Underwood v. Gerber

149 U.S. 224, 13 S. Ct. 854, 37 L. Ed. 710, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2286
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 1, 1893
Docket217
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 149 U.S. 224 (Underwood v. Gerber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Underwood v. Gerber, 149 U.S. 224, 13 S. Ct. 854, 37 L. Ed. 710, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2286 (1893).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Blatcheoud

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in equity, brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of New York, by John T. Underwood and Frederick W. Underwood against Henry Gerber and Anton Andreas, founded on the alleged infringement of letters patent No. 348,073, granted to the plaintiffs August 24, 1886, on an application filed March 22,. 1886, for a “ reproducing surface for type-writing and manifolding.”

The specification reads as follows:

“ Our invention relates to an improved reproducing-surfac© adapted to be employed for obtaining copies of type-writing or other printed or written impressions by means of a typewriter or other printing device, or by the employment of a stylus or other writing means.

“ Our improved transfer-surface is spread upon a sheet or vehicle, and when so' applied is adapted to be employed in place of the articles of trade commonly known and designated as ‘ carbon paper ’ or semi-carbon paper,’ which are employed by type-writers and others to produce copies of impressions either obtained by a machine or by a stylus or other writing means.

[In carrying out our invention we employ in the manufacture of our improved transfer-surface dye-wood solutions or their active principles, which we filter and precipitate with alkalies and mineral salts, or with alkalies, acids, and mineral salts, or with acids or alkalies alone. After the solution has been filtered the precipitate is removed from the filtering device and dried. The precipitate is then mixed with lard-oil and wax or their equivalents, and the mixture is then ground together in a warm state.

*226 The dye solutions we prefer to employ are obtained from logwood or hgematoxylin, the active principle of logwood, Brazil wood, sapan wood, peach wood, madder, or its active principle — alizarine.

“ The proportions we find to answer well in producing our improved surface are as follows: Take one pound of extract of logwood and dissolve the same in one gallon of water, then add to the solution one pound of soda and one pound of mineral salt, using one of the salts of iron or copper, preferably sulphate of copper. The mixture thus obtained is then placed in a filter. After the solution has been filtered the precipitate is removed from the device employed for filtering and then dried, after which the precipitate is rea&y for use. To every two pounds of precipitate thus obtained we add one pound of oil and one pound of wax, and then grind, the mixture in a warm state in what is commonly known as a paint - or other suitable grinding mill. The heated mixture thus obtained is then applied to tissue-paper or other suitable, paper or fabric by means of a sponge or other suitable transferring device.

“ The paper or fabric to which our improved surface is to be applied is placed upon a heated table, by preference formed of iron, and heated by steam; but this may be varied.

“ In place of employing oil or wax, or both combined, we can employ any other suitable oleaginous matter or combination of oleaginous matter having equivalent or approximately equivalent properties.] ”

The claim is- as follows:

“A sheet of material or fabric coated with a composition composed of a precipitate of dye-matter, obtained as described, in combination with oil, wax, or oleaginous matter, substantially as and for the purposes set forth.”

The answer sets up as defences want of novelty and non-infringement. There was a replication, proofs were taken, and the case was brought, to a hearing before Judge Lacombe, who entered a decree dismissing the bill. His opinion is reported in 37 Fed. Kep. 682. The plaintiffs have appealed to this court. Since the appeal-was taken, Frederick ~W. Under *227 wood has died, and John T. Underwood and Hannah E. Underwood, as his executors, have been substituted as co-appellants, with the surviving appellant, John T. Underwood.

Among the proofs introduced by the defendants was a patent, No. 348,072, granted by the United States to the same persons to whom No. 348,073 was granted, dated August 24, 1886, on an application filed March 22, 1886, the specification of which states as follows : “ Our invention relates to the process of producing a transfer-surface adapted to be employed upon a sheet or vehicle to take the place of the articles of trade commonly known and designated as ‘ carbon papers ’ or semi-carbon papers,’ which are employed by type-writers or others to produce copies of impressions either obtained by a machine or by a stylus or other writing means.” Then the specification proceeds in the same words that are contained in brackets- in the foregoing specification of No. 348,073, leaving out the words that are in itálics, and changing the word paint ” to paint-mill.”

The claim of No. 348,072 is as follows:

“ The coloring composition herein described for the manufacture of a substitute for carbon paper, composed of. a precipitate of dye-matter, in combination with oil, wax, or oleaginous matter, substantially as set forth.”.

This suit was not brought on No. 348,072. The defendants have made the composition of matter described in both of the patents, and have combined paper with it as indicated in No. 348,073. The only difference in the two patents is that No. 348,073 is for spreading upon paper the composition described in No. 348,072.

The opinion of the Circuit Court s'ays that in view of the earlier patents and publications put in evidence, it was difficult to see what novelty or invention there was in taking a coloring substance already known and applying it to paper ; that, if' No. 348,072 had been granted to some person the day before the plaintiffs applied for No. 348,073, the latter would clearly be void for want of novelty or invention ; that, if No. 348,072 were held by an assignee of the plaintiffs, near or remote, he could not be held as an infringer of No. 348,073 ; *228 that an assignee of No. 348,072 could not be so held except for the combination of paper with the coloring substance for the purpose named; that such a combination was old; that the plaintiffs insisted that their position was the ^ame as if they held a patent with two claims, one for the composition of matter producing the coloring substance, and the other for the combination of that substance with paper; that this might be so, if ’they could be considered as holding both of the patents, but in the suit they had abstained from declaring on No. 348,072, or even referring to it; that its issue was known to the court only through the defendants, who set it up in defence ;• that the plaintiffs based their claim to a monopoly solely upon No. 348,073; that, as that patent might stand or fall, so the case which they made out upon their bill must also stand or fall; that the holders of No. 348,073 must subinit it to a comparison with No. 348,072 as if the latter patent were outstanding; that thus, at the time when No.

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Bluebook (online)
149 U.S. 224, 13 S. Ct. 854, 37 L. Ed. 710, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/underwood-v-gerber-scotus-1893.