Waterbury Brass Co. v. New York & B. Brass Co.

29 F. Cas. 395, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 43
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 F. Cas. 395 (Waterbury Brass Co. v. New York & B. Brass Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waterbury Brass Co. v. New York & B. Brass Co., 29 F. Cas. 395, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 43 (S.D.N.Y. 1858).

Opinion

INGERSOLL, District Judge

(charging jury). This is a suit brought by the plaintiffs, as assignees of a patent which was originally granted to Hiram W. Hayden, in which they seek to recover damages of the defendants for infringing upon the rights secured by that patent. Where a patent is valid, the rights secured by that patent are as much secured to the patentee as the right which you have to the houses in which you live, and which are made your property by the deeds you have in your possession; and they are as much to be protected as any other right to any other species of property. If the patent is valid, it secures to the patentee rights which should be protected; and the one right should be no more protected than the other. In a case of this kind, the rule of law is, that he who discovers that a certain useful result will be produced in any art, machine, or manufacture, by the use of certain means, is entitled to a patent for it, provided he specifies the means he uses, in a manner so clear and exact that any one skilled in the science or art to which it appertains, can, by the means he specifies, without any addition to or subtraction from them, produce precisely the result described. If [396]*396this can be done, then the patent granted to him confers on him the exclusive right to the use of the means he describes to produce the result or effect specified.

The plaintiffs claim that Hiram W. Hayden discovered that a certain useful result could be produced, namely: the forming out of a disc, blank, or plate of metal, a complete kettle, or any similar article so that it should be gradually reduced from the center to the edge, at the same time forming it in straight sides by successive stages, and to be produced by the use of means in the specification set forth. The means were: “The application of a rotary metallic form, or mold, or a succession of forms or molds, in combination with a proper tool or tools, roller or rollers, sustained, moved, and directed in a proper path, by competent mechanical means;” and the mechanical means is described by which this combination will produce this useful result. If Hayden did really make this discovery, and if he has in his specification pointed out the means he thus uses, in a manner so clear and exact that any one skilled in the business to which it appertains, can, by the means described, to wit: the application of a rotary metallic form or mold, or a succession of forms or molds, in combination with a proper tool or tools, roller or rollers, sustained, moved, and directed in a proper path, by competent mechanical means, produce the result of a complete kettle or similar articles by operating on a disc, blank, or plate of metal, so as to reduce it gradually from the center to the edge, at the same time forming it with straight sides by successive stages, substantially as described and shown in the specification — he was by the patent which he obtained, entitled to the exclusive right to the use of these means, in the manner stated, to produce such result, and the plaintiffs, as assignees of all the right which Hayden had to the patent, are entitled to the exclusive use of these means, substantially in the manner set forth; and any one who uses the means specified to produce such a result, infringes upon the right secured by the patent, and is subject to pay the damages which the plaintiffs may have sustained by such infringement.

There are four questions, and only four, which are presented for consideration in this case; and it is necessary that these several questions should be kept distinctly in your minds, in order that you may be enabled to arrive at a correct conclusion. These four questions are: First. What does the patent purport to grant? Second. Was the grant a valid grant of right? Third. Do the defendants infringe upon any grant of right secured by the patent of the plaintiffs — not whether they hare infringed on all the grants of right secured to the plaintiffs by the patent, but whether they have infringed on any one of them? Fourth. If they have, what damages have the plaintiffs sustained by such infringement of their rights on the part of the defendants?

The first is a question of law, to be determined by the court. The three other questions are to be determined by the jury. They are questions of fact, and in determining them, it should be borne in mind that patents are to be liberally construed — that they should not be subjected to too rigid an interpretation. That is a rule of law, and if it were not a rule of law, and not regarded, but very few patents would be of any avail.

The first question, then, gentlemen of the jury, being a question of law, is for the court to determine, and of course the jury will take the law as it is laid down by the court, because it is the peculiar province of the court to determine questions of law, and it is the peculiar province of the jury to determine questions of fact. The patent does not grant the several parts or any part of the machinery by which the combination claimed is called into action, and made to perform the duty it accomplishes: but what has been granted has already been indicated. The patent is for the application of a metallic form or mold, or a succession of forms or molds, in combination with a proper tool or tools, roller or rollers, sustained, moved, and directed in a proper path by competent mechanical means, for the purpose of operating on a disc, blank, or plate of metal, so as to reduce this disc, blank, or plate of metal gradually from the center to the edge, at the same time forming it with straight sides, by successive stages into a complete kettle or any other similar article.

This includes the whole patent or grant of right. There is nothing else in it, and in considering the questions of fact, the jury will bear in mind that this is the whole patent or grant of right.

The second question is — and it is a question of fact for the jury to determine — was this grant a valid grant of right? In other words, was the grant of the combination of the means described "sustained, moved, and directed” in the manner specified, a valid grant of right? It was, gentlemen, and required invention, provided the means used in the manner specified to accomplish the result, were new and useful. It is admitted that the result produced was highly useful, and that the combination of means used in the manner specified does produce this highly useful result. To show its use, it is only necessary to bear in mind that some years before the invention of Hayden, the only mode of making kettles was by the hammering process. Subsequentlj-, another process. that of swedging kettles or the stamping process, was produced, and by these two modes were kettles principally manufactured. But at the present day the kettles formed by these two processes are entirely out of the market, and have been so completely superseded by those formed substantially in the manner specified by these means, that hammered kettles are now almost unknown. The usefulness of the invention is thus admitted.

[397]*397It is therefore only necessary for you to inquire upon this branch of the case: Was the combination of these means new? The patent when produced in evidence is prima facie evidence that such is the case — that these means producing this result were new. When an application is made for a patent, it is submitted to the commissioner of patents; his skill and judgment are brought to bear upon the subject, and when he grants the patent it is prima facie evidence that the means granted are new, and produce a useful result.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 395, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waterbury-brass-co-v-new-york-b-brass-co-nysd-1858.