Sayles v. Richmond, F. & P. R.

21 F. Cas. 613, 4 Ban. & A. 239
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 21 F. Cas. 613 (Sayles v. Richmond, F. & P. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sayles v. Richmond, F. & P. R., 21 F. Cas. 613, 4 Ban. & A. 239 (circtedva 1879).

Opinion

HUGHES, District Judge.

It is only necessary for me to pass on the two questions of limitation and of jurisdiction.

First, as to the statute of limitations. The-34th section of the judiciary act of 1789 [1 Stat. 80] — section 721, Rev. St. U. S. — is the only general statute of limitations known in federal legislation. In providing that the law's of the several states shall be the rules of decisions in trials at common law in courts of the United States, except where treaties, or acts of congress otherwise provide, congress virtually adopted the statute of limitation of each state as the limitation of actions brought in the United States courts held in that state. This point is so thoroughly settled that it is useless for me to cite authorities on the subject. But this section excepts, in terms, cases in which any acts of congress may provide other rules of decision; and congress did enact a special statute of limitations as to patents, in section 55 of the act of July 8, 1870, entitled an act “to revise, amend, and consolidate the statutes relating to patents and copyrights” (16 Stat. 206), the concluding clause of v'liieh declared that all actions should be brought within the term of the patent, or within six years after the expiration thereof. This clause wus not repealed until [614]*614the 22d of June, 1874, when it was virtually repealed by section 559G of the Revised Statutes of the United States, in having been omitted in the revisal from sections 4919 and 4921, which latter sections, in other respects, embodied sections 59 and .55 of the act of 1870. This repeal gave to the complainant the right to sue, under section 721, within five years from June 22, 1874 (Sohn v. Waterson, 17 Wall. [84 U. S.] 596; Ross v. Duval, 13 Pet. [38 U. S.] 62; and Lewis v. Lewis, 7 How. [48 U. S.] 778); and the present suit was, in fact, brought within that period. The suit is, therefore, undoubtedly, in time as to profits made by the defendant during the period of the extension of the patent— July, 1866, to July, 1873. . The only question admitting of doubt is, whether or .not it is brought in time to cover profits for the fourteen years extending from 1852 to 1866. Section 66 of the act of 1870, and section,4927 of the Revised Statutes, provides, in its last clause, that when a patent shall be extended for seven years after the expiration of the first period for which it was granted, it “shall have the same effect in law as though it had been originally granted for twenty-one years.”

I have given all the attention of which I am capable to the ingenious argument of defendant's counsel in their contention that, in spite of this language, the limitation applied severally, first, to the fourteen years — barring all claims accruing specifically in that period; and, second, to the seven years — barring claims accruing afterward in that period; so that, if a suit is brought, as this was, within six years after the close of the latter period, it would be good to cover claims accruing therein, but .would not be good to cover claims which had accrued anterior thereto. But it is too plain for doubt, in my .mind, that the law, which is certainly written as has been quoted, really means what it declares, when it provides that the renewed patent “shall have the same effect in law as though it had been originally granted for twenty-one years.” The necessary effect of this language is to consolidate the seven and fourteen years of the two patents into one term, as under one patent, and to make the limitation apply to the period of twenty-one years as a single integral term. Indeed, I can well imagine it to have been one of the objects of section 66 of the act of 1S70, to establish a plain, intelligible period of limitation, to wit, six years after one single integral period of twenty-one years, rather than to enact a complicated statute of limitations, depending upon two periods of duration, two sets of dates, and two classes of claims. I cannot, therefore. sustain the demurrer. So far as it rests upon this ground I must hold that the claim of the complainant in this suit is not barred.

I come, therefore, to the more important question, whether the complainant’s bill makes a case within the jurisdiction of a court of equity. This suit being one in which complainant and defendant are citizens of different states, and the jurisdiction of the court extending here to any case which may fall within its general jurisdiction as a court of equity, its power here is not a mere statutory jurisdiction confined to cases arising under patent laws, but it is the general power of an equity court. I doubt whether, under section 55 of the act of 1870, or section 4921 of the Revised Statutes, the United States circuit courts have jurisdiction in patent cases, except by injunction, where the parties are citizens of the same state. In cases where the jurisdiction is merely statutory, and would not exist but for the acts of congress giving special jurisdiction in patent cases, I doubt whether these courts could entertain suits in equity, except by injunction. It is a well settled canon of construe, tion that jurisdictional legislation must be strictly construed, and I see nothing in the letter of section 4921, relating to patent suits in equity, to authorize any other proceeding in them by the circuit courts, as courts of equity, but by injunction, carrying with it, of course, proceedings incident to injunction. If so, the term of this complainant’s patent having expired, and there being no case for an injunction, we have no jurisdiction in this suit merely as a patent suit under section 4921. This proposition, however, does not affect the present case. We are proceeding under the general powers of an equity court, and have jurisdiction of the case (if it can otherwise be entertained) by virtue of the parties, complainant and defendant, being citizens of different states. It was not contended, in the argument at bar, that the bill in this case can be entertained as a bill for discovery. In fact it is not framed on that theory, and does not contain the averments necessary to constitute it such a bill. It does not aver, that the information it seeks, rests alone in the knowledge of the defendant. The defendant is a corporation having no conscience to probe, and is incapable of taking an oath. It can give information only through its officers, and these may all be summoned, and may testify as ordinary witnesses. A “discovery” (in the technical sense) by the defendant is not necessary to the plaintiff’s relief. There is, therefore, no case for a discovery made in this bill, as a bill of discovery. Nor is the bill framed on the theory and in the form of an ordinary bill of account. What it seeks is to recover profits resulting to the defendant from using, through a series of years, a mechanical invention without the owner’s consent or authority. These profits do not consist in specific sums of money received by the defendant in so using the invention; they simply consist in the advantage and convenience which the defendant derived from using an ingenious piece of mechanism. What this advantage was. is a matter of estimate by experts or men of practical experience, as due in the lump. It is not a matter of items, of [615]*615money and accounts, of book-keeping, of bU3'-ing and selling, of mutual dealing in goods or money. Nor is there anjr mutuality of account. If defendant’s profits consisted of items at all, the items were all on one side. Because this is not a matter of account, because there was no mutuality of accounts, and because the case is not one for discovery, it follows that the bill cannot be entertained as a bill for an account as such.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 613, 4 Ban. & A. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sayles-v-richmond-f-p-r-circtedva-1879.