Ruggles v. Eddy

20 F. Cas. 1319, 11 Blatchf. 524, 1 Ban. & A. 92, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 1945
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York
DecidedMarch 17, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 20 F. Cas. 1319 (Ruggles v. Eddy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruggles v. Eddy, 20 F. Cas. 1319, 11 Blatchf. 524, 1 Ban. & A. 92, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 1945 (circtndny 1874).

Opinion

WOODRUFF, Circuit Judge.

The defendants. at the adjourned term in January, 1874, moved the court for an order opening the decree made herein at the June term, 1872 [Case No. 12.117], and allowing the defendants to amend their answer, by striking out such portion of the same as admits the infringement of the complainant’s patent, and by inserting instead thereof, a denial of such infringement, and thereupon permitting the defendants either to contest the complainant’s case on the merits, as to such infringement, or to open the proceedings before the master under such decree, and direct the accounting thereby ordered to proceed anew upon such amended answer, instead of upon the fact admitted in the answer as it now stands.

The litigation between these parties has been severe and protracted. On the 4th of January, 1845, the original letters patent for the invention in controversy were granted to one Henry Stanley. In 1853, the patentee sold [1320]*1320and assigned to Henry J. Buggies his inventions, and the letters patent therefor, “to the full end of the term for which said letters patent are or may be granted, as fully and entirely as the same would have been held and enjoyed by me, ‘(him,)’ had this assignment and sale not have been made.” On the 24th of July, 1858, Henry J. Buggies executed a similar assignment to the complainant. On the 24th of December, 1S5S, on the petition of the patentee, Henry Stanley, the said patent wgs extended for the period of seven years from the day on which it was about to expire, viz., from the 4th day of January, 1859. On the 4th of January, 1S59, the patentee, acting upon the idea that the extension of the patent did not enure to the benefit of the complainant, assigned the extended term to John Stanley, and John Stanley, on the 24th of March following, assigned the same to the defendants in this cause. The defendants, subsequently, claiming to be the owners, made several surrenders, and obtained re-issues, of the said letters patent. The defendants, having begun the manufacture of stoves which the complainant deemed to be an infringement of the patent, the complainant notified them that he claimed title thereto, and afterwards, in May or June, 1859, he filed his bill in this court, setting up his title to the extended term, alleging infringement of the patent by the defendants, and praying discovery on oath and an injunction and relief. To this bill the defendants, under the advice of their then counsel, in July, 1850. put in an answer, under the oath of each of the defendants, admitting that they were engaged in manufacturing stoves upon the plan and principle of the said invention, but setting up title to the said extended letters patent under the assignment by the patentee to them. They also commenced an action thereunder against third parties, founded on, their claim to the extension and the re-issues they had obtained, in which they produced proof that their patterns were made under such re-issues. The complainant, having failed to obtain an injunction pendente lite, by reason of the doubt whether the extended term had passed to him, discontinued his above named suit. But, subsequently, in the year 1871, the complainant filed the present bill of complaint, demanding a discovery under oath, to which the defendants put in their answer in this cause, verified on the 2d of September, 1871, and put in under the advice of counsel other than those employed in the former suit. In this answer, the defendants, both verifying the same by oath, admit that they have made, and caused to be made and sold, 10,097 coal stoves, of the description named in the bill of complaint, which description plainly conforms to the patent; and, as before, the defendants set up, among other things, their own title, and a denial that the complainant has title to the extended term. Under these pleadings and the complainant’s replication, proofs were taken, and, at the March term of this court, 1872, the cause was brought to a hearing on pleadings and proofs, and was heard and considered, without an intimation that the admission of the infringement contained in the answer was not intelligently and advisedly made. The whole contest before the court was upon the question of title to the extended term of the patent. At the June term, 1872, the court made a decree affirming the complainant’s title to the extended term, and •ordering an injunction and an account of the profits accruing to the defendants from their infringement. In the opinion of the court, attention was called to the fact that, on the question of infringement, there was no dispute between the parties [Case No. 12,117], At the October term, 1872, the defendants-moved for a rehearing; but, at the instance of their counsel, the hearing of their motion was postponed to the January term, 1873. The grounds of the motion were, not that the defendants had not infringed the patent, if the complainant had title, but that that question of title ought to receive further examination. Meantime, in November, 1872. the accounting before the master was begun, but successive stays of proceedings were sought by the defendants and temporarily obtained, with a view to the application for a rehearing, motions for which stays the complainant was required to oppose; and, in January term, 1873. the defendants did not appear at all to urge their motion for a rehearing. In all these proceedings, the defendants and the complainant acted upon the admission made by the defendants of their infringement — an admission deliberately made, with the approval of various-counsel. Not only so, it is entirely manifest that the defendants, in their manufacture of the stoves, were acting under their own claim to the Stanley patent and the re-issues thereof which they had obtained; and that they acted, and knowingly and purposely acted, in defiance of the complainant, and claimed, as well as admitted, that their stoves were constructed according to the patent the title to-which was then in contest. The proceedings before the master on the accounting proceeded to a final report. The complainant was contented to charge the defendants with making and selling the precise number of stoves which they admitted in their answer they had made and sold, 10,097; and for the making and selling of that number the master made his report of the gains and profits realized by the-defendants for the manufacture and sale of the stoves thus admitted to have been made by the defendants. And now, after five years of litigation, in which no doubt that the stoves made by the defendants were infringements of the patent, if the complainant had title, had been suggested to the court or to the complainant, in any stage of the litigation, conducted on the part of the defendants by various counsel, and more than a year after the decree, they come and ask that the litigation be opened, and their answer be amended, that they may contest the question of infringement-They do not claim even, that, upon the in[1321]*1321formation which they gave their counsel, they have been fraudulently dealt with, but they allege that, in fact, they had made an alteration in one of the devices contained in the Stanley stove, which withdrew the stoves made by them from the operation of the Stanley patent, and that, if their several counsel had sufficiently studied the patent and examined the stoves which the defendants actually made and sold, their counsel would not have permitted them to make the admissions under oath, which appear in their answers.

[NOTE. Pursuant to the order of the court in its decree in favor of plaintiff for an injunction and account (Case No. 12.117), a reference was had to a master. Exceptions were filed to the master's report, and the case sent back for further proof. Case No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F. Cas. 1319, 11 Blatchf. 524, 1 Ban. & A. 92, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 1945, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruggles-v-eddy-circtndny-1874.