Standard Paint Co. v. Bird

65 F. 509, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 3138
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedJune 23, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 65 F. 509 (Standard Paint Co. v. Bird) 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
Standard Paint Co. v. Bird, 65 F. 509, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 3138 (circtdnj 1894).

Opinion

DALLAS, Circuit Judge.

This suit is brought upon patent bio. 378,520, granted to Truman J. Pearce and Melvin W. Beardsley, assignors, etc., the sole claim whereof is as follows: "As a new article of manufacture and of commerce, paper coated or saturated with maltha, substantially as herein set forth.” Several of the de[510]*510fenses suggested by the record, though considered, need not be separately discussed. No brief on behalf of the defendants was furnished until a considerable time after the hearing. Such postponements are not unusual, but are very unsatisfactory. The argument of 82 printed pages, which has now been submitted, may, however, be safely accepted as finally presenting and enforcing the grounds of defense which are relied upon. For this reason, and because they clearly present what seem to be the real questions in the cause, I will deal only with the two propositions which are affirmed in the defendants’ brief, as follows :•

“Our position is twofold: (1) That complainant’s patent covers only the use of the ‘maltha,’ as defined and described, and is restricted thereto; and that said maltha is not an ingredient used by Bird. (2) That, if it be hold to include the said ingredients used by Bird, it is unsustainable and void, as neither new, nor useful, nor properly and lawfully granted.”

The first limb of the first of these propositions may be granted. To state it somewhat differently, the complainant’s patent is for the article of manufacture claimed, when produced by coating or saturating paper with “maltha,” as defined. But how is the “maltha” referred to defined? The correct answer to this question must be sought at the threshold of the case; but it is not hard to find. It is manifest from the evidence that the patentees employed this term without possessing exact knowledge of its meaning, and the counsel who prepared their application appears to have doubted the propriety of using it to designate the substance which was in contemplation. But there is no reason to suspect that any inexactness in this matter was intentional, or was resorted to for the purpose of deception; and, in fact, no person has been misled by it. Cinder these circumstances, the meaning of the word “maltha” may fairly and justly be taken to be that which tire patentees attached to it' when they adopted it, and that meaning appears from the history of the invention, and, especially, in the specification of the patent in suit, where it is said:

“Tbe product and substance known as ‘maltba,’ which we employ and utilize in the manufacture of our improved paper, is the solid residuum obtained in the distillation of the heavier grades of petroleum, and, as procured from oil refineries in many localities, it is sufficiently free from earthy and other foreign solid matter to be used without any preparatory treatment; but, where it is found and procured in a more or less unclean condition, it is necessary to eliminate the sand and other imirarities mixed with it before it is suitable for this purpose.” „

Resort being had to this description of the substance intended, all difficulty arising from the inapt use of the name “maltha” in the claim is removed, for the latter may be read as if the defining language of the specification was contained in the claim itself. By doing this the claim is neither added to nor subtracted from. It is explained by interpretation of its language in accordance with the true intent of the patentees, as expressed in another part of the same instrument. Reference to the specification for such a purpose is not objectionable, and in this case it renders unimportant the expert [511]*511testimony which has been taken for the purpose of showing whal: would he generally understood to he “maltha” by those who are well instructed with respect to the true sense of that term. Now, it being conceded thaf'the patent covers only the use of the substance thus defined, regardless of the name by which it should be designated, the defendants insist that the claim is, in consequence, so restricted as not to be inclusive of “an ingredient used by Bird”; but the ingenious argument of counsel in support of this contention is not convincing. Mr. Bird, it appears, employs a material which is known as “petrocite.” He adds to it certain other substances, but the petrocite is the essential component of his mixture, and by its use he produces the complainant’s patented article. Much expert testimony has been adduced upon, and the arguments have been largely directed to, the question of identity of petrocite with the maltha of the patent; but it is unnecessary to particularly refer to this evidence, or to attempt a review of (lie publications which have been cited in connection with it. It is sufficient to say that, upon careful consideration of the whole matter, I have arrived at the conclusion that petrocite and maltha, as described by the patentees, are the same thing. They are not produced in precisely, though they are in substantially, the same manner; and the defendants’ “solid residuum” is obtained, not “in the distillation of the heavier grades of petroleum,” but from the lighter grades of the oil regions of the eastern portion of the United States. Yet, as has been said, the products, however and from whatever produced, are the same, and, by the use of either, the same manufactured article is created; and this, in the sense of the patent law, constitutes identity. It is still urged, however, that the patentees had no knowledge of petrocite; Thai: they described the residuum they had in mind as that which is obtained in the distillation of-the heavier grades of petroleum, and Unit therefore (hey should be held to he restricted to a residuum so obfaiued. I am unable to assent to this. It may well be that the patentees were ignorant of the fact that the material which they referred to was obtainable from other substances than that which they mentioned, hut such ignorance does not have the supposed restrictive consequence. The material itself, not the substance from which it may he obtained, is the gist of the matter, and “a patented manufacture is infringed by the making, use, or sale of any manufacture which possesses the same essential characteristics.”

The proposition that the views which have been expressed with respect to the scope of the patent in suit require that it should he held to he “unsustainable and void” involves, I think, a misconception of the construction which has been adopted. Investigation of the prior state of the art, as shown by this record, does disclose that the patent now in question could not he sustained as for the use of any kind of bituminous material whatever; hut the claim, as I have interpreted it, is limited to the solid residuum particularly described. It is because the defendants have used this same material that they have infringed; and it is because it had never been used before as and for the purpose for which the patentees employed it that the [512]*512patent which they obtained is impregnable to assault on the ground of anticipation.

• The learned counsel of the defendants has suggested that “this suit should be dismissed as to the defendant Reynolds,” because, as is averred in the amended answer, he “has no interest in said business, except as a creditor, landlord, and keeper, and he denies that he ever sold or manufactured paper, as is alleged as to him in said bill of complaint.” Mr. Reynolds’ connection with the infringing business seems, however, to have been closer and more extensive than this language indicates.

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Bluebook (online)
65 F. 509, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 3138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-paint-co-v-bird-circtdnj-1894.