Letters patent No. 108,085, issued October 11, 1870, to John B.
Augur for an improvement for gearing in wagons was not anticipated
by the invention patented to C. C. Stringfellow and D. W. Surles,
by letters patent No. 31,134, dated January 15, 1861, and are
valid, so far as that invention is concerned.
It is not sufficient, in order to constitute an anticipation of
a patented invention, that the device relied upon might, by
modification, be made to accomplish the function performed by that
invention, if it were not designed by its maker, nor adapted, nor
actually used for the performance of such function. .
In view of the extensive use to which the invention secured to
John H. Topliff and George H. Ely by letters patent No. 122,079 for
an improvement in connected carriage springs, reissued March 28,
1876, No. 7017, the invention secured thereby is held to have
patentable novelty, although the question is by no means free from
doubt.
The first reissue of that patent, being to correct a palpable
and gross mistake, and being made within four months after the date
of the original patent, was within the power of the Commissioner of
Patents.
The second reissue of that patent is valid whether it be an
enlargement of the original patent or not.
Miller v. Brass Company, 104 U.
S. 350, was not intended to settle a principle that
under no circumstances would a reissue containing a broader claim
than the original be supported.
The power to reissue a patent may be exercised when the original
patent is inoperative by reason of the fact that its specification
was defective or insufficient, or the claims were narrower than the
actual invention of the patentee, provided the error has arisen
from inadvertence or mistake, and the patentee is guilty of no
fraud or deception; but such reissues are subject to the following
qualifications:
(1) That it shall be for the same invention as the original
patent, as such invention appears from the specification and claims
of such original.
(2) That due diligence must be exercised in discovering the
mistake in the original patent, and that if it be sought for the
purpose of enlarging the claim, the lapse of two years will
ordinarily, though
Page 145 U. S. 157
not always, be treated as evidence of an abandonment of the new
matter to the public to the same extent that a failure by the
inventor to apply for a patent within two years from the public use
or sale of his invention is regarded by the statute as conclusive
evidence of an abandonment of the patent to the public.
(3) That this court will not review the decision of the
Commissioner upon the question of inadvertence, accident, or
mistake unless the matter is manifest from the record; but that the
question whether the application was made within a reasonable time
is, in most, if not in all such cases, a question of law for the
court.
Objections to a master's report should be taken in the court
below, and if not taken there, cannot be taken here for the first
time.
The allowance of an increase of damages, under the statute, to
the plaintiff in a suit for the infringement of letters patent
rests somewhat in the discretion of the court below, and its
finding on this point will not be disturbed unless the evidence
clearly demands it.
The Court stated the case as follows:
This was a bill in equity for the infringement of three patents,
namely: (1) patent No. 108,085, issued October 11, 1870, to John B.
Augur, for an improvement in gearing for wagons; (2) patent No.
123,937, issued February 20, 1872, to Cyrus W. Saladee, for an
improvement in carriage springs, and mode of attachment; (3) patent
No. 122,079, issued December 19, 1871, to John A. Topliff and
George H. Ely, for an improvement in connecting carriage springs,
reissued March 28, 1876, No. 7,017.
The patent to Augur consisted in a mode of equalizing the
pressure upon two carriage springs by
"connecting together by a rigid rod the two pivoted links upon
the clips employed on the hind axle, so that, when the weight is
upon one spring, both springs, by reason of the connecting rod,
shall be caused to work together, thus preventing the roll."
The effect of this device is such that if a heavy weight is
thrown upon one spring, as, for instance, by a person getting into
a buggy at one side, the pressure is borne equally by both springs.
The claims alleged to be infringed were the following:
"1. The herein-described method of equalizing the action of
springs of vehicles and distributing the weight of the load."
"2. The combination of the pivoted links with a rod
connecting
Page 145 U. S. 158
the same, the rod compelling both links to move in unison, as
and for the purpose described."
