Wells v. Jacques

29 F. Cas. 664, 5 Fish. Pat. Cas. 136
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 15, 1871
StatusPublished

This text of 29 F. Cas. 664 (Wells v. Jacques) 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
Wells v. Jacques, 29 F. Cas. 664, 5 Fish. Pat. Cas. 136 (circtdnj 1871).

Opinion

NIXON, District Judge.

This ease has been heard on motion for a preliminary injunction to restrain the defendants from the use of a machine for forming hat-bodies, alleged to be an infringement of the Wells patent.

The complainant is the widow of Henry A. Wells, to whom letters patent were granted and issued April 25, 1816, for “new and useful improvements in machineiy for making hat-bodies.” Wells having departed this life before the expiration of the term for which the said letters patent were granted, this complainant, as his widow and administratrix, made application to the commissioner of patents for an extension of the term, pursuant to the acts of congress, and the same was renewed and extended for the further period of seven years.

Before the end of this renewal, the complainant applied to the congress of the United States to grant to her, for an extended term, the exclusive right to make, use, and vend the said invention of Wells, for the benefit of his heirs; and an act was passed March 2, 18G7, again extending the said patent to the complainant, as administratrix of Wells, for the period of seven years from April 25, ISO".

The complainant afterward surrendered the letters patent, thus extended, to the commissioner of patents, and new letters patent, numbered 2942, were reissued to her, May 19, 186S, for the unexpired period of the term granted toiler by said act of congress, by virtue of which reissue she claims the exclusive right of making, using, and vending to others to be used, the said invention and improvement.

The allegations of the complainant’s bill are. that she commenced a suit in the circuit court of the United States for the Southern district of New York, upon the said reissued letters-patent, against Henry H. Jacques and Henry W. Duryea, two of the defendants in this cause; that, upon issue joined and trial had, the invention of Wells was found by the jury to be new; that a verdict was rendered for complainant, and judgment entered thereon; that the defendants have been using machines at Newark, New Jersey, ever since the granting of said reissued letters patent, and which are the same as those upon which said last-mentioned suit was brought, which machines were, and up to the time of the said trial, continued to be the property of the said Henry W. Duryea, and were by him leased or let to the said defendants, the Newark Patent Hat-Body Company, who were using the same in violation of the rights of said complainant; that said machines were the identical ones for the use of which, for the short period between the reissue of said patent and the commencement of said suit, said recovery was had; and that, since said recovers*, trifling alterations in the deflecting apparatus have been made, not affecting the principle and mode of operation of said machine.

These allegations are met by various affidavits produced by the defendants, setting forth the state of the art at the time of the procurement of the Wells patent, and denying that Wells was the first and original inventor of the improvements claimed by him. alleging that the machines used by the defendants for several years past are of the Boyden patent, with some variations, in no wise changing the principle or mode of operation of said patent; that the supreme court of the United States, in the case of Burr v. Duryea, 1 Wall. [68 U. S.] 531. affirmed the decree of this court, holding that the said Boyden patent, for an “improvement in machinery for forming hat-bodies.” was not an infringement of the patent granted to Wells for the same thing, and that since then the defendants have kept themselves strictly within the principle of that decision: that the trial in the circuit court of the United States for the Southern district of New York, in January last, between the complainant and two of the [667]*667defendants, turned mainly upon the fact that the machine introduced as the one then used by the defendants materially differed from the machine which was shown to have been in use by said defendants, in the case in the supreme court; that the utmost effect which can be given to the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the court in the case of Wells v. Jacques [case unreported], in New York, is that the defendants had no right to change the device or instrumentality of the Boyden patent for guiding and conducting the fur from the picker, and for properly distributing the same upon the perforated cone, from a curved mold-board, specified in the patent, or from the stepped mold-board, as exhibited in the argument of the case of Burr v. Duryea [Case No. 2,190], into a plate with projecting tins or strips of tins, whereby it was alleged the machine was made to perform the same office, and by substantially the same means as the Wells patent; and that, although the said defendants do not regard the judgment in that case as final, because a bill of exception has been prepared, and a motion for a new trial is pending, having ultimate reference to a writ of error, if the motion is denied, yet they at once discontinued the use of the deflecting tins in deference to the said judgment, and have since only employed the precise means of conducting the fur from the picker to the cone, which the court of last resort, in the case of Burr v. Duryea [supra], determined was not an infringement of the Wells patent.

I have carefully examined the huge mass of evidence-much of it the outgrowth of former litigation upon this subject — which the learning and industry of able counsel have placed in my hands, and I do not know that I can better give the reasons for the result to which I liave arrived than to state briefly what I understand to be the WTells patent, under which the complainant claims, and the Boyden patent, under which the defendants claim, and then to inquire whether I ought, at this preliminary stage of the case, to undertake to settle by injunction the disputed facts, which, ordinarily, are only settled upon final hearing.

1. What is the Wells patent?

The original patent was issued April 25, 1840, to Henry A. "Wells. the husband of the complainant, and through whom she derives her title. It was for a machine for forming, on hollow perforated cones, hat-bodies, and for a process for removing the bodies from the cones after they had been so formed, in such a condition that its fibers could be afterward felted together to.a proper degree by hand.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 664, 5 Fish. Pat. Cas. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-jacques-circtdnj-1871.