1. Where the claim for a patent for an invention which consists
of a product or a manufacture made in a defined manner refers in
terms to the antecedent description in the specification of the
process by which the product is obtained, such process is thereby
made as much a part of the invention as are the materials of which
the product is composed.
2. Whether the single fact that a device has gone into general
use and displaced other devices previously employed for analogous
uses establishes in all cases that the later device involves a
patentable invention, it may always be considered as an element in
the case, and, when the other facts leave the question in doubt, it
is sufficient to turn the scale.
3.
Hotchkiss v.
Greenwood, 11 How. 248, decides that employing one
known material in place of another is not invention if the result
be only greater cheapness and durability of the product. It does
not decide that the use of one material in lieu of another in the
formation of a manufacture can in no case amount to invention or be
the subject of a patent.
4. In the present case, the result of the use, in the manner
described in the specification, of hard rubber in lieu of the
materials previously used for a plate for holding artificial teeth
or such teeth and gums is a superior product, having capabilities
and performing functions which differ from anything preceding it
and which cannot be ascribed to mere mechanical skill, but are to
be justly regarded as the results of inventive effort as making the
manufacture of which they are attributes a novel thing in kind, and
consequently patentable as such.
5. A patent is
prima facie evidence that the patentee
was the first inventor, and casts upon him who denies it the burden
of sustaining his denial by proof.
6. The presumption arising from the decision of the Commissioner
of Patents granting the reissue of letters patent that they are for
the same invention which was described in the specification of the
original patent can only be overcome by clearly showing, from a
comparison of the original specification with that of the reissue,
that the former does not substantially describe what is described
and claimed in the latter.
7. Upon consideration of the history of this invention, the
Court holds 1. that
Page 93 U. S. 487
there was no abandonment by the patentee of his original
application; 2. that the application upon which the patent was
finally allowed was a mere continuation of the original, and not a
new and independent one; 3. that the invention was never abandoned
to the public; 4. that reissued letters patent No. 1904, dated
March 21, 1865, for an alleged "improvement in artificial gums and
palates," are valid.
This was a bill in equity filed by the appellees against the
appellant for an infringement of reissued letters patent No. 1904,
for "improvement in artificial gums and palates," granted March 21,
1865, to the appellees, as assignees of John A. Cummings. The bill
prayed for an injunction, discovery, account, and assessment of
damages.
The original letters patent No. 43,009, for said improvement,
were granted to said Cummings, and bear date June 7, 1864.
A decree was entered in favor of the complainants; whereupon the
defendant appealed to this Court, and assigns the following
errors:
First, the decree of the court below is erroneous in
adjudging that John A. Cummings was the original and first inventor
of the improvement described and claimed in the reissued letters
patent No. 1904, dated March 21, 1865.
Second, in adjudging that the reissued letters patent
No. 1904, dated March 21, 1865, is a good and valid patent.
Third, in adjudging that the defendant had infringed
the said reissued letters patent No. 1904, and upon the exclusive
rights of the complainants under the same.
Fourth, in awarding an account of profits and a
perpetual injunction against the defendant, according to the prayer
of the bill.
The history of the invention and the facts bearing upon the
questions involved are fully set forth in the opinion of the
Court.
Page 93 U. S. 489
MR. JUSTICE STRONG delivered the opinion of the Court.
A brief review of the history and nature of the patent which the
complainants allege has been infringed will aid materially in
solving the questions presented by this appeal. On the fourteenth
day of May, 1852, Dr. John A. Cummings, a dentist of Boston, filed
in the Patent Office a caveat to protect an invention he claimed to
have made, of certain new and useful improvements
Page 93 U. S. 490
in the setting and plates of artificial sets of teeth. The
description accompanying the caveat indicated with very
considerable clearness what the alleged invention was, and the
objects sought to be gained by it. The improvement was declared
to
"consist in forming the plate, and also the gums in which the
teeth are inserted, of rubber, or some other elastic substance, so
compounded with sulphur, lead, and other similar substances as to
form a hard gum, or whalebone gum, rigid enough for the purposes of
mastication, and pliable enough to yield a little to the
mouth."