The reissued patent to Topliff and Ely, as stated by the
patentees,
"relates to side half-elliptic spring vehicles, and has for its
object suspending the front and rear ends of the springs directly
to the rear axle and front bolster of the running gear by means of
two separate connecting rods, the outer ends of which have formed
upon them, as a part of the same, and at right angles with the rod,
short arms, between which the ends of the springs, respectively,
are secured and operated, the connecting rod receiving the rear
ends of the springs, being hinged to the rear axle, while the rod
receiving the front ends of the springs is, in like manner,
connected to the front bolster in such manner that the vibration of
the springs will impart a corresponding rotation to the connecting
rods front and back, and so that the depression of either spring
will, by the rotary action imparted to the connecting rod, compel a
corresponding depression of the other, and thus compel both springs
to vibrate together, and move in unison one with the other,
equalizing their action and the weight imposed upon them, as well
as to prevent side motion to the body of the vehicle."
There were but two claims to this patent, which read as
follows:
"1. The combination of two connecting rods located at the front
and rear ends of a wagon body, and arranged to turn in their
bearings, with a pair of half-elliptic springs, whereby the springs
are caused to yield in unison with each other, substantially as and
for the purpose set forth."
"2. The combination of the connecting rods, BB', provided with
arms at their ends, with the half elliptic springs, AA',
substantially as and for the purpose set forth."
The answer admitted that the defendant had manufactured and sold
connecting rods for carriages substantially like those manufactured
by the plaintiffs, and claimed the right so to do, alleging that
plaintiffs' patents were both void for want of novelty, and that
the reissued patent of Topliff and Ely was not for the same
invention as the original, and denied that
Page 145 U. S. 159
his manufacture infringed in any way upon any right which
plaintiffs had to the invention.
The case was heard in the court below upon pleadings and proofs,
the court holding that the Augur patent and the Topliff and Ely
reissue were good and valid, and that the defendant was guilty of
infringement. An injunction was allowed, and the case was referred
to a master to take an account of profits and damages. The master
reported the sum of $8,480.54 to be due the plaintiffs from the
defendant as damages for the infringement, and a final decree was
entered for that amount, from which both parties appealed to this
Court.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
As the court below failed to pass upon the Saladee patent in its
decree, and as neither party has assigned this omission as error,
it is unnecessary to take it into consideration upon this appeal.
There are really but two questions involved in this case: (1) the
validity of the Augur patent, in view of the state of the art; (2)
the validity of the Topliff and Ely reissue.
(1) In the Augur patent, the device described consists of a rod
attached to the rear axle of a side spring buggy or other vehicle,
having two links rigidly attached to the rod, one at each end
thereof, upon which the rear ends of such side springs are pivoted.
The result is that when one spring is depressed, as by a person
stepping into the vehicle on one side, the spring upon the other
side is also depressed, through the action of the rod connecting
the two, so that the body of the vehicle is kept approximately upon
a level.
The patents to Stowe of 1868, and to Sexton of 1868, were also
for a method of equalizing the action of side springs by so
connecting, as stated in the Stowe patent,
"the two side springs of a carriage that a weight placed on any
portion of the carriage will depress each side equally, and prevent
the
Page 145 U. S. 160
strain to the springs occasioned by the frequent wrenching they
are subjected to in getting in and out of the carriage."
But the means for accomplishing this in both cases are so wholly
dissimilar to those described in the patents in suit that a
comparison can hardly be made of them.
Indeed, the patent to Stringfellow and Surles of 1861
approximates so much more nearly to the patents in suit that it is
the only one worthy of serious consideration. If this patent does
not anticipate the Augur patent, none of the others does; if it
does anticipate it, it is of no consequence whether the others do
or not. This patent is for
"a novel improvement in hanging carriage bodies on springs and
from C-shaped jacks or supports, whereby the body is allowed a free
and easy vibration longitudinally, and it is relieved from sudden
and disagreeable jolts and jerks in traveling on rough roads, or
from the sudden starting of the horse. The parts are also so braced
and strengthened that all liability to twist the carriage body is
effectively prevented. The invention consists of a combination of
transverse tie rods with the side springs, which are hung by
shackle bars or jointed links from C-shaped supports."
The patentee further states:
"It will thus be seen that the springs, DD, are suspended in
such a manner from the four supports, CCC'C', that the body of the
carriage, which is mounted on said springs, will be allowed to have
a free, swinging motion backwards or forwards, and, in consequence
of the springs being hung by the shackle bars, EEEE, the springs
will also have an upward movement. . . . In uniting the shackle
bars to the ends of the springs, DD, and the supports, CCC'C', two
tie bars, GG, with forked ends, one of which is shown in Fig. 2 of
the drawing, are used for the purpose of bracing the supports, CC',
and also the ends of the springs, DD, so as to prevent the swaying
of the carriage body from twisting or bending the supports, CC',
laterally."
