If a bill in equity to restrain an infringement of letters
patent be filed before the expiration of the patent, the
jurisdiction of the circuit court is not defeated by the expiration
of the patent by lapse of time before the final decree.
The case of
Eames v. Andrews, just decided, is applied
to the issues in this case, so fur as they are identical with those
in that case.
The use of this invention by the inventor in the manner stated
in the opinion of the court, and his delay in applying for a patent
under the circumstances therein detailed for more than two years
prior to his application, did not constitute an abandonment of his
invention or a dedication of it to the public, and did not forfeit
his right to a patent under the law, as it stood at the time of his
application.
The use by the respondents of driven wells for their personal
use on their farms, which wells were operated by means of the
process patented to Green, constituted an infringement of that
patent.
Bill in equity to restrain infringements of letters patent. The
patent expired by its own limitation after the filing of the bill,
and before final decree. The final decree and allowance of appeal
were as follows:
"This cause coming on to be heard upon the pleadings in agreed
statement of facts and arguments of counsel, the court finds the
reissued letters patent sued on valid, and to have been infringed
by defendant, and that the complainants have an established license
fee of $10 per well driven by the process described and claimed in
the patent, for which said sum, and interest from the 15th day of
May, 1883, the date of filing the bill herein, the complainants are
entitled to a decree which, to the first day of this term, amounts
to $12.03."
"The patent having expired, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed
that the court [complainants] do recover the sum of $12.03 per well
driven in accordance with said patent, with interest from the 5th
day of October, 1886, and his costs, to be taxed. "
Page 122 U. S. 72
"An appeal being prayed by defendants, it is allowed, and bond
fixed at $250, and it is ordered that the other causes pending in
this court on said patent be stayed until such appeal has been
decided by the Supreme Court, and no entry or decree be made in
them pending said appeal."
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a bill in equity filed by the appellees, May 15, 1883,
to restrain the alleged infringement of reissued letters patent No.
4,372, issued to Nelson W. Green, for a driven well. The cause was
heard, by stipulation between the parties, upon an agreed statement
of facts set out in the record, as follows:
"For the purpose of saving the expense of taking testimony, it
is hereby agreed, by and between the parties hereto, that the above
cause, and the others hereinafter referred to, may be tried upon
the following agreed statement of facts; said statement to be
accepted as proof of the facts recited as fully and completely as
if the same had been duly and formally proven:"
"It is agreed that Nelson W. Green was the patentee of a new and
valuable process in the construction of wells, and claimed to be
its first and original inventor, for which process he received
original letters patent of the United States, No. 73,425, on the
14th day of January, 1868, and for which reissued letters patent
No. 4,372 were granted to Nelson W. Green on May 9, 1871, the
application for which having been filed February 24, 1871."
"That the title to the letters patent sued on for the State of
Ohio is in the complainants."
"That the defendants have had in use on their farm for the past
seven or eight years one or more driven wells, which wells were put
down for the defendants by an ordinary well driver
Page 122 U. S. 73
in the following manner: a tube, of which the lower portion was
perforated with small holes, and the lower end provided with a
point, was driven into the ground until it projected into the water
without removing the earth upwards, as in boring. "
"The water then entered the tube through the perforations, and
was pumped up through the tube by an ordinary pump."
"That the defendants have never driven wells for themselves
except as above described or for other purposes; never have sold,
or offered for sale, driven wells, or the materials for driving
them, but have simply used their own wells for their personal use
on their farms."
"It is agreed that printed copies of the original and reissued
letters patent granted to N. W. Green in 1868 and 1871, Nos. 73,425
and 4,372, respectively, may be offered in evidence at the hearing,
and may be accepted as proof with the same force and effect as if
formally proven."
"That the said N. W. Green made his alleged invention or
discovery as early as 1861, when he put down on his own grounds at
Cortland, New York, the first driven well for the purpose of
demonstrating his discovery."
"That he at the time of his alleged invention, claimed to have
made a valuable discovery, and to have invented a new process."
"That he then declared an intention to secure his process by
letters patent, and expressed his belief that large profits would
accrue therefrom."
"That he at that time, having been partly educated at West
Point, was engaged in organizing a regiment at Cortland, N.Y., his
residence, and was expecting soon to take part in the war of the
rebellion."
"That in June, 1861, he put down a well at his house in
Cortland, and in October, 1861, he publicly drove a well, in the
manner described in his original patent at the fair grounds near
Cortland, for the use of the soldiers in camp, and demonstrated to
his own complete satisfaction its success."
