Yearsley v. Brookfield

30 F. Cas. 798

This text of 30 F. Cas. 798 (Yearsley v. Brookfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yearsley v. Brookfield, 30 F. Cas. 798 (circtddc 1853).

Opinion

MORSELL, Circuit Judge.

The original application of Yearsley appears to have been filed on the 18th of September, 1850, stating his claim, with specifications, &c., but which, being supposed defective, he was allowed to .amend according to the application as stated in the report filed on the 7th of August, 1851, in which he says: “What I claim as my invention, and desire to secure by letters-patent as a new and useful improvement in the art of making glass, is the employment of anthracite coal in a glass furnace, substantially in the manner and for the purposes set forth in my specification.” He then describes particularly the methods which had been formerly used and the difficulties met with in the ordinary process, and says the improvements and advantages attending his invention and discovery are—First, anthracite coal may be used, giving a flame which plays upon the vessels containing the fluxing materials; second, a great economy in fuel is effected and a much shorter time is required for fluxing, the flame being of a more uniform and higher, temperature and under greater control than in the ordinary methods; third, the glass is of a superior quality and the scum sandiver or salts escape very freely; fourth, the great heat renders the sulphate of soda as useful a flux as soda ash and carbonate of soda; fifth, the fiuxing-pots can be separated some distance from the burning fuel for the convenience of working, and freed from the cracks called fangs and fleins, and they can be used without covers; sixth, colored glass may readily be made, and the labor of testing it much reduced; seventh, and finally, the manufacture of glass by this means will not be a nuisance in densely-populated cities. To en[799]*799able persons skilled in the art of glass-making to understand and use his invention and discovery, he describes particularly its nature and operations, which specifications are supposed to comprehend, as the applicant’s claim of invention, the combination of anthracite, blast, steam or vapor, and preparatory heating.

To this application the report states-that there was found to interfere, in the recent archives of the office, a caveat, of which notice was given, and on the 31st of July, 1851, the caveators (James M. Brookfield and Ephraim Y. White) filed their application, and claimed the application of a blast to an ordinary glass furnace, by which they are enabled to use anthracite coal in the manufacture of glass, substantially as herein set forth. This caveat appears to bear date the 31st of January, 1851, and to have been filed in the office the 4th of February, 1851; and their claim is stated in substantially the same way as the claim of Yearsley, above recited, as by reference to the specification and accompanying draft will appear. In the specification alluded to they say they have invented and discovered a new and improved mode of manufacturing glass by the use of anthracite coal as a fuel; and referring to the accompanying drawing, and to the letters of reference marked thereon, they state that the nature of the invention or discovery consists in burning coal instead of wood, the heat being generated by the application of a blast to the burning coal. They then describe the furnace. They say the construction consists of an air-chamber, a fire-chamber and furnace, or place in which the materials to be melted are deposited; in the drawing it is a chamber to receive the pots for the manufacture of glass, &c. The report then states: “The interference was declared on the 5th of August, 1851, and a hearing appointed for the first Monday of October. 1851, which hearing was postponed from time to time until Monday, July 5th, 1852, when it was fixed for final hearing, and on the 11th of August, after weighing the testimony, priority of invention was awarded by the office to Brookfield and White, and from this decision the appeal was taken and sundry reasons filed.” Those relating to preliminary objections will be first considered, viz., that E. Y. White’s depositions are incompetent and inadmissible, and that the testimony of the witness, stating his declarations, is also inadmissible; second, that the joint invention, as alleged, of Brookfield and White ought to have been proved.

The commissioner, in his report, says that White, by assigning all his interest to Anderson R. Hay on the 26th of March, 1852, divested himself of every interest in the pending application that could, under any rule of evidence, have excluded his testimony, taken in the month of September, after the assignment.

First, as to White’s deposition to show the loss of the draft made by him in the year 1847, for the purpose of introducing secondary evidence, in accordance with the rule that the nonproduction of the original must be accounted for. From a principle of necessity the party is allowed by his own oath, addressed to the court, to prove the fact of a lost paper if lost out of his own custody and not destroyed by fraud, the existence and details of such paper being proved by other testimony. In this case, although the evidence is not sufficient to show that it was destroyed by fraud, as Brookfield, by reason of his relationship to White in interest, may be reasonably supposed to have access to it, it would have been more satisfactory if he had been joined with White in the deposition. In the absence of proof, however, of his having the custody of it, the objection must be overruled.

With respect to the deposition of White, taken in the examination of him as a witness generally, I do not think that the objection can be sustained on the ground of his liability over to the assignee. There appears to be no warranty, either express or implied, of indemnity. But the objection on the ground of his being a party to the proceeding by his application for the patent at the time of the examination, and still so, though perhaps nominally—and, technically speaking, that proceeding cannot be called a record—yet the case appears to be within the reason of the rule which makes a party incompetent, and therefore the deposition cannot be considered as legal evidence. The rule and its reason will be found laid down by the supreme court in [Scott v. Lloyd] 12 Pet. [37 U. S.] 149. The court say: “The decision in Willings v. Consequa [Case No. 17,767], where the court held that a party named on the record might be released so as to constitute him a competent witness, has been cited and relied on in the argument. Such a rule would hold out to the parties a strong temptation to perjury, and we think it is not sustained either by principle or authority.”

The next objection is to the admissibility of the evidence as to the declarations of Mr. White. The rule, as stated by the counsel of Brookfield and White, is—“If ifi 1834, 1847, or any other period, he (White) described, orally or by drawings, a mode of using anthracite coal for the purpose of making glass, those statements are acts or part of the res gesta, and show what he knew or had invented at the time when made.” This position is correct, with this qualification, that the' same were made before this contest arose. The case decided by the supreme court, Philadelphia & T. R. Co. v. Stimpson, 14 Pet. [39 U. S.] 448, fully sustains the proposition. No better evidence from the nature of the subject could be expected or required. That objection is also overruled. With respect to an objection that the evidence does [800]*800not prove Brookfield a joint inventor with White, I do not think it can be considered material in this issue, for if both, or either, is shown by the testimony to have been the first and original inventors or inventor, the appellant must be considered as having failed in his claim.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F. Cas. 798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yearsley-v-brookfield-circtddc-1853.