The claim was for "the transverse ties, GG, arranged and
operated substantially as and for the purposes specified."
If there be anything in this patent which anticipates the
connecting rods of the Augur device, it is the transverse tie bars,
GG, upon which the springs are hung, which the specification
Page 145 U. S. 161
states are used for bracing the supports, CC', and also the ends
of the springs, DD, so as to prevent the swaying of the carriage
body from twisting or bending the supports, CC', laterally. An
inspection of the models of this patent, put in evidence, shows at
once that the object of these tie bars is not an equalization of
the pressure upon the springs, but to secure an equality in the
backward and forward swinging movement in the body of the vehicle.
Indeed, this was obviously necessary, as the patentee states, to
prevent the body of the carriage and the supports, CC', from being
twisted, the entire object of the patent being to secure a free and
easy vibration longitudinally. It is true that one of the models of
the patent put in evidence (Exhibit M) does, by its peculiar
construction in shortening the links and strengthening and
stiffening the entire structure, show an equalization of the
pressure upon the springs, but it is accomplished by sacrificing
the swinging movement backward and forward, which it was the object
of the patent to secure. The duplicate of the model from the Patent
Office contains no suggestion of this kind, nor do the other models
of the same patent offered in evidence. While it is possible that
the Stringfellow and Surles patent might, by a slight modification,
be made to perform the function of equalizing the springs which it
was the object of the Augur patent to secure, that was evidently
not in the mind of the patentees, and the patent is inoperative for
that purpose. Their device evidently approached very near the idea
of an equalizer; but this idea did not apparently dawn upon them,
nor was there anything in their patent which would have suggested
it to a mechanic of ordinary intelligence unless he were examining
it for that purpose. It is not sufficient to constitute an
anticipation that the device relied upon might, by modification, by
made to accomplish the function performed by the patent in
question, if it were not designed by its maker, nor adapted, nor
actually used, for the performance of such functions.
(2) The Topliff and Ely patent is claimed to be fully
anticipated by the Augur device. In their specification, the
patentees admit that the connecting rods, placed at right angles
across the front and rear of the running gear of vehicles, and
Page 145 U. S. 162
hinged to the front bolster and rear axle, are an old device.
The better to illustrate the distinction between their own
invention and all others pertaining to the use of connecting rods,
they cite several patents, among which is that of Augur, of which
they state as follows:
"In this patent, side springs are used, the front ends of which
are hinged upon fixed and rigid standards secured upon the top of
the front bolster, and where the front ends of the spring are
firmly held in a central position over said bolster, while the rear
ends are hinged to hinges secured to the outer ends of a single
connecting rod placed over the top of the rear axle in such a
manner that, as the springs are lengthened by depression, a
corresponding rotation is imparted to the connecting rod. In this
case, provision for the lengthening of the springs when depressed
or in motion is only made for the rear ends of the springs, the
front ends being firmly held over the center of the bolster, and
hence, as the load upon the springs is increased, and as only their
rear ends, in combination with said links and connecting rod, are
permitted to accommodate their vibration, the rear end of the body
is caused to have a backward tipping motion -- that is, the back
end of the body is thrown lower than the front end, when the
springs are depressed to their full capacity -- which is an
objectionable feature in this device for equalizing the action of
springs. Besides, as only the rear ends of the springs are allowed
to act, that easy and natural motion of the springs which is only
had by allowing both ends to act freely is in a great measure
lost."
"The radical difference of our invention from each and all the
cases above cited is first in the construction of the connecting
rod [which is in reality precisely the same as that employed by
Augur], and secondly in suspending both ends of the springs upon
separate connecting rods, and thus allow both ends of the springs
to act freely and in harmony with their vibrating motion, to which
is added the other important advantage,
viz., that
arrangement of connecting rods admits of their application to side
spring vehicles of the ordinary kind now in use as readily as to
those built expressly for the purpose, an advantage not attained by
any other previously
Page 145 U. S. 163
known combination of connecting rods with the springs or bodies
of vehicles."