"That he gave orders and directions for the construction of
proper apparatus for driving such wells, and made arrangements for
its transportation with his regiment as it was moved to the seat of
war. "
Page 122 U. S. 74
"That on the 6th of December, 1861, while in discharge of what
seemed to be his duty, he felt compelled to shoot one of the
captains of his regiment named McNett; that the shot was not
mortal, but inflicted serious injury; that in the then state of the
public mind, this occasion gave rise to intense public excitement,
out of which sprang a controversy of extraordinary bitterness,
involving numerous persons and continuing for several years; that
the effect upon Green was disastrous in the extreme; that he was
suspended from his command, then tried by a court of inquiry at
Albany, and reinstated in command; that his regiment, after having,
it is said, required the protection of a battery to save it from
violence at the hands of evil-disposed people of the country,
removed to Washington, where Green was relieved from command, and
then dismissed the service and subjected to military charges"
"That he was, in addition, harassed by civil suits brought to
charge him with a personal liability for articles used by his
regiment."
"That he was also arrested and then indicted for the shooting of
McNett, and after repeated postponements of the trial, effected
because of the excited State of the public mind, was tried in 1866,
and the jury, having disagreed, was discharged"
"That during this period he also became involved in church
difficulties arising out of the shooting of McNett, was expelled
from the church, and compelled to appeal to the bishop, and also
became involved in litigation with the pastor of his church"
"That his efforts during this period to secure a reversal of the
order dismissing him from the service were constant and absorbing,
and were attended with such anxiety of mind as to give rise to the
charge that he was insane."
"That this state of things continued up to 1866, during which
period he was of necessity often absent from Cortland at Albany and
at Washington, and that he was compelled to devote his entire time
to the controversy in which he had become involved, abandoning all
other occupation and exhausting all his means."
"That in November, 1865, when Green saw, by an advertisement
Page 122 U. S. 75
in the papers, that driven wells were being put down, although
he was advised by counsel defending him on the indictment for the
shooting of McNett not to apply for a patent, as he would thereby
increase the number of his enemies and prejudice him on the trial
of the indictment, then about to come on, he nevertheless did then,
and in opposition to the advice of his counsel, file his
application and assert his right to the invention."
"That the said Green, during this period aforesaid, never
declared any intention of abandoning his said discovery and
invention, and that, having so made his application as aforesaid,
original letters patent were granted the said N. W. Green, January
14, 1868."
"It is further agreed that whatever order or decree is made in
this cause, the same shall be made in all the cases pending in this
court in which the same parties are complainants, a list of which
cases, with the title and number thereof, is hereto attached, and
made a part of this stipulation."
"It is further admitted that the complainants' price for
settling for infringement under the above patent without suit has
been ten dollars per well and the recognition of complainants'
rights, and that the complainants offered to settle on such terms
with these defendants before bringing suit, which offer was
refused."
A decree was rendered in favor of the complainants on the 6th
day of December, 1886, but, as at that time the patent had expired,
no injunction was granted. The amount of the damages awarded was at
the rate of $10 for each well used, that being the amount of
royalty which the complainants had offered to take before suit
brought, and admitted to be the customary price for the same, as a
license fee. The defendant prosecutes the present appeal.
As the patent was in force at the time the bill was filed, and
the complainants were entitled to a preliminary injunction at that
time, the jurisdiction of the court is not defeated by the
expiration of the patent by lapse of time before final decree.
There is nothing in the case of
Root v. Railway Co.,
105 U. S. 189, to
sustain the objection made by the appellant
Page 122 U. S. 76
on this account.
See also Clark v. Wooster,
119 U. S. 322,
119 U. S. 325,
and cases there cited. All other defenses made in the cause except
that of prior public use and the defendant's infringement have been
passed upon in the case of
Eames v. Andrews, just
decided.
In the present case, the appellant contends that the patentee
publicly used his invention more than two years before he applied
for his patent, and thereby forfeited his right to a patent under
the law. This defense was raised and considered, upon facts
substantially the same, in the case of
Andrews v. Carman,
13 Blatchford 307, and also in the case of
Andrews v.
