United States Stamping Co. v. Jewett

7 F. 869, 18 Blatchf. 469, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2737
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York
DecidedNovember 29, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 7 F. 869 (United States Stamping Co. v. Jewett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Stamping Co. v. Jewett, 7 F. 869, 18 Blatchf. 469, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2737 (circtndny 1880).

Opinion

Blatchford, C. J.

This suit is brought for the alleged infringement by John G. Jewett & Sons, a joint stock association, of letters patent No. 119,705, granted to Eugene A. Heath, October 10, 1871, for an improvement in cuspidors. The patent was held to be valid by the decision of this, court in the case of the same plaintiff against King, in August, 1879. In a prior suit in the circuit court for New Jersey it had been held by Judge Nixon to be invalid. That suit was brought by Linn Ingersoll, the then owner of the patent, against Mary Turner and William Turner, for infringement. In that suit it was held that the Heath invention was anticipated by an invention made by William H. Topham, and for which he obtained a patent August 2,1870. The date of the Heath invention was not carried back, in that suit, prior to the date of the Heath patent; but in the King suit, in this court, it was shown that Heath applied for his patent before Tophara made his invention. Various other defences were set up in the King case, and were overruled. In the present case some defences are brought forward which were not made in the King case, or in the Turner case.

The principal new defence is the alleged prior invention of the same thing by Charles T. Weber, in Chicago. Before considering the date of the Weber invention it is necessary to fix the date ’of the Heath, invention. In the King case the Heath invention was defined to be a metallic cuspidor, in form essentially a spheroidal body, with a conical mouth flaring outwards, formed of three metallic parts, the lower part being heavier than in ordinary, then-existing cuspidors, and extending up to the longefl diameter of the spheroid,—the middle part and the upper part being lighter than in then-[871]*871existing cuspidors; the middle part being of a dome shape, and being joined below to the lower part, and above to the upper part, and the upper part being an inverted cone in shape, flaring outwards and forming a mouth; the whole structure not being liable to fracturo, and having the capacity of returning to an upright position, of itself, from a position not upright, when left free.

Heath testifies that he made his invention in the fall of 1869. What he meant by this is shown by the testimony of his brother, who says that in the early fall of 1869 Heath spoke to him about a metallic loaded cuspidor,to be made in three pieces, joined at the neck and at the swell, as to how it would sell, and showed him a drawing of the shape of it on paper. He experimented thereafter as to the shape and the mode of putting the pieces together with a view to cheapness of construction. In the fall of 1869, or in the spring or summer of 1870, ho made a cuspidor of different pieces of tin wrought up by hand, with a piece of lead soldered on the inside of the bottom, to make the structure self-righting. This one seems to have been made of three parts, joined at the greatest and the least diameter, although each part consisted of more than one piece of tin. During the year 1870 he made a large number of these tin cuspidors experimentally, with a view of arriving at the cheapest manner of getting the desired shape from the smallest number of pieces of sheet metal. Sometime in the summer or fall of 1870 he made a loaded cuspidor of three pieces of metal, joined at the greatest and the least diameter, on a Grimshaw press, which he procured in July, 1870. This was without any vertical seams, and was substantially the patented structure. It took about a year after that to get the necessary machinery to make"- the articles for the market. The patent was applied for June 3, 1871, and the first cuspidors sold wore delivered June 8, 1871. On this evidence, the date of the Heath invention is properly to he taken as the fall of 1869, or early in 1870. After conceiving the idea of the shape of the structure, and the making it of metal with seams at the greate t and the least diameter, he exercised reasonable dili[872]*872gence in embodying bis ideas in a structure, and in perfecting it so as to make it of the fewest possible number of pieces and get rid of vertical seams, and enable it to be made cheaply by machinery.

The evidence on the part of the defendant, as to the W eber structure, is very voluminous. I have examined it with great care, and the result is that I am not satisfied from it that the defendant has fulfilled the necessary obligation of showing, beyond any reasonable doubt, that Weber was prior to Heath. In all the testimony for the defendant there is not the fixing of a date, for the Weber invention, by evidence of such a character as makes it impossible that such date should not have been earlier than the date of Heath’s invention. The defendant’s witnesses testify from abstract memory of dates, or from some associations in their minds, which, on being tested, prove unsubstantial, and not to be relied on. It would occupy too much space to discuss the evidence in detail. Some of the salient features will be adverted to.

Weber, the alleged prior inventor, was an employe in the establishment of Creror, Adams & Co., of Chicago, at the time. Mr. J. McGregor Afiams, of that firm, was the person who first brought before the court, by an affidavit made by himself, this structure of Weber., The evidence taken as to this structure was taken in consequence of statements made in this affidavit of Mr. Adams. It now turns out that the statements hazarded from memory in this affidavit of Mr. Adams were very largely erroneous. They placed events earlier than they turned out to be on investigation. They did so as to the time when the firm of Creror, Adams & Co. was formed, as to the time when the Chicago Railway Lantern Company succeeded it, and as to the time when Weber left his employ. They we -e erroneous as to the fabt of the making of self-righting spittoons by his firm prior to the making of the cuspidor in question; as to the fact of the purchasing of self-righting cuspidors from his firm by the Pullman Palace Car Company, the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad Company, and Mason <”s Co.; and as to the witnesses who would corroborate his statement as to the prior invention by [873]*873Weber. These circumstances are alluded to as evincing a tendency on the part of Mr. Adams, honest and sincere though it may be, to remember things which did not occur, and to place events which did occur at an earlier date than they actually occurred. Such a habit of mind, in the presence of the affidavit made by him; and of the fact that he took an active and zealous part in the procuring of the witnesses who testified for the defendant; and of the fact that many of such witnesses were or had been his employes; and of the fact that they, and others of the witnesses, were in a position naturally to respond to his influence upon their memories in a direction consonant with his own memory, in a matter which for them had no interest, but for him had an interest to be measured only by the positiveness of his assertions in his affidavit,—such a habit of mind is to be taken into consideration when weighing his own evidence, and that of such other witnesses, as to the date of the Weber structure. The testimony of Mr. Adams as to the sale of the Weber cuspidors to anybody is entirely vague and unreliable. It is not supported by any written or record evidence, or by any testimony from the alleged purchasers. His dates of events, in his testimony, are shown to be as unreliable as his dates in his affidavit.

As to one of the Weber cuspidors which Mr. Adams had in his house, given to him by Weber, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. 869, 18 Blatchf. 469, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-stamping-co-v-jewett-circtndny-1880.