It is quite evident from an examination of this patent that "the
connecting-rods, BB'," provided with arms at their ends, are
precisely the same in structure, design, and operation as "the
pivoted links with a rod connecting the same," described in the
second claim of the Augur patent, and that the only substantial
difference in the construction of the two devices is in the
duplication of this rod by applying it to the front bolster as well
as to the rear axle, and thereby enabling it to be applied to side
spring vehicles of the ordinary kind, as readily as to those built
expressly for the purpose. It is true there are introduced into the
claims of the Topliff and Ely patent the half-elliptic springs,
A'A, which, by means of the connecting rods, are caused to yield in
unison with each other; but the same springs are evidently to be
read into the Augur patent, since the whole object of the device,
as stated by him, is to equalize the action of the springs by
compelling both links to move in unison. If this patent differed
from the other merely in duplicating the rod and applying it to the
front bolster as well as to the rear axle, it is conceded that it
would not, under the cases of
Dunbar v. Myers,
94 U. S. 187,
94 U. S. 195,
and
Slawson v. Grand Street Railroad Co., 107 U.
S. 649,
107 U. S. 653,
involve invention.
But there is a further distinction between the two devices which
ought not to be overlooked. Under the Augur patent, the front ends
of the springs are supported upon standards rising from the
bolster, and the rear ends upon the links of the connecting rod,
rising perpendicularly above the rear axle. In other words, the
links are turned upward, instead of down. This arrangement would
evidently be inoperative if the springs were hung at both ends upon
links so placed, since the body of the vehicle would fall down at
once upon the axles. In the Topliff and Ely patent, to obviate
this, and to enable the device to be applied at both ends of the
springs, the links are turned horizontally, or somewhat dependent,
so that the springs can rest upon them at both ends, and thus
secure a more perfect equalization. Trifling as this deviation
seems to
Page 145 U. S. 164
be, it renders it possible to adapt the Augur device to any side
spring wagon of ordinary construction.
While the question of patentable novelty in this device is by no
means free from doubt, we are inclined, in view of the extensive
use to which these springs have been put by manufacturers of
wagons, to resolve that doubt in favor of the patentees and sustain
the patent.
(3) With regard to the reissue of this patent, the record shows
that on April 9, 1872, within four months from the date of the
original patent, a reissue was granted in which the specification
was largely reframed, the drawings changed in form, though
apparently not in substance, but the claim was changed only by
providing that the connecting rods should be "secured directly to
the hind axle and front bolster," instead of "to the front and rear
axles," as provided in the claim of the original patent. The claim
of the original and first reissue are as follows:
"
Original"
"The arms, CCC'C', arranged upon separate
rock-rods,
BB', secured directly to the
front and rear axles, to
cause both ends of
each spring to yield simultaneously and
in unison with each other,
and also to be laterally braced by
said rock-rods, as described."
"
First Reissue"
"The arms, CCC'C', arranged upon separate
connecting-rods, BB', secured directly to the
hind
axle and
front bolster, to cause both ends of
the
side-springs to yield simultaneously and in unison with each
other,
in the manner shown and described."
The original claim was, in the particular above mentioned, a
clear mistake, since affixing the connecting rod and springs to the
front axle would render it impossible to be turned, and in addition
to this, the original drawing shows it affixed to the bolster. The
correction of a mistake so clear, made within so short time after
the issue of the original patent, was undoubtedly within the power
of the commissioner, as defined by Rev.Stat. section 4916. The
lateral bracing by the rock rods mentioned in the claim of the
original patent was a merely incidental
Page 145 U. S. 165
function to the operation of the rock rod in securing the axle
to the spring, and their omission cannot be considered an
enlargement of the claim.
The second reissue was applied for a little more than a month
after the first was granted, although the patent was not granted
upon this application until March 28, 1876, nearly four years after
the application was filed. No change from the first reissue was
made in the drawings or specification in this reissue, but the
claim was divided and changed so as to read as follows:
"1. The combination of two connecting rods located at the front
and rear ends of a wagon body, and arranged to turn in their
bearings, with a pair of half-elliptic springs, whereby the springs
are caused to yield in unison with each other, substantially as and
for the purpose set forth."
"2. The combination of the connecting-rods, BB', provided with
arms at their ends, with the half-elliptic springs, AA',
substantially as and for the purpose set forth."
