Woodbury Patent Planing Mach. Co. v. Keith

30 F. Cas. 489, 4 Ban. & A. 100
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 F. Cas. 489 (Woodbury Patent Planing Mach. Co. v. Keith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodbury Patent Planing Mach. Co. v. Keith, 30 F. Cas. 489, 4 Ban. & A. 100 (circtdma 1879).

Opinion

LOWELL, District Judge.

The patent in suit, No. 138,462, was issued to Joseph P. Woodbury April 29, 1873, and is for an improvement in planing machines, by which flat bars are placed before and behind the cutters to keep the stock firm during the operation, instead of the rollers which were used by Woodworth, the inventor of this class of machines. This change, though slight, has proved to be of great value, and is now in general use; and this suit is defended by an association of persons who are interested to continue such use. The pat-entee is dead, and the plaintiffs are a corporation to whom he had assigned his patent.

The history of this grant, which was made twenty-five years after it was first applied for, and twenty-seven years -after the invention was completed, is remarkable. The Inventor made application June 6, 1848, and appointed an attorney, but did not give him all the usual authority. The power was so worded as not to enable him to withdraw the application. The office rejected the application February 20, 1849, and nothing further was done until October, 1852, when the attorney withdrew the application, and received back $20, of which Woodbury had no notice. In February, 1854, Woodbury instructed Mr. Cooper, a well-known patent solicitor of Boston, who was acting for him in another case, to call up and prosecute this rejected application. There was a misunderstanding as to the invention referred to, and it was only in September, 1854, that Mr. Cooper learned exactly how the case stood. There was, at that time, a rule in the patent office, that an application which should not be renewed or prosecuted within two years after it had been rejected or withdrawn, should be conclusively presumed to have been abandoned. This rule was not always acted on, but Mr. Cooper says that it was very rigid, and that in all his experience, which is understood to have been large, he had not known it to be departed from. I think it a fair inference from the testimony, that Cooper instructed Woodbury that it was useless to attempt to reinstate his case at the patent office. There is evidence that Woodbury thought himself unjustly deprived of a patent, and that he often afterwards expressed a hope that something would "Be done by congress for his relief. • He says, in an ex parte affidavit, which forms part of the record, that he heard in 1869 that Mr. Fisher, then commissioner of patents, had reversed the former rule of presumption arising out of neglect for two years, and that he then intended to apply again, but heard that congress was about to pass a law to meet such cases, and he waited for that.

When revising the patent laws in 1870, congress did enact: “That when an application for a patent has been rejected or withdrawn, prior to the passage of this act, the applicant shall have six months from the date of such passage to renew his application, or to file a new one; and if he omit to do either, his application shall be held to have been abandoned. Upon the hearing of such renewed applications, abandonment shall be considered as a question of fact.”

Upon the question of abandonment, it is argued: First, that the decision of the commissioner was final, under section 35 of the statute of 1870 [16 Stat. 202]. But the same statute gives the commissioner, in all cases, jurisdiction of the question of abandonment, and, at the same time, makes the fact a de-fence upon the trial of the action. Sections 24 and 01 (16 Stat. 201, 20S). And this thirty-fifth section was so construed by Ship-man, J., in United States Rifle Go. v. Whitney Arms Go. [Oase No. 10.793], Second, that there was a conclusive abandonment by virtue of the statute of 1801, § 12 (12 Stat. 248), which required that all applications should be completed and prepared for examination within two years after the filing of the petition, or, in cases then pending, within two years after the passage of the act, unless it should be shown to the satisfaction of the commissioner of patents that the delay was unavoidable. This was not the case of an incomplete' application in 1801, but of one that had been rejected. Third, that Woodbury had actually aban[490]*490doned this invention. Each ease, of course, must be decided on its own circumstances; and I am inclined to think that Woodbury had not abandoned his invention. This is a somewhat difficult question to decide, especially as Woodbury cannot be eross-ex-arhined; but the general adoption of his improvement which would estop him, if lie knowingly permitted it, without taking steps to enforce his rights, appears to have occurred later than 1854, when he had no means, or was advised that he had no means, for such enforcement. This appears to me the turning point upon the matter of abandonment; for that he had, in his mind,' any actual intention of that sort, cannot be maintained. I am further of the opinion that the machine built by one Anson, at Norwich, Connecticut, anticipated the invention of Woodbury.

The plaintiffs maintain that most of the evidence in respect of this machine is inadmissible, because'the names of the witnesses called to prove this defence were not given in the answer. I was of that impression at the trial, and I think the practice here is to give all the names. The statute is substantially the same as it has been since 1836, excepting that the act of 1870, adopting the decisions of the courts, applied to cases in equity the rule of notice which the act of 1830 [5 Stat. 117] laid down for actions at common law. The rule is now found in Rev. St. § 4920, and declares that the defendant shall state in his answer the names and residences of the persons alleged to have invented, or to have had the prior knowledge of the thing patented, and where and by wThom it had been used. I have examined, I believe, all the decisions, and while there are many which speak of notice of the names of “witnesses,” yet this is an ambiguous term, which does not necessarily mean that all witnesses are to be mentioned. It was decided by Grier, J., after careful argument, that it was only those persons who had invented or used the machine, or improvement, and not those who were to testify to such invention or use, who must be pointed out. Wilton v. The Railroads [Case No. 17,857]. Nelson and Conk-ling, J.T., made a similar ruling. Many v. Jagger [Id. 9,055]. Mr. Justice Clifford, in giving the opinion of the supreme court, has twice cited the former of these cases, though not to this precise distinction; and in a third case he has adopted its language. See Teese v. Huntingdon, 23 How. [64 U. S.] 10; Agawam Co. v. Jordan, 7 Wall. [74 U. S.] 596; Roemer v. Simon, 95 U. S. 219.

The deposition of Anson, the inventor of the machine, may be read, because no objection was made at the time of his examination. See Graham v. Mason [Case No. 5,671]; Brown v. Hall [Id. 2,00S]; Barker v. Stowe [Id. 994]. And there was notice of the name and residence of one witness to the use of the machine at Norwich.

If the. rulings that I have above cited, and which appear to have been adopted or approved by the supreme court,- mean that after notice of the name and residence of the inventor, and of the place of use, and of. the name of some one who has used It, has been given or waived, all other witnesses may be examined without notice,— and I do not see that it can mean less than that,—then the evidence in this case is all admissible, because Anson invented and used the machine at Norwich, and notice of his name and residence was waived.

Another ground for admitting the depositions relating to Anson’s machine, is'taken by the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F. Cas. 489, 4 Ban. & A. 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodbury-patent-planing-mach-co-v-keith-circtdma-1879.