Roemer v. Simon

20 F. Cas. 1097, 1 Ban. & A. 138
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedApril 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 F. Cas. 1097 (Roemer v. Simon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roemer v. Simon, 20 F. Cas. 1097, 1 Ban. & A. 138 (circtdnj 1874).

Opinion

NIXON, District Judge.

The bill is filed in this case for an alleged infringement of letters patent, granted to the complainant, July 31, 1866, for “improvement in travelling bags.” The defendants, in their answer, aver, that the complainant is not the original and first inventor of the improvement claimed; that it had been previously in use, and was known to a large number of persons named; that a knowledge of the invention had been acquired by the complainant abroad, and that he had surreptitiously and unjustly obtained said patent here; and that it had been described in a printed publication, by one Samuel Fisher, in London, prior to the supposed invention thereof by complainant.

The testimony in the case is conflicting, and in many respects unsatisfactory; especially, that of the complainant, the defendants and several of their employees. I have been unable to reconcile many of their statements of facts and circumstances, and am obliged to conclude that they have allowed their interests or their feelings to warp their judgment, and to distrust the accuracy of their recollections. Viewing much of the evidence in this light, and the affirmative being upon the defendants, I think they have failed to establish all their defences, except the one alleging a prior public use of the invention, and I proceed to examine the proofs and the law upon that point.

The proofs may be properly considered under the two heads of (1) foreign, and (2) domestic prior use.

1. In regard to the foreign prior use, a number of witnesses, undoubtedly, testify that travelling bags, having fastenings upon them like the complainant’s patent, were largely manufactured and used abroad, and were sent to this country and exhibited for sale in the public market.

A commission was taken out by the defendants, for the examination of Mr. Samuel Fisher, a dressing-bag maker, residing in London, and to it was annexed a copy of the drawing, accompanying and illustrating the patent of the complainant, and which clearly revealed the character of the invention claimed. Mr. Fisher examined the said drawing, and, in answer to the 5th interrogatory says:

“The fastening, or catch, described in the drawing attached to this commission, and marked ‘William Roemer’s improvement in travelling bags, valises, etc., patented July 31, 1866,’ was, I believe, invented by a person named Morse, of London, and was manufactured by him, before the year 1861. Before that date, I frequently purchased bags, with the fastening or catch referred to, of him, he having given me to understand that the said invention was protected by registration up to the year 1861; after that date, both before and after the year 1861, I have manufactured and sold bags with the said fastening or catch.”

Oscar Ditzes, a satchel-maker, who came to this country in April, 1869, testifies that, in 1863 he worked in Cologne, on bags having catches or fastenings on them, like those described in Roemer’s patent; that previous to this, in 1862, he was with the complainant, in the employ of Vogel Brothers, in London, and, while there, saw many of such catches at Keller & Bertrams, No. 28 Remsen street, and at Schaffer Brothers; that they were the invention of a German, whose name and place of business he does not remember; and that two of them were attached on the top of the frame of each travelling bag, in the mode exhibited in the drawing of the complainant’s patent.

Henry I. Sayers, of the firm of H. I. Sayers & Co., of New York, says that, previous to 1866, he was connected with the firm of Calhoun & Robbins, and .had particular charge of the bag department; that he fre[1098]*1098quently saw, upon bags imported from Paris, catebes or fastenings to the jaws of the bags, constructed and arranged, upon the same general idea, of those of the defendants’ Exhibit No. 17, to wit, two or more saddles or brass pieces on the top and sides of the frame with the two ends turned down, and holding together the jaws of the satchel.

Henry S. Doxsey, salesman for H. I.' Sayers & Co., and formerly his fellow-cíerk at Calhoun & Itobbins, states that the last named firm moved from 26 and 2S Vesey street, to No. 410 Broadway, January 1, 1S60; that before the removal, in the fall of 1865, he recollects seeing there, on sale, imported French travelling bags, with two catches fastened to the top of the frame; that the clamp was attached to the frame by a plate, and closed over the jaws of the bag, and that they only differed from the catches on the frame, Exhibit No. 17, in the manner of their finish.

Thomas Walter Griffith, now a resident of Newark, New Jersey, and formerly of Canada, (defendants' Exhibit No. 14 being shown to him,) testifies, that he first saw such catches or fastenings upon a bag in the possession of one Benedict, travelling from Ni-agra Falls to Toronto, in 1S54 or 1S55; that his mind was so much impressed with the utility of the contrivance for fastening the jaws of travelling bags, and especially for preventing the sides from bulging out, that afterwards, on purchasing a bag in London, in 1858, he had such catches placed upon the frame; that he used the bag with the catches for eight or ten years, visiting the United States with it more than a dozen times, while he owned it, and generally stopping at the Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York; that he has frequently seen them upon the bags of English officers, stationed in Canada; and, that the catch he had and saw, was precisely like the defendants’ Exhibit No. 14, except that the clamps turned all the way round under the plate, and did not have the small knob on this exhibit which prevented such turning.

Carl Frederick Sperling, having made and affixed to the jaws of a travelling bag frame, a catch similar in all respects to complainant’s patent, and marked, defendants’ Exhibit 10, says, that he came to this country in April, 1SSG; that he worked at bag-making in London from August, 1863, to about March, 1S66; that while in London, he applied to travel-ling bags, catches or fastenings, like Exhibit 10; that such catches were in use in London, at that time, and were on sale in the market; and, that he purchased them there, at a shilling a pair, but did not largely use them on account of the price.

There was no contradiction of these witnesses, and their evidence seems to establish the defendants’ proposition, that, there was a foreign prior use of the improvement described and claimed in the complainant’s patent.

2. In reference to the knowledge and pub-lie use of the invention in this country, in addition to the testimony aforesaid of Sayers and Doxsey, the attention of the court has been particularly directed to the evidence of John Hill and Edward Taylor.

Hill was a trunk-maker, and carried on the business from 1849 to 1857, at the comer of Broadway and Warren street, New York; and, from 1857 to li00 at the comer of Broadway and Tenth street; and, afterwards worked for Stillings on Broadway, from 1863 to 1867. A bag, marked defendants’ Exhibit No.

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

Related

Lettelier v. Mann
91 F. 909 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern California, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F. Cas. 1097, 1 Ban. & A. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roemer-v-simon-circtdnj-1874.