The first claim of this reissue is not insisted upon in this
case, so that the question of its validity need not now be
considered. The second claim is to some extent a change of the
claim of the first reissue. It omits the requirement that the
connecting rod shall be secured directly to the axle and bolster,
so as to cause both ends of the side springs to yield
simultaneously, and introduces the half-elliptic springs, AA', as a
new element of the combination. Whether this be an enlargement of
the original claim or not, it is for substantially the same
invention, and, in view of the fact that the reissue was applied
for as soon as the mistake was discovered, and before any rights in
favor of third parties could be reasonably expected to have
attached or had in fact attached, we think this reissue is not open
to the objections which have proved fatal to so many since the case
of
Miller v. Brass Company, 104 U.
S. 350, was decided.
It is a mistake to suppose that that case was intended to settle
the principle that under no circumstances would a reissue
containing a broader claim than the original be supported. We have
no desire to modify in any respect the views expressed
Page 145 U. S. 166
in that and subsequent cases with regard to the validity of
reissues. There is no doubt, as was said by this Court in
Powder Company v. Power Works, 98 U. S.
126,
98 U. S.
137-138, that a reissue can only be granted for the same
invention which formed the subject for the original patent, of
which it is a reissue, since, as was said by the Court in that
case, the express words of the act are "a new patent for the same
invention."
"The specification may be amended so as to make it more clear
and distinct; the claim may be modified so as to make it more
conformable to the exact rights of the patentee; but the invention
must be the same. . . . This prohibition is general, relating to
all patents, and by 'new matter' we suppose to be meant new
substantive matter, such as would have the effect of changing the
invention or of introducing what might be the subject of another
application for a patent. The danger to be provided against was the
temptation to amend a patent so as to cover improvements which
might have come into use or might have been invented by others
after its issue."
In the case of
Miller v. Brass Company, 104 U.
S. 350, a reissue with expanded claims was applied for
fifteen years after the original patent was granted. It
was held to be manifest upon the face of the patent that the
suggestion of inadvertence and mistake was a mere pretense, or if
not a pretense, that the mistake was so obvious as to be instantly
discernible on the opening of the patent, and the right to have it
corrected was a abandoned and lost by unreasonable delay. "The only
mistake suggested," said Mr. Justice Bradley,
"is that the claim was not as broad as it might have been. This
mistake, if it was a mistake, was apparent upon the first
inspection of the patent, and if any correction was desired, it
should have been applied for immediately."
It was intimated in that case, p.
104 U. S. 352,
although the facts did not call for an adjudication upon the point,
that
"if two years' public enjoyment of an invention with the consent
and allowance of the inventor is evidence of abandonment and a bar
to an application for a patent, a public disclaimer in the patent
itself should be construed equally favorable to the
Page 145 U. S. 167
public. Nothing but a clear mistake or inadvertence, and a
speedy application for its correction, is admissible when it is
sought merely to enlarge the claim."
It was further said that the section of the Revised Statutes
does not in terms authorize a reissue to enable a patentee to
expand his claim, and that it was natural to conclude that the
reissue of a patent for such purposes was not in the mind of
Congress when it passed the laws in question. "At all events," said
the Court, p.
104 U. S.
354,
"we think it clear that it was not the special purpose of the
legislation on this subject to authorize the surrender of patents
for the purpose of reissuing them with broader and more
comprehensive claims, although, under the general terms of the law,
such a reissue may be made when it clearly appears that an actual
mistake has inadvertently been made. . . . Now whilst, as before
stated, we do not deny that a claim may be enlarged in a reissued
patent, we are of the opinion that this can only be done when an
actual mistake has occurred, not from a mere error of judgment, for
that may be rectified by appeal, but a real,
bona fide
mistake, inadvertently committed, such as a court of chancery, in
cases within its ordinary jurisdiction, would correct. . . . The
granting of a reissue for such a purpose, after an unreasonable
delay, is clearly an abuse of the power to grant reissues, and may
justly be declared illegal and void."
So, in the case of
Johnson v. Railroad Company,
105 U. S. 539, the
patent was issued in 1857, and at the expiration of the original
term of fourteen years an extension of seven years was granted, and
a reissue was applied for after a lapse of fifteen years, and it
was held, upon the authority of
Miller v. Brass Company
that if the patentee had the right to a reissue if applied for in a
reasonable time, he had lost it by his unreasonable delay. Said the
Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Woods:
"He has rested supinely until the use of the fish plate joint
has become universal, and then, after a lapse of fifteen years, has
attempted by a reissue to extend his patent to cover it. We think
it is perfectly clear that the original patent could not be fairly
construed to embrace the device used by the appellee, which
appellants insist is covered by
Page 145 U. S. 168
their reissue. If the reissued patent covers it, it is broader
than the original, and is therefore void."
