Read v. Bowman

69 U.S. 591, 17 L. Ed. 812, 2 Wall. 591, 1864 U.S. LEXIS 454
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 30, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 69 U.S. 591 (Read v. Bowman) 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
Read v. Bowman, 69 U.S. 591, 17 L. Ed. 812, 2 Wall. 591, 1864 U.S. LEXIS 454 (1865).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois. The principal question in the case arises upon the exceptions of the defendants to the instructions given by the court to the jury. *601 Other exceptions were taken by the defendants to the rulings of the court, and to the refusal of the court to instruct the jury as requested; but the whole substance of the controversy between the parties, and of the errors assigned in the record, is involved in the exceptions to the instructions of the court. Defendant in error and the first-named plaintiff were inventors of a certain improvement in reaping and mowing .machines, and were joint-owners of the improvement. They applied to the' Patent Office for letters patent, and employed a patent solicitor, to prosecute their claim before the commissioner. Application was filed on the eighteenth day of May, 1857, and it is conceded that the specifications accompanying the same contained a description of the entire improvement. Pending the application, and before the letters patent were granted, ’Whitaker, the principal defendant in the court below, agreed with his associate inventor to purchase of him, for the sum of four thousand five hundred dollars, all the right, title, and interest which the latter had or might have in and to the invention, in consequence of the letters patent granted or to be granted therefor;' and in consideration of that sum the plaintiff" in the court below, who was the other inventor, assigned and set over to the party first named the full and exclusive right to all of the invention, as set forth and described in the specifications; and the contract was that the assignee should have and hold the invention to him and his assigns, as fully as the same would have been enjoyed by the assignor if the assignment and sale had not been made. Introductory part of the instrument described the invention as an improvement in reaping and mowing machines, for which the inventors had applied for letters patent. Assignor also, by the same instrument, “in consideration aforesaid, and also of one dollar” to him paid, assigned and set over to the same assignee, all right, title, and interest in and to three certain claims to inventions, described as made by the same inventors, and for which the specifications had not been fully prepared. Suit was brought in this case, by the assignor in that instrument, to recover the sum of three thousand dol *602 lars as the unpaid balance of the consideration for the title and interest of the invention as conveyed.

Declaration was an assumpsit, and was founded upon a contemporaneous written agreement, signed by the assignee in that assignment, and the other two defendants. Agreement declared on refers to the instrument of assignment, describes the'subject-matter assigned as improvements “to grain-reapers and grass-mowers, belt-tightener,’’.Ac., specifies the entire consideration, states that the balance unpaid is three thousand dollars, and that the- same is to be paid in two annual instalments, with interest at ten per cent, per annum, and concludes with what is the material clause in the controversy. Substance of the clause is that the defendants agreed to execute to the assignor of the invention their joint and several notes “for said amounts, payable as aforesaid, with interest, as aforesaid,” as soon as the patent for the improvement in the grain-reaper and grass-mower aforesaid is obtained by the said inventors. . Material allegations of the declaration are, that the letters patent described in the agreement were, op the eleventh day of August, 1857, duly obtained, and that the defendants, after due notice thereof, neglected- and refused to give to the plaintiff their joint and several notes as they had agreed to do. Plea was non-assumpsit, and the verdict aiid judgment were for the plaintiff'.

I. Principal defence is that by the true construction of the agreement, no right of action against the last two defendants was to accrue to the plaintiff, unless letters patent for all the improvements specified in the assignment were obtained within a reasonable time, and that inasmuch as the patent of the eleventh of August, 1857, was for one only of the four specified improvements, the. plaintiff, as against those defendants; is not entitled to recover. Reference must be made to the circumstances under which the contract was made, as affording the means of applying the language employed in the instrument to the subject-matter, of the agreement. Parties agreed that there were four improvements, but they all related to grain-reapers and grass-mowers, as *603 the machines are called in the written contract. Specifications of the patent of the eleventh of August, 1857, embraced-, all of the improvements described in the assignment, but the,' claim of the patent limited the invention to the tubular finger-bar, therein described, which is by far the, most important feature of the entire improvement, and really constitutes the principal merit of the invention. Description of the improvement in the assignment is that it is an improvement in reaping and mowing machines, and there can be no doubt that it was regarded by the parties as constituting the principal matter of the assignment and transfer. But the other improvements are embraced in the assignment, and cannot be separated from the consideration specified in the instrument. Two of the claims are described as the subjects of one application, and the other, as an invention for a belt “tightener,” operated by a right and'left hand screw. They were four in all, and in point of fact were all described in the original specification, and are the same as those described in- the reissued patents set forth in the record.

First one, as before stated, consists of an improvement in the construction of the finger-bar in reaping and mowing machines, substituting a rolled tubular finger-bar in the place of the solid bar previously used.

Second one consists of an improvement in the arrangement and combination of the raker’s seat with a supporting wheel, and the frame and finger-bar of the machine.

Third one consists of an improvement in the mode of mounting the driving wheel, and of driving the pulley that communicates motion to the belt and reel pulley.

Fourth one consists of an improvement for tightening the belt which draws the reel for the purpose of gathering- the grain into the sickle.

Obviously the improvements are but parts of the same invention, and the evidence shows that the parties to the assignment had invented them all before the-date of that instrument. Precise date of the invention does not appear; but it does appear that all of the parties to the written agree *604 ment were partners in 1856, and that the partnership used the improvement in the manufacture of machines. "When the plaintiff assigned his interest in the invention to the first-named defendant he retired from the firm, and the other partners continued the business, using all four of the improvements.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 U.S. 591, 17 L. Ed. 812, 2 Wall. 591, 1864 U.S. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/read-v-bowman-scotus-1865.