Cross, 8 F. 269. The law governing the subject of the alleged
dedication and abandonment by Green of his invention prior to
obtaining his patent is that which was in force prior to November,
1865, when he made his application. By the Patent Act of 1870 as
well as by the Revised Statutes, all rights previously acquired
were preserved. The law therefore applicable to the question is to
be found in the acts of 1836 and 1839. The act of 1839, as has
repeatedly been held, has no effect to invalidate a patent unless
there be proof of abandonment or of a use of the invention for more
than two years prior to the application for the patent. The only
facts from which such an abandonment or dedication can be inferred
are that Green, in June, 1861, put down a well at his house in
Cortland, New York; that in October, 1861, he publicly drove a
well, in the manner described in his original patent at the fair
grounds near Cortland, for the use of the soldiers in camp, and
demonstrated to his complete satisfaction its success, and that he
gave orders and directions for the construction of proper apparatus
for the driving of such wells, and made arrangements for its
transportation with his regiment as it was moved to the seat of
war. The circumstances of delay which intervened between that date
and the time when he made his application for his patent in
November, 1865, are stated in the agreed statement of facts. Those
circumstances sufficiently rebut any presumptions which might
otherwise have arisen of an intention on his part to abandon and
dedicate to the use of the public the invention described
Page 122 U. S. 77
in his patent. The wells made by Green himself at Cortland and
at the fair grounds near Cortland for the use of his soldiers were
his first experiments. In respect to these, it was said by Judge
Benedict in
Andrews v. Carman, 13 Blatchford 307, 325:
"The first experiment was a success in this, that it proved the
possibility of obtaining a supply of water by this process; but of
course it could not prove that a tube could be driven down to a
water-bearing stratum in all localities with the cheapness and
dispatch necessary to render the process one of general utility. It
was natural, therefore, to suppose that before the process could be
declared to be satisfactory, other experiments in other and
different localities should be made. He could by law use his
invention for this purpose, and permit it to be used, for two years
without forfeiting his right to a patent. Under such circumstances
it would be going far to say that his act of permitting the use of
his process at the camp in Cortland, where his regiment was then in
camp, and of providing material wherewith to construct such wells
for his regiment when it should move into hostile territory,
amounted to a dedication of his invention to public use, and worked
a forfeiture of his right to it."
Section 7 of the Act of March 3, 1839, 5 Stat. 354, protects
everyone who had purchased or constructed the subject of the
invention prior to the application for the patent, and adds as
follows:
"And no patent shall be held to be invalid by reason of such
purchase, sale, or use prior to the application for a patent as
aforesaid except on proof of abandonment of such invention to the
public or that such purchase, sale, or prior use has been for more
than two years prior to such application for a patent."
There is no evidence in the record of any use or sale of the
invention by Green before his application for a patent, and no
evidence from which to conclude that any use of any driven well by
others before his application was consented to or allowed by him
except in the instances mentioned at Cortland, which were merely
experimental tests, made by himself. Much less is there any
evidence to show that there was any use of the invention by other
for more than two years prior to his application.
Page 122 U. S. 78
Upon the question of infringement, the agreed statement of facts
shows the following:
"That the defendants have had in use on their farm for the past
seven or eight years one or more driven wells, which wells were put
down for the defendants by an ordinary well driver in the following
manner: a tube, of which the lower portion was perforated with
small holes and the lower end provided with a point, was driven
into the ground until it projected into the water, without removing
the earth upwards, as in boring. The water then entered the tube
through the perforations, and was pumped up through the tube by an
ordinary pump. That the defendants have never driven wells for
themselves except as above described, or for other purposes; never
have sold or offered for sale driven wells or the materials for
driving them, but have simply use their own wells for their
personal use on their farms."
It is now contended on the part of the appellant that the claim
of the patent is for the process of driving the well, and not for
the use of the well after it has been driven, and that consequently
the appellant is not shown to have infringed, but as has been shown
in the case of
Eames v. Andrews, the patent covers the
process of drawing water from the earth by means of a well driven
in the manner prescribed in the patent. The use of a well so
constructed is therefore a continuing infringement, as every time
water is drawn from it, the patented process is necessarily used.
As was said by MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD in
Andrews v. Cross,
8 F. 269:
"Under this construction, the defendant has infringed by using
the pump in a driven well, constructed in a house hired by him, to
obtain a supply of water for the use of his family, although he may
not have paid for driving the well or have procured it to be
driven. Such use of the well was a use of the patented
process."
The decree of the circuit court is accordingly
affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, MR. JUSTICE FIELD, and MR. JUSTICE GRAY,
dissenting.