"By this improvement," the caveator said, "the teeth can be
easily baked into the gums which form one piece with the plate."
Subsequently, on the 12th of April, 1855, he applied for a patent,
reciting in his application that he had previously entered a
caveat. His accompanying specification declared the invention to
consist in
"forming the plate and gums to which the teeth are attached of
rubber, or some other elastic material, so indurated as to be rigid
enough for the purpose of mastication, and pliable enough to yield
a little to the motions of the mouth, and in one piece, the teeth
being embedded in the elastic material while the material is in a
soft condition, and then baked with the gums and plate, so that the
teeth, gums, and plate will all be connected, forming, as it were,
one piece."
This application for a patent was rejected on the 19th of May
next following, and the applicant was referred to two printed
publications, one suggesting the use of gutta-percha as a base for
artificial sets of teeth and the other suggesting pastes, analogous
to porcelain paste, as well as gutta-percha. Cummings then amended
his specification by striking out all reference to gutta-percha or
other merely elastic material, disclaiming the use of gutta-percha,
and any material which is merely rendered plastic by heat and
hardened by cooling, and he claimed the improvement in sets of
mineral, or other artificial sets of teeth which consists in
combining the teeth with a rubber plate and gums, which, after the
insertion of the teeth, are vulcanized by Goodyear's process, or
any other process, forming thereby a cheap, durable, and elastic
substitute for the gold plates theretofore used. This amendment,
however, proved ineffectual. The application for a patent was again
rejected, and a third rejection followed, a reconsideration for
which the
Page 93 U. S. 491
applicant had asked. This third rejection was on the third day
of February, 1856. From that time onward for several years, indeed,
until the patent was finally granted, the evidence very
satisfactorily shows that Dr. Cummings was in a condition of
extreme poverty, utterly unable to bear the necessary expenses of
prosecuting his case further. But he did not withdraw his
application. He did not ask for a return of part of the fee he had
paid, nor by any act of his did he indicate acquiescence in the
unfavorable action of the Patent Office. On the contrary, he
continued to assert his expectation of ultimately obtaining a
patent, formed plans for his own action after it should be
obtained, and complained of what he supposed to be the negligence
of his solicitor. The proof of his extreme poverty is ample. His
ill health interfered with his working successfully in the line of
his profession, and his family was subjected to great privations.
He seems never to have had any considerable money. He borrowed,
sometimes, small sums to purchase underclothing for himself. He
made frequent applications to his friends for advances to enable
him to prosecute his application for a patent, offering as a
compensation for such advances sometimes one-quarter and sometimes
one-half of the patent when obtained. He appears never to have
remitted his efforts until, in 1864, he induced Dr. Flagg, who had
been his partner in former years, and Dr. Osgood, to advance first,
$100, and afterwards $720, by means of which the patent was
obtained. Even then he had not the $20 necessary to be paid when it
was allowed. For the assistance he thus received he gave one
quarter of his invention. Before this time, between the third
rejection of his application and his obtaining the advances
mentioned, every thing was done which was within his power. In
February, 1859, in the midst of his pecuniary embarrassments, his
solicitor applied to the Patent Office, not for a return of any
portion of the fee paid, nor for a withdrawal of the application,
but that the specification and one drawing might be sent to him.
