer, upon information and belief, that the alleged invention was not new and original with the complainant, but that it' was communicated to him, and explained to him by one John Sehrink, residing at Toledo,'in the state of Ohio.

It is further alleged by the defendants that, for an improvement similar to that claimed by complainant, letters patent were granted to one John Állender; of New London, in the state of Connecticut, July 24, 1805, and that he and his heirs have continued ever since making and using the articles so patented to him.

It is also alleged, in the answer, that long before the patent and reissue patented to complainant, the same and each and every material part thereof was •described, set forth, and explained in volume -2 of the Pateut Office Reports of the. United States, in the year 1855, on pages 175 and 337; number of the patent, 13,338.' Also in the English Patent Reports for the,year 1848; number of the patent, 12,330, and issued to Thomas Masters in the same year. Also in the English Patent Reports for the year 1856; number of the patent, 2,OSS or 20,088, issued to one Chalus. Also in the English Patent Reports for the year' 1857, in the patent issued, as ia described and set forth, to James Hincks and James Tyson Nibbs. January 23, 1857. Also in Bufnoir’s ■ Provisional Protection, English [79]*79patent; date of patent, August 1, 1855. Also in English Patent Reports for the year 1854; •number of patent, as described therein, 1,823; .and'in the claim or patent issued to Henry Bauekham. Also in same reports for the year 1853, in claim or patent of Henry G. ..Tames, or Herbert Jam.es. Also in.first scries •of French Patent Reports, in patent issued to C. Goin, March 25, 1835. Also in volume ¾ page 232, 1S15. Also in volume 25, page 125, second series, French Brevets; and the plates of the same in same volume, page 26, •or No. 26; date of patent, October 14, 1851. Also in volume 20, second series of same works, page 208; see plates. And on these "facts, so pleaded by the defendants, they allege that the letters patent to complainant are null and void.

[For other cases involving this patent, see Putnam v. Wealherbee. Case No. 11,485; Putnam v. Yerrington, Id. 11,486; Putnam v. Sudu hoff, Id. 11,4S3; Putnam v. Lomax, 9 Fed. 448.)

It does not appear in evidence that John Schrink communicated to complainant sufficient facts to enable him to form a model for his invention. On the contrary, this man, John Schrink, is one of the witnesses to complainant’s application; and complainant denies having obtained from Schrink the alleged intelligence.

There is also proof sufficient to establish the facts that the improvement of complainant has become of general use, and that the use •extends back to a short time after the date •of the amended letters patent. Referring to ■the date of the original patent, its validity may be legally presumed.

The evidence of the witnesses, in connection with the exhibits of the patented articles annexed to bottles, I think, substantially •supports the schedule description of the letters patent as claimed by complainant

It would be tedious to follow in detail the evidence in the description and explanation •of the complainant’s improvement.

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Related

Putnam v. Lomax
9 F. 448 (U.S. Circuit Court, 1881)

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Bluebook (online)
20 F. Cas. 77, 5 Fish. Pat. Cas. 334, 3 Biss. 157, 1872 U.S. App. LEXIS 1440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/putnam-v-hickey-circtedwi-1872.