In the case of
Mahn v. Harwood, 112 U.
S. 354, a patent reissued nearly four years after the
date of the original patent was held to be invalid as to the new
claims upon the ground of unreasonable delay in applying for it,
the only object of the reissue being to enlarge the claims. Nothing
was changed but to multiply the claims and make them broader, and
this was done not for the benefit of the original patentee, but for
that of his assignee. "It was not intended then," said Mr. Justice
Bradley, referring to
Miller v. Brass Company,
"and is not now, to question the conclusiveness, in suits for
infringements of patents, of the decisions of the commissioner on
questions of fact necessary to be decided before issuing such
patents, except as the statute gives specific defenses in that
regard."
He repeated substantially what had been said in
Miller v.
Brass Company, that
"a patent for an invention cannot lawfully be issued for the
mere purpose of enlarging the claim unless there has been a clear
mistake inadvertently committed in the wording of the claim and the
application for a reissue is made within a reasonably short period
after the original patent was granted. The granting of such
reissues after the lapse of long periods of time is an abuse of
power, and is founded on a total misconception of the law."
It was held that while lapses of time might be of small
consequence where the original claim was too broad and the patentee
sought to restrict it, there were substantial reasons why the claim
could not be enlarged unless the patentee used due diligence to
ascertain his mistake.
"The rights of the public here intervene, which are totally
inconsistent with such tardy reissues, and the great opportunity
and temptation to commit fraud after any considerable lapse of
time, when the circumstances of the original application have
passed out of mind and the monopoly has proved to be of great
value, make it imperative on the courts, as a dictate of justice
and public policy, to hold the patentees strictly to the rule of
reasonable diligence in making applications for this kind of
reissues."
It was further held that while it was for
Page 145 U. S. 169
the Commissioner of Patents to determine the question of
inadvertence, accident, or mistake, the question of reasonable time
was one which the court could determine as one of law by comparing
the patent itself with the original patent, and, if necessary, with
the record of its inception.
In speaking of the case of
Miller v. Brass Company, Mr.
Justice Bradley observed:
"We suggested that a delay of two years in applying for such
correction should be construed equally favorable to the public. But
this was a mere suggestion by the way, and was not intended to lay
down any general rule. Nevertheless, the analogy is an apposite
one, and we think that excuse for any longer delay than that should
be made manifest by the special circumstances of the case."
In the large number of cases which have come up to this Court
since that of
Mahn v. Harwood was decided in which
reissues have been held to be invalid, it will be found that the
opinion of the Court was put upon the ground either that the
patentee had been guilty of inexcusable laches, usually of from
four to sixteen years, or that circumstances had occurred since the
granting of the original patent which made the reissue operate
harshly or unjustly to the defendant in the case.
Thus, in
Mathews v. Machine Co., 105 U. S.
54, there was a delay of fourteen years; in
Bantz v.
Frantz, 105 U. S. 160, a
delay of fourteen years and six months, in
Wing v.
Anthony, 106 U. S. 142, of
over five years; in
Moffitt v. Rogers, 106 U.
S. 423, of 2 years and 7 months; in
Gage v.
Herring, 107 U. S. 640, of
fourteen years; in
Clements v. Odorless Apparatus Co.,
109 U. S. 641, of
nearly five years; in
McMurray v. Mallory, 111 U. S.
97, of nine years; in
White v. Dunbar,
119 U. S. 47, of
five years. In
Parker & Whipple Co. v. Yale Clock Co.,
123 U. S. 87, there
was a delay of one year and eight months, but it appeared that the
improvements not covered by the original patent had been brought
into use by others than the patentee before the reissue was applied
for. In
Coon v. Wilson, 113 U. S. 268, a
reissue was applied for only a little over three months after the
original patent was granted, but the patentee waited until the
defendants produced their
Page 145 U. S. 170
device, and then applied for such enlarged claims as to embrace
this device, which was not covered by the claim of the original
patent, and it was apparent from a comparison of the two patents
that the application for a reissue was made merely to enlarge the
scope of the original. In
Wollensak v. Reiher,
115 U. S. 96, there
was a delay of more than five years, Mr. Justice Matthews observing
that
"the settled rule of decision is that if it appears in cases
where the claim is merely expanded that the delay has been for two
years or more, it is adjudged to invalidate the reissue unless the
delay is accounted for and excused by special circumstances which
show it to have been not unreasonable."