This request was refused. An attempt was then made for an appeal to
the board, but that not being allowed by the commissioner, nothing
further was done in the Patent Office until the applicant was
enabled, by the funds obtained from Drs. Flagg and Osgood, to
Page 93 U. S. 492
renew his endeavors. Then, on the 1st of March, 1864, he
presented a petition for the grant of a patent to himself for the
same invention which he had endeavored to secure in 1855 (the
application for which remained in the office unwithdrawn), and
accompanied his petition with a specification and drawings
corresponding exactly with those he had previously made. This final
effort was successful. The office practically acknowledged that the
prior rejection had been an error, and declared that, in justice to
his rights as an inventor, the admission of his claim, limited to
the use of hard rubber or vulcanite, as he had before limited it,
would not be objected to. Accordingly the patent was granted on the
7th of June, 1864, and by sundry conveyances it subsequently became
vested in the complainants. Two surrenders and reissues have since
been made, the last dated March 21, 1865, and it is for an alleged
infringement of this second reissue that the present suit has been
brought. The bearing of this history upon the merits of the
controversy will appear as we proceed to examine the several
defenses set up.
Among these, the one perhaps most earnestly urged is the
averment that the device described in the specification was not a
patentable invention, but that it was a mere substitution of
vulcanite for other materials, which had previously been employed
as a base for artificial sets of teeth -- a change of one material
for another in the formation of a product. If this is in truth all
that the thing described and patented was, if the device was merely
the employment of hard rubber for the same use, in substantially
the same manner and with the same effect that other substances had
been used for in the manufacture of the same articles, it may be
conceded that it constituted no invention. So much is decided in
Hotchkiss v.
Greenwood, 11 How. 248. But such is not our
understanding of the device described and claimed. In the
specification, it is declared that the invention
"consists in forming the plate to which the teeth, or teeth and
gums, are attached, of hard rubber, or vulcanite, so called, an
elastic material, possessing and retaining in use sufficient
rigidity for the purpose of mastication, and at the same time being
pliable enough to yield a little to the motions of the mouth."
This is immediately followed by a description of the manner of
the proposed use; that is, of making the hard rubber
Page 93 U. S. 493
plates, and the claim, as stated, is "the plate of hard rubber,
or vulcanite, or its equivalent, for holding artificial teeth, or
teeth and gums, substantially as described;" that is, plainly,
formed as described. The invention, then, is a product or
manufacture made in a defined manner. It is not a product alone
separated from the process by which it is created. The claim refers
in terms to the antecedent description, without which it cannot be
understood. The process detailed is thereby made as much a part of
the invention as are the materials of which the product is
composed. We shall not quote at large the description of the mode
of making the plate. Such a quotation would unnecessarily prolong
this opinion. It plainly shows a purpose of the inventor to secure
what had not been secured before -- a combination of a plate with
artificial teeth, or with gums and teeth, in such a manner as to be
free from the objections and defects or inconveniences attending
the method before practiced of attaching such teeth to a metallic
plate fitted to the roof of the mouth. Some of these objections are
stated; such as expense, hurting the mouth, impeding mastication,
and obstruction to perfect articulation. In carrying out the
purpose proposed, the materials employed were all old. The teeth,
the wax, the plaster, the moulds, the soft rubber, and the hard
rubber, were none of them new. It is also true that the steps in
the process were not all new. Plaster had been used for formation
of moulds. The process of forming a plate by the use of such moulds
was well known, and so was the process of converting a vulcanizable
compound into vulcanite by heating it and allowing it to cool in
moulds. But the process of Dr. Cummings extended beyond the use of
known materials and the employment of the processes mentioned. It
was vulcanizing soft rubber in a mould, and in contact with
artificial teeth inserted in place into it while it remained in a
soft condition. It was well described by the circuit judge as
"the making of a vulcanite dental plate out of a vulcanizable
compound, into which the teeth were embedded in its plastic
condition, and the rubber compound, with the teeth thus embedded in
it, afterwards vulcanized by heat, so that the teeth, gums, and
plate should be perfectly joined without any intervening crevices,
and the plate should possess the
Page 93 U. S. 494
quality of hard rubber or vulcanite."
