Smith v. Downing

22 F. Cas. 511, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 64

This text of 22 F. Cas. 511 (Smith v. Downing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Downing, 22 F. Cas. 511, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 64 (circtdma 1850).

Opinion

WOODBURY, Circuit Justice.

This case is full of difficulty, in respect both to the facts and the law. The operations of the conflicting machines depend much on the principles of electricity and galvanism — two sciences not very well understood, except by those • who have made them a special study; and the trouble in comprehending with clearness and fullness their operations here, is increased by the intricate and novel mechanism employed.

More especially is this last the case with the machine worked by the defendants, and alleged to have been invented by Mr. House, and which is made still more complicated by the use of the new species of magnetism called axial-magnetism, and by the use of air as an additional power to move parts of-the machine. As these two inventions are both conceded to be remarkable in their character — relating to an improvement in telegraphic communication by electro-magnetism at great distances, with almost lightning speed, and thus forming one of the wonders of the age; and, as their value is estimated to be very large, both to their owners and the public, I have hastened to examine the rights of each party as early and as fully as other pressing avocations would permit.

The prayer of the bill, by Smith, the as-signee of Morse, is for a permanent and final injunction in equity against those who are operating under House. And this remedy should be granted, if it appears on the whole evidence that Morse was the original and first inventor of what he really claims in his patent, and that the machine by House is not different in principle, but the same in substance as Morse’s.

These two questions, with some incidental considerations under each, will be found to cover the whole case. In order to ascertain whether Morse was the original inventor of all which he claims, it will be necessary first to examine and settle how much he does claim— that is, how much is embraced in his specification.

This inquiry is made somewhat complicated by his having taken out two different patents on the subject of electro-magnetism and its use in telegraphs, and having renewed one of them twice and the other once, and having preceded the first patent by a caveat, describing its character and extent.

But what he claims does not seem material in this case, except as set forth in the first patent and its various renewals.

I shall, therefore, confine my inquiry to that, though the others must be at times adverted to, the better to understand what was meant in that. As represented in his letter to the treasury department in 1S37, Morse says he had been attempting, since 1832, to make electricity visible at a distance by signs, intelligible and certain, so as to communicate information. And in his caveat of October 6, 1837, he claims to have “invented a new method of transmitting and receiving intelligence by means of electro-magnetism.” Or, in other-words, in the same instrument, “a method of recording permanently electrical signs” at a distance. His specification, filed in 1838, April 7, is much the same in substanee.

Following up a like idea in 1840, in his first patent he claims in that to have invented only a "new and useful improvement in the mode of communicating information by signals,” and by the power of electro-magDetism.

Such is. in substance, the title of this patent in its original form and under all its renewals. In his last specifications in 1848, he claims to have invented merely “a new method,” or “a new and useful apparatus for a system of transmitting” intelligence, whieh puts in motion machinery for producing signs, and at a distance recording said signs.

From all these, standing by themselves, it would seem manifest that he makes no pretension to have invented or discovered any new principles in physics, or to have discovered the old principles of electricity or galvanism. Nor does he claim to have invented or discovered any new principle in mechanics — like a new power, resembling the lever or screw. As little would any one have supposed, that he meant to claim as his invention and as new— the application at all, of electro-magnetism to the purposes of telegraphing at a distance, whether by making intelligible marks or signs there, or in some other mode — if it had not been for some remarks in one of his letters in 1837, and some words in the eighth clause of his last specification, and the ground taken in the argument, recently, by his counsel.

Thus, in his letter in September, 1837, to Jackson, he seems to have believed he had some claim to this discovery, viz: as he describes it, “The original suggestion of conveying intelligence by electricity” — as well as to the invention, which he calls “the devised mode of doing it.”

Yet nothing of this is believed to be inserted in any of his official documents, till 1848. In his last renewal, in 1848, there are introduced for the first time, some changes of language and some tendencies in a part of them, as well as in some of the arguments, to make the claim broader, and, as in the letter just quoted —to cover all application of electro-magnetism, if not of electricity — to convey intelligence, or to telegraph to a distance.

But as late as 1846, so far from claiming the discovery or invention of any new general principle, or art, and asking a patent to protect himself in the exclusive use. as inventor of all telegraphs by electro-magnetism — he asks for protection of only his own improvement — his own method — his own apparatus. And he seems in his last specification, in 1848, to regard as the great excellence and [513]*513novelty of his invention, that it imprints the signals at one end, which were sent at the other, and in such characters as to be intelligible, without an observer to note them, and' easily translated into English by means of his stenographic alphabet — and hence he there styles it a “recording or printing telegraph.”

When there, for the first time, he also speaks of “the essence of my invention being the use of the electric or galvanic current,” “however developed,” “for marking or printing intelligible characters,” “at any distance,” being “a new application of that power of which I claim to be the first inventor or dis- I coverer,” he must, by all before said and ; done, be considered as claiming it in the form ¡ of his application — according to his machinery ; —and in the modes he had described in 1837, 1838, 1840, and 1846 — rather than in this succeeding clause of 1848, and by it intending to cover the application itself of electro-mag-netism to telegraphic purposes, in every possible form. Otherwise, his renewed patent of | 1848 must be regarded as void for claiming j too much, and for wishing to protect a mere ; principle, or effect, “however developed,” and without reference to any method described by him, and to cover a principle, also before known.

But, limiting the patent to what is described as his method, or mode, and considering that in his “first claim” in 1848, he disclaims such broad views as appear in the “eighth claim,” of that date, and expressly says: “I wish to be understood that I do not claim the ' use of the galvanic current, or current of electricity, for the purpose of telegraphic communications generally, but a new mode of using it, to move machinery, to print signs, etc., as described.” All is consistent, and confined substantially to the mode he sets out in his specifications and in his own testimony in the record.

What he thus sets out is the subject invented.

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Bluebook (online)
22 F. Cas. 511, 1 Fish. Pat. Cas. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-downing-circtdma-1850.