In the very latest case decided by this Court,
viz.,
Electric Gas-Lighting Co. v. Boston Electric Co., 139 U.
S. 481, there was a delay of eight and one-half years,
and the sole object of the reissue was to expand the claims. In
Newton v. Furst & Bradley Co., 119 U.
S. 373, there was a delay of more than thirteen years,
and the defendant had begun in the meantime to make machines of the
pattern complained of. In
Ives v. Sargent, 119 U.
S. 652, there was a delay of three years, and in the
meantime the patent was infringed by a construction manufactured
and sold without infringing the patent as originally granted. In
Worden v. Searls, 121 U. S. 14, there
was a delay of six years, and in
Matthews v. Manufacturing
Co., 124 U. S. 347, one
of seven years.
From this summary of the authorities, it may be regarded as the
settled rule of this Court that the power to reissue may be
exercised when the patent is inoperative by reason of the fact that
the specification as originally drawn was defective or
insufficient, or the claims were narrower than the actual invention
of the patentee, provided the error has arisen from inadvertence or
mistake, and the patentee is guilty of no fraud or deception; but
that such reissues are subject to the following qualifications:
First. That it shall be for the same invention as the original
patent, as such invention appears from the specification and claims
of such original.
Second. That due diligence must be exercised in discovering
Page 145 U. S. 171
the mistake in the original patent, and that if it be sought for
the purpose of enlarging the claim, the lapse of two years will
ordinarily, though not always, be treated as evidence of an
abandonment of the new matter to the public to the same extent that
a failure by the inventor to apply for a patent within two years
from the public use or sale of his intention is regarded by the
statute as conclusive evidence of an abandonment of the patent to
the public.
Third. That this Court will not review the decision of the
commissioner upon the question of inadvertence, accident, or
mistake unless the matter is manifest from the record; but that the
question whether the application was made within a reasonable time
is in most if not in all such cases a question of law for the
court.
To hold that a patent can never be reissued for an enlarged
claim would be not only to override the obvious intent of the
statute, but would operate in many cases with great hardship upon
the patentee. The specification and claims of a patent,
particularly if the invention be at all complicated, constitute one
of the most difficult legal instruments to draw with accuracy, and
in view of the fact that valuable inventions are often placed in
the hands of inexperienced persons to prepare such specifications
and claims, it is no matter of surprise that the latter frequently
fail to describe with requisite certainty the exact invention of
the patentee, and err either in claiming that which the patentee
had not in fact invented or in omitting some element which was a
valuable or essential part of his actual invention. Under such
circumstances, it would be manifestly unjust to deny him the
benefit of a reissue to secure to him his actual invention,
provided it is evident that there has been a mistake, and he has
been guilty of no want of reasonable diligence in discovering it,
and no third persons have in the meantime acquired the right to
manufacture or sell what he had failed to claim. The object of the
patent law is to secure to inventors a monopoly of what they have
actually invented or discovered, and it ought not to be defeated by
a too strict and technical adherence to the letter of the statute
or by the application of artificial rules of interpretation.
The
Page 145 U. S. 172
evidence in this case shows that plaintiffs were conceded by
manufacturers a monopoly of this invention; that defendant was the
only one who had infringed their patents, and that he did not begin
to manufacture the infringing device until 1882, six years after
the second reissue was granted. In view of this and the fact that
the second reissue was applied for within five months from the time
the original patent was granted, and within thirty-seven days after
the first reissue, and that it covers no more than the actual
invention of the patentee, so far as the same is an improvement
upon the Augur patent, we think it should be upheld.
(4) Defendant also assigns as error the allowance by the master
of damages for the infringement of the Augur patent prior to April
9, 1884, when the plaintiffs first took title to it. It appears
from the record that the patentee assigned the patent to one
Atwater, on February 4, 1873, subject to the condition that if he
paid a certain note of $2,000 and interest the assignment was to be
void. This vested the real title in the assignee.
Waterman v.