The combination thus resulted in a manufacture which was "one
piece." If, then, the claim be read, as it should be, in connection
with the preceding part of the specification, and construed in the
light of the explanation which that gives, the invention claimed
and patented is
"a set of artificial teeth as a new article of manufacture,
consisting of a plate of hard rubber, with teeth, or teeth and
gums, secured thereto in the manner described in the specification,
by embedding the teeth and pins in a vulcanizable compound, so that
it shall surround them while it is in a soft state, before it is
vulcanized, and so that when it has been vulcanized the teeth are
firmly and inseparably secured in the vulcanite, and a tight joint
is effected between them, the whole constituting but one
piece."
It is evident this is much more than employing hard rubber to
perform the functions that had been performed by other materials,
such as gold, silver, tin, platinum, or gutta-percha. A new product
was the result, differing from all that had preceded it, not merely
in degree of usefulness and excellence, but differing in kind,
having new uses and properties. It was capable of being perfectly
fitted to the roof and alveolar processes of the mouth. It was easy
for the wearer, and favorable for perfect articulation. It was
light and elastic, yet sufficiently strong and firm for the
purposes of mastication. The teeth, gums, and plate constituting
one piece only, there were no crevices between the teeth and their
supporters into which food could gather, and where it could become
offensive, and there could be no such crevices so long as the
articles lasted. They were unaffected by any chemical action of the
fluids of the mouth. Besides all this, they were very inexpensive
as compared with other arrangements of artificial teeth. To us it
seems not too much to say that all these peculiarities are
sufficient to warrant the conclusion that the device was different
in kind or species from all other devices. We cannot resist the
conviction that devising and forming such a manufacture by such a
process and of such materials was invention. More was needed for it
than simply mechanical judgment and good taste. Were it not so,
hard rubber would doubtless have been used in the construction of
artificial sets of teeth, gums, and plates long before Cummings
Page 93 U. S. 495
applied for his patent. To find a material, with a mode of using
it, capable of being combined with the teeth in such a manner as to
be free from the admitted faults of all other known combinations,
had been an object long and earnestly sought. It had been a subject
for frequent discussion among dentists and in scientific journals.
The properties of vulcanite were well known, but how to make use of
them for artificial sets of teeth remained undiscovered, and
apparently undiscoverable, until Cummings revealed the mode. But
when revealed its value was soon recognized, and no one seems to
have doubted that the resulting manufacture was a new and most
valuable invention. The eminent dentists and experts examined in
this case uniformly speak of it as such. Not one has ventured to
testify that it was not an invention. They speak of it as "a novel
and desirable thing," as "the greatest improvement in dentistry"
made in many years; and as an invention which is "a great
benefaction to mankind, whereby both health and comfort are
promoted." The evidence also shows that it has wrought a revolution
in dental practice, and that many thousands of operators are using
it in preference to older devices. All this is sufficient, we
think, to justify the inference that what Cummings accomplished was
more than a substitution of one material for another; more than the
exercise of mechanical judgment and taste -- that it was, in truth,
invention. Undoubtedly the results or consequences of a process or
manufacture may in some cases be regarded as of importance when the
inquiry is whether the process or manufacture exhibits invention,
thought, and ingenuity. Webster, on the subject matter of patents,
page 30, says:
"The utility of the change, as ascertained by its consequences,
is the real practical test of the sufficiency of an invention, and
since the one cannot exist without the other, the existence of the
one may be presumed on proof of the existence of the other. Where
the utility is proved to exist in any degree, a sufficiency of
invention to support the patent must be presumed."
We do not say the single fact that a device has gone into
general use, and has displaced other devices which had previously
been employed for analogous uses, establishes in all cases that the
later device involves a patentable invention. It may, however,
always be
Page 93 U. S. 496
considered; and, when the other facts in the case leave the
question in doubt, it is sufficient to turn the scale.
We have therefore considered this branch of the case without
particular reference to
Hotchkiss v.
