Shipman v. Frank

237 F. 395, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1212
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedSeptember 11, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 237 F. 395 (Shipman v. Frank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shipman v. Frank, 237 F. 395, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1212 (D. Md. 1916).

Opinion

ROSE, District Judge.

Plaintiff says defendants have sold a carbureter which infringes the fifteenth claim of his reissued patent 13,903, granted April 20, 1915. The defendants are Baltimore dealers in automobile supplies. The carbureter was made by Findeisen & Kropf Manufacturing Company, an Illinois corporation. It has a great interest in the controversy, the nominal defendants scarcely any. It has come into the case and taken charge of .the defense. For convenience it will be called the “defendant.”

[397]*397The original patent was numbered 783,902. It was issued February 28, 1905, in pursuance of an application filed January 8, 1904.

The Defenses.

The defenses are invalidity and noninfringement. To sustain the former, four grounds are assigned: (1) Fraud in procuring the original issue. (2) Taches in asking for the reissue. ' (3) Prior use by one Menns. (4) Anticipation by various British and American patents. Of these in their order.

Fraud in Procuring the Grant of Original Claim 15.

[1] In asking for the reissue, plaintiff said that in the light of the disclosures of the Butler patent, 423,214, the original claim 15 was too broad. In the course of the prosecution of the original application, this Butler patent was cited against other of plaintiff’s claims. It was not mentioned in connection with claim 15. Defendant points out that nevertheless at that time plaintiff’s attention was called to it. He must have read it. If he did, it is argued he must have perceived that claim 15 covered much to which he had no right. To persist in his application for it was, it is contended, knowingly to seek a patent for more than he had invented. Actual fraud must ordinarily, perhaps must invariably, be shown before a patent can be held void on this ground. The examiner in the Patent Office had the Butler patent before him. He did not discover its pertinency to claim 15. Plaintiff may have been equally honest and equally dull.

Taches in Seeking a Reissue.

[2] The reissued patent differs from its original in the wording of the claim in suit. In all other respects they are identical. The change in the phraseology of that claim has no other effect than to narrow its scope. Nevertheless, it is said that plaintiff waited too long to ask for it. He did not make his application for the reissue until March 15, 1915, more than ten years after the patent was granted. Mere lapse of time after the issue of a patent does not by and of itself bar the right to disclaim or to obtain a strictly narrowing reissue. A patentee, it is true, must act with reasonable promptness after he knows that his patent or some of its claims are too broad; but knowledge must precede action, and, until he knows that his claim covers something he has not invented, he is not bound to do anything. He is not required to believe everybody who tells him that his claim is invalid. Very possibly, as defendant contends, a patentee even before he knows his grant is too broad may so act as to shut off his right to disclaim or to seek a narrowing reissue. It would be unsafe to say that there are no circumstances in which such an estoppel would be raised. Into such questions there is no occasion here to go. In this case nothing is shown which even tends to make it inequitable for plaintiff to stand upon the reissue he has obtained. It is true that about 9% months before the application for the reissue was filed ’defendant’s lawyer told the plaintiff that claim 15 was anticipated by the Butler patent. This statement was true, but plaintiff was not bound to believe it. [398]*398Defendant was then in treaty with him for the purchase of his patent, or, at all events, had been in such treaty a few days before. He may have thought what was said as to the worthlessness of claim IS was merely the proverbial, “It is naught,” of the would-be buyer.

Prior Use by Menns.

[3] The defendant has produced a carbureter made by one Menns. It embodies the invention described in the claim in suit. The controversy is as to whether it was made before or after plaintiff applied for his patent. Much evidence has been taken concerning it, and a good deal of heat has been generated in the process. A minute analysis of the testimony relating to it would serve no purpose. The conclusion would be merely that it is doubtful whether Menns made his device before or after plaintiff asked for his patent. Under such a state of the proofs, this particular defense fails.

Anticipation by Prior British and American Patents.

[4] A number of patents have been offered in evidence. Highly competent experts have discussed them from many different points of view. The defendant has had constructed devices which its experts say embody the inventions shown in these patents. As is usual, the witnesses for the defendant assert that, when they have done anything not alluded to in tire patent or not precisely therein described, they have used only the skill and discretion which the patentee had the right to expect from the mechanic who undertook to reduce his invention to practice. Equally according to established custom and usage, plaintiff’s expert replies that what has been done is to reconstruct the various patented machines, not as the inventors intended them to be, but in the light of subsequent discoveries. No discussion of any of these patents or of what has been said about them will be attempted. I am not satisfied that the precise combination described in the claim at bar is to be found in any of them. I am not prepared to say that there may not have been invention in combining the old elements as plaintiff did. It is true that, individually considered, each of these elements was old, and that others had previously brought them, or some of them, together in ways which were not much unlike that of the plaintiff. For a number of years after plaintiff’s patent was issued, little use was made of the combination covered by the claim in suit, although plaintiff gave it an appreciable advertisement. It is therefore possible that the forward step in the art taken by plaintiff' was, after all, of but little practical value. Under such circumstances, the claim is not entitled to a broad construction.

Noninfringement.

[5] Has the defendant infringed? The answer turns on a narrow issue. Prof. Carpenter, of Cornell, who was defendant’s principal expert, pointed out that there are ten elements in the combination described in the claim in suit. He finds all but one in defendant’s device. The one which he thinks is missing is described in the claim itself as means for retarding the closing movement of a valve, which in both [399]*399defendant’s and plaintiff’s structures normally restricts the flow of air through the mixing chamber and is adapted to open by atmospheric pressure. The means actually used by the plaintiff to effect this retardation was a dash pot. The use of such an instrumentality to check too rapid movement was old in this and in other arts. Defendant has a dash pot. In defendant’s, as in plaintiff’s device, the dash pot affects the speed of the valve movement, which, were it not for the dash pot, would close more quickly than it does. ..Plaintiff’s claim may therefore be read upon defendant’s structure. It must be, provided the words used are to be understood as they would be by one who knew nothing of how they got into the claim. But they actually have a history, and one which for the purpose in hand is significant.

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Related

T. H. Symington & Son, Inc. v. Symington Co.
9 F. Supp. 699 (D. Maryland, 1935)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 F. 395, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shipman-v-frank-mdd-1916.