Mackenzie, 138 U. S. 252. The
assignment made no mention of past infringements. On April 9, 1883,
Atwater assigned to Saladee all the interest which he had acquired,
together with all claims and demands for the past use of such
patents, and on April 9, 1884, Saladee made a similar assignment to
the plaintiffs.
It is claimed in this connection first that the bill did not
make the assignment of the claim for damages for prior
infringements of the Augur patent a basis or ground of recovery,
and asked no recovery therefor, and second that if the plaintiffs
were entitled to recover the damages which Atwater sustained by
reason of the infringement of this patent prior to April 9, 1883,
and those which Saladee sustained from April 9, 1883, to April 9,
1884, the date of the assignment to the plaintiffs, there was no
evidence that either Atwater or Saladee suffered any damages by
reason of the infringement, nor any evidence that they could have
supplied the trade during those years.
It is sufficient to say in reply to this that no such exception
was taken in the court below to the master's report, the only
Page 145 U. S. 173
exception being that, in view of the Stringfellow and Surles
patent, the master should have reported only nominal damages. It
was held by this Court in
Story v.
Livingston, 13 Pet. 359,
38 U. S. 366,
that proper practice in chancery requires that no exceptions to a
master's report be made which were not taken before the master, the
object being to save time, and give him an opportunity to correct
his errors or reconsider his opinion. A party neglecting to bring
in objections cannot afterwards except to the report unless the
court, upon motion, see reason to be dissatisfied with the report
and refer it to the master for review, with liberty to the party to
take objection to it. And in
McMicken v.
Perin, 18 How. 507, it was held directly that this
Court will not review a master's report upon objections taken here
for the first time. In affirmance of this principle, Rule 21
(subdivision 2) requires that "when the error alleged is to a
ruling upon the report of a master, the specification shall state
the exception to the report, and the action of the court upon it."
This presupposes that the particular exception relied upon was
taken in the court below, and was passed upon by the court
adversely to the appellant. Proper practice requires that
objections to a master's report shall be taken in that court, that
any errors discovered therein may be rectified by the court itself
or by a reference to the master for a correction of his report,
without putting parties to the delay and expense of an appeal to
this Court. It would be manifestly unjust if this Court, after
having affirmed the action of the court below in every other
particular, should take up an error in a master's report, which was
not called to its attention, and reverse the case upon that ground,
when, if exception had been duly taken, the error could have been
at once corrected. There is nothing in this case to indicate that
this point was ever made before the master, nor is it noticed in
the eight exceptions taken to his first report, which was set aside
upon other grounds, or, as already observed, in the exception to
his final report.
(5) For the same reason -- that no exceptions were taken at all
by the plaintiffs to the master's report -- we must decline to
notice their first two assignments of error based upon the
inadequacy of the damages awarded.
Page 145 U. S. 174
There is much force in the third assignment -- that the court
erred in overruling plaintiff's motion to increase the damages, and
in refusing to give a decree for such increase. The master finds
that for some years before the defendant began to manufacture, he
was the traveling sales agent of the plaintiffs; that while so
associated in the manufacture of carriage hardware and appliances,
they established a large trade in certain parts of the country, and
that during this period, the defendant, while traveling for the
firm, became acquainted with their trade and the location, extent
of purchase, and solvency of their customers. His connection with
the firm having terminated, defendant went to Cleveland, and in
1882 opened a rival establishment, and began the infringement of
these patents. Before that time, plaintiffs were the exclusive
manufacturers of these equalizers, and had equipped their
establishment with sufficient machinery to enable them to supply
the market; but they neither issued licenses nor established a
royalty for the manufacture or use of their improvement. The
defendant, knowing all their customers and plaintiffs' facilities
for the manufacture of equalizers, made serious inroads upon their
business, and sold almost exclusively to those who had formerly
been customers of the plaintiffs. Under these circumstances, we
should not have disturbed the decree of the court below if it had
seen fit to increase the damages; but in view of the fact that the
defendant carried on the business apparently without profit to
himself, and that a decree passed against him for the sum of
$8,480.51 actual damages, we are not inclined to reverse it upon
that ground. The allowance of an increase of damages under the
statute is a matter which rests somewhat in the discretion of the
court, and we should not be inclined to disturb its finding upon
this point unless the evidence clearly demanded it.
The decree of the court below is therefore
Affirmed.