Greenwood, 11 How. 248. The patent in that case was
for an improvement in making door and other knobs for doors, locks,
and furniture, and the improvement consisted in making them of clay
or porcelain, in the same manner in which knobs of iron, brass,
wood, or glass had been previously made. Neither the clay knob nor
the described method of attaching it to the shank was novel. The
improvement therefore was nothing more than the substitution of one
material for another in constructing an article. The clay or
porcelain door-knob had no properties or functions which other
door-knobs made of different materials had not. It was cheaper, and
perhaps more durable; but it could be applied to no new use, and it
remedied no defects which existed in other knobs. Hence it was
ruled that the alleged improvement was not a patentable invention.
The case does decide that employing one known material in place of
another is not invention if the result be only greater cheapness
and durability of the product. But this is all. It does not decide
that no use of one material in lieu of another in the formation of
a manufacture can, in any case, amount to invention, or be the
subject of a patent. If such a substitution involves a new mode of
construction, or develops new uses and properties of the article
formed, it may amount to invention. The substitution may be
something more than formal. It may require contrivance, in which
case the mode of making it would be patentable; or the result may
be the production of an analogous but substantially different
manufacture. This was intimated very clearly in the case of
Hicks v.
Kelsey, 18 Wall. 670, where it was said,
"The use of one material instead of another in constructing a
known machine is, in most cases, so obviously a matter of mere
mechanical judgment, and not of invention, that it cannot be called
an invention, unless some new and useful result, as increase of
efficiency, or a decided saving in the operation, be obtained."
But where there is some such new and useful result, where a
machine has acquired new functions and useful properties, it may be
patentable as an invention, though
Page 93 U. S. 497
the only change made in the machine has been supplanting one of
its materials by another. This is true of all combinations, whether
they be of materials or processes. In
Crane v. Price, 1
Webst.Pat.Cas. 393, where the whole invention consisted in the
substitution of anthracite for bituminous coal in combination with
a hot-air blast for smelting iron ore, a patent for it was
sustained. The doctrine asserted was, that if the result of the
substitution was a new, a better, or a cheaper article, the
introduction of the substituted material into an old process was
patentable as an invention. This case has been doubted, but it has
not been overruled; and the doubts have arisen from the uncertainty
whether any new result was obtained by the use of anthracite. In
Kneass v. Schuylkill Bank, the use of steel plates instead
of copper for engraving was held patentable. So has been the flame
of gas instead of the flame of oil to finish cloth. These cases
rest on the fact that a superior product has been the result of the
substitution -- a product that has new capabilities and that
performs new functions. So in the present case the use, in the
manner described, of hard rubber in lieu of the materials
previously used for a plate produced a manufacture long sought but
never before obtained -- a set of artificial teeth, light and
elastic, easily adapted to the
contour of the mouth,
flexible, yet firm and strong, consisting of one piece, with no
crevices between the teeth and the plate, impervious to the fluids
of the mouth, unaffected by the chemical action to which artificial
teeth and plates are subjected when in place, clean and healthy --
peculiarities which distinguish it from everything that had
preceded it. These differences, in our opinion, are too many and
too great to be ascribed to mere mechanical skill. They may justly
be regarded as the results of inventive effort, and as making the
manufacture of which they are attributes a novel thing in kind, and
consequently patentable as such.
A second objection urged by the defendant against the validity
of the complainant's patent is alleged want of novelty of the
invention, and a strenuous effort has been made to convince us,
that although hard rubber had not been used in the manner described
for the production of the manufacture, equivalent materials and
processes had been, and that a plate
Page 93 U. S. 498
substantially the same as that of Dr. Cummings had been made
before his improvement. We are not, however, convinced. The patent
itself is
prima facie evidence that the patentee was the
first inventor, at least it casts upon him who denies it the burden
of sustaining his denial by proof. We do not find such proof in the
case. Though the patent was not granted until June 7, 1864, the
invention was completed at least as early as April 12, 1855, when
the application for a patent was made. Indeed, as we have noticed,
a caveat to protect it was filed on the 14th of May, 1852, which
clearly foreshadowed the invention. Yet taking the spring of 1855
as the time when it was completed, we find nothing in the proofs to
justify a conclusion that Dr. Cummings was not the first inventor.
It would answer no good purpose to review the voluminous evidence
supposed to bear upon this branch of the case. We shall refer only
to that which is deemed most important, and which has been most
pressed upon us in this argument. Of the English patent of Charles
Goodyear it is enough to say, that, though the provisional
specification was filed March 14, 1855, the completed specification
was not until the 11th of September following. It was therefore on
the last-mentioned date that the invention was patented.
The experiments made by George E. Hawes, it must be admitted,
closely resembled the process described in the reissued patent to
the complainants. He cast in moulds sets of teeth on a tin base, in
a manner very like that in which the vulcanite plate is formed by
the Cummings process. But the experiments resulted in nothing
practical. Hawes cast sets of teeth for the lower jaw only, the
weight of the metal making the plate unfit for the upper. In
consequence of the shrinkage of the metal in cooling, a tight joint
could not be obtained between the teeth and the base. The sets were
therefore liable to become offensive in consequence of deposits of
food and the secretions of the mouth in the crevices. The shrinkage
also prevented a close fitting of the plate to the roof of the
mouth, and the tin base was affected by the chemical action of the
secretions. In consequence of these and other objections, the
manufacture was soon abandoned, and it may properly be considered
an abandoned experiment. It not only was not the same manufacture
as that
Page 93 U. S. 499
of Cummings, but it was not suggestive of it, and Dr. Hawes, who
cast the tin plates, testifies that the use of vulcanite for dental
purposes is the greatest improvement in his profession that he knew
of in twenty-five years. He adds "that vulcanite may be used by
dentists in many ways which could not be accomplished by tin or
platinum." In his opinion, therefore, the cast-tin base was not
substantially the same thing as the Cummings manufacture. So also,
Dr. Royce, who cast plates of tin for artificial teeth in a manner
very similar to that of Dr. Hawes, testifies that the solid tin
base was found practically unfit for the purpose, except in rare
instances. He made but a few sets, none after 1850, and adopted the
vulcanite, agreeing to pay for a license to use it in manufacturing
dental plates.
We need go no farther into a consideration of the various
devices and publications offered to show that the manufacture
patented as known before Cummings invented it. Suffice it to say
that none of them, in our opinion, suggest or exhibit in substance
such a manufacture. The defense of want of novelty is therefore not
sustained.
It is further insisted by the defendant that the reissued patent
on which this suit is founded is not a patent for the same
invention which was described in the specification of the original
patent, and therefore that the reissue is unauthorized and void. To
sustain this position the defendant must overcome the presumption
against him arising from the decision of the Commissioner of
Patents in granting the issue, and this he can do only by showing,
from a comparison of the original specification with that of the
reissue, that the former does not substantially describe what is
described and claimed in the latter. This must plainly appear
before we can be justified in pronouncing the reissued patent void.
But this, in our judgment, does not appear. The first specification
describes a set of artificial teeth having a hard rubber plate made
by a process substantially the same as that indicated in the later
patent. The description of the process is not quite so minute; but
it is sufficiently full to be understood, and to enable an operator
to make the manufacture. Certainly it is not another process, and
as its result is the same, it is impossible to hold that the
reissued patent is for a different invention from the one
protected
Page 93 U. S. 500
by the original patent. It is true, the specification of the
reissue describes also another process not described in the
specification of the first -- namely, a mode of making the moulds
-- but that is not claimed as a part of the invention.
The remaining defenses to the bill rest mainly on the assumption
that the new petition presented to the Patent Office in 1864 cannot
be regarded as a continuation of the application made for a patent
on the 12th of April, 1855. But this cannot be conceded. The
history of the application, as we have given it, forbids such an
assumption. No act of Cummings amounted to a withdrawal of his
first petition, or to an acquiescence in its rejection. It is true,
he filed a second petition in 1864, but he accompanied it with
substantially the specification that remained in the office, and
with the same drawings. It was a mode of procuring another
consideration of his rejected claim, and the commissioner regarded
it as such. The Act of March 2, 1861, gave him authority thus to
regard it. He replied to the application, that his claim was
embraced in an application filed by him in 1855, and rejected for
want of novelty, admitted that it had been improperly rejected, and
suggested an amendment to make it correspond with his former
amended claim. It is impossible, in view of these facts, to regard
the effort to obtain a new patent in 1864 as a new and independent
application, disconnected from the application made in 1855. It was
but one stage in a continuous effort. In
Godfrey v.
Eames, 1 Wall. 317, the first application was
actually withdrawn, and a new petition was presented at the time of
the withdrawal, with a different description of the invention, but
as the thing patented under the second might have been engrafted as
an amendment of the first, it was ruled that all the proceedings
constituted one application. This Court said,
"If a party choose to withdraw his application for a patent, and
pay the forfeit, intending at the time of such withdrawal to file a
new petition, and he accordingly does so, the two petitions are to
be considered parts of the same transaction, and both as
constituting one continuous application."
We are not aware that filing a second petition for a patent,
after the first has been rejected, has ever been regarded as
severing the second application from the first and depriving the
applicant of any advantage he would have enjoyed
Page 93 U. S. 501
had the patent been granted without a renewal of the
application. The contrary was decided by the Circuit Court for the
Southern District of Ohio, in
Bell v. Daniels, 1 Fish.
372, and in
Blandy v. Griffth, 3
id. 609; and
these decisions are founded in justice and sound reason.
If, then, as we think it must be held, the proceeding to obtain
the patent was a continuous one from 1855 until it was granted; if
the application of 1855 is not severable from the proceedings of
1864 -- there is no foundation whatever for the allegation that the
invention was abandoned to the public, and that it was in public
use or on sale for more than two years before the inventor's
application. The first use of it proved, by any other than Dr.
Cummings, was in 1859, and there is no evidence that this was with
his consent. And the proof respecting his health and pecuniary
condition, together with his constant efforts to obtain the
necessary means to prosecute his right, rebuts all presumption that
he ever abandoned, actually or constructively, either his invention
or his application for a patent. That he never intended an
abandonment of his invention is perfectly clear, and it was not his
fault that granting the patent was so long delayed.
The conclusion of the whole matter is, that the patent is a
valid one, and therefore that the decree of the circuit court
should be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE MILLER and
MR. JUSTICE FIELD, dissenting.
I dissent from the judgment of the Court in this case, on the
ground that the patentee, having duly made his application for a
patent in 1855, and the same having been three times rejected, must
be considered as having abandoned the same, inasmuch as no further
effort was made to obtain a patent until either years afterwards,
without any pretence that the patentee was engaged in perfecting
his invention, and in the meantime the invention which he claims as
his had come into general public use. The application for a patent
made in 1864 was a new and independent application, and should be
treated as such. As the public had enjoyed the use of the invention
for more than two years prior to this application, the patent
should be declared invalid.
Page 93 U. S. 502
Great injustice will, in my judgment, be done to the public to
allow a patent obtained under such circumstances to stand. The
public had a right to suppose that no further application would be
made. The levy of a tribute now on all the dentists of the country
who have brought the plate into public notice and use seems to me a
species of injustice. The delay of the patentee, in fact, is made
to operate to his benefit instead of his prejudice, his patent
being made to run eight years longer than it would have done had it
been granted when first applied for; so that the public is still
further injured by sustaining the patent as finally granted. It is
too common a case that associated companies, in order to maintain
some valuable monopoly, look about to see what abandoned invention
or rejected application, or ineffective patent, can be picked up,
revamped, and carried through the Patent Office, and by the aid of
ingenious experts and skillful counsel succeed in getting the
desired protection. I think that the courts ought to be strict in
maintaining the rights of the public in such cases. And the present
case seems to me to be one in which we ought to hold the patent
invalid as against those rights.