1. A foreign patent or publication describing an invention,
unless published anterior to the making of the invention or
discovery secured by letters patent issued by the United States, is
no defense to a suit upon them.
2. The presumption arising from the oath of the applicant that
he believes himself to be the first inventor or discoverer of the
thing for which he seeks letters patent remains until the contrary
is proved.
3. The use of an invention by the inventor or by persons under
his direction, if made in good faith, solely in order to test its
qualities, remedy its defects, and bring it to perfection, is not,
although others thereby derive a knowledge of it, a public use of
it within the meaning of the patent law, and does not preclude him
from obtaining letter patent therefor.
4. Samuel Nicholson having, in 1847, invented a new and useful
improvement in wooden pavements and filed in the Patent Office a
caveat of his invention, put down in 1854, as an experiment, his
wooden pavement on a street in Boston, where it was exposed to
public view and traveled over for several years, and it proving
successful, he, Aug. 7, 1854, obtained letters patent therefor.
Held: 1. that there having been no public use or sale of
the invention, he was entitled to such letters patent; 2. that they
were not avoided by English letters patent for the same invention,
enrolled in 1850.
Page 97 U. S. 127
5. Where contractors laid a pavement for a city which infringed
the patent of Nicholson and the city paid them as much therefor as
it would have had to pay him had he done the work, thus realizing
no profits from the infringement,
held that in a suit in
equity, to recover profits, against the city and the contractors,
the latter alone are responsible, although the former might have
been enjoined before the completion of the work, and perhaps would
have been liable in an action for damages.
6. Where profits are made by an infringes by the use of an
article patented as an entirety or product, he is responsible to
the patentee for them, unless he can show and the burden is on him
to show it that a portion of them is the result of some other thing
used by him.
7. No stipulations between a patentee and his assignee, as to
royalty to be charged, can prevent the latter from recovering from
an infringes the whole profits realized by reason of the
infringement.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by the American Nicholson Pavement Company
against the city of Elizabeth, N.J., George W. Tubbs, and the New
Jersey Wood Paving Company, a corporation of New Jersey, upon a
patent issued to Samuel Nicholson, dated Aug. 20, 1867, for a new
and improved wooden pavement, being a second reissue of a patent
issued to said Nicholson Aug. 8, 1854. The reissued patent was
extended in 1868 for a further term of seven years. A copy of it is
appended to the bill, and, in the specification, it is declared
that the nature and object of the invention consists in providing a
process or mode of constructing wooden block pavements upon a
foundation along a street or roadway with facility, cheapness, and
accuracy, and also in the creation and construction of such a
wooden pavement as shall be comparatively permanent and durable, by
so uniting and combining all its parts, both superstructure and
foundation, as to provide against the slipping of the horses' feet,
against noise, against unequal wear, and against rot and consequent
sinking away from below. Two plans of making this pavement are
specified. Both require a proper
Page 97 U. S. 128
foundation on which to lay the blocks, consisting of tarred
paper or hydraulic cement covering the surface of the roadbed to
the depth of about two inches, or of a flooring of boards or plank,
also covered with tar, or other preventive of moisture. On this
foundation, one plan is to set square blocks on end arranged like a
checker board, the alternate rows being shorter than the others, so
as to leave narrow grooves or channel ways to be filled with small
broken stone or gravel, and then pouring over the whole melted tar
or pitch, whereby the cavities are all filled and cemented
together. The other plan is, to arrange the blocks in rows
transversely across the street, separated a small space (of about
an inch) by strips of board at the bottom, which serve to keep the
blocks at a uniform distance apart, and then filling these spaces
with the same material as before. The blocks forming the pavement
are about eight inches high. The alternate rows of short blocks in
the first plan and the strips of board in the second plan should
not be higher than four inches. The patent has four claims, the
first two of which, which are the only ones in question, are as
follows:
"I claim as an improvement in the art of constructing
pavements:"
"1. Placing a continuous foundation or support, as above
described, directly upon the roadway, then arranging thereon a
series of blocks, having parallel sides, endwise, in rows, so as to
leave a continuous narrow groove or channel way between each row,
and then filling said grooves or channel ways with broken stone,
gravel, and tar, or other like materials."
"2. I claim the formation of a pavement by laying a foundation
directly upon the roadway, substantially as described, and then
employing two sets of blocks -- one a principal set of blocks that
shall form the wooden surface of the pavement when completed, and
an auxiliary set of blocks or strips of board which shall form no
part of the surface of the pavement, but determine the width of the
groove between the principal blocks, and also the filling of said
groove, when so formed between the principal blocks, with broken
stone, gravel, and tar, or other like material."
The bill charges that the defendants infringed this patent by
laying down wooden pavements in the City of Elizabeth, N.J.,
Page 97 U. S. 129
constructed in substantial conformity with the process patented,
and prays an account of profits, and an injunction.
The defendants answered in due course, admitting that they had
constructed and were still constructing wooden pavements in
Elizabeth, but alleging that they were constructed in accordance
with a patent granted to John W. Brocklebank and Charles Trainer,
dated Jan. 12, 1869, and denied that it infringed upon the
complainant.
They also denied that there was any novelty in the alleged
invention of Nicholson, and specified a number of English and other
patents which exhibited, as they claimed, every substantial and
material part thereof which was claimed as new.
They also averred that the alleged invention of Nicholson was in
public use, with his consent and allowance, for six years before he
applied for a patent on a certain avenue in Boston called the Mill
dam, and contended that said public use worked an abandonment of
the pretended invention.
These several issues, together with the question of profits and
liability on the part of the several defendants to respond thereto,
are the subjects in controversy before us.
We do not think that the defense of want of novelty has been
successfully made out. Nicholson's invention dates back as early as
1847 or 1848. He filed a caveat in the Patent Office in August,
1847, in which the checkerboard pavement is fully described, and he
constructed a small patch of pavement of both kinds, by way of
experiment, in June or July, 1848, in a street near Boston, which
comprised all the peculiarities afterwards described in his patent,
and the experiment was a successful one. Before that period, we do
not discover in any of the forms of pavements adduced as
anticipations of his, any one that sufficiently resembles it to
deprive him of the claim to its invention. As claimed by him, it is
a combination of different parts or elements, consisting, as the
appellant's counsel, with sufficient accuracy for the purposes of
this case, enumerates them, 1st, of the foundation prepared to
exclude moisture from beneath; 2d, the parallel sided blocks; 3d,
the strips between these blocks, to keep them at a uniform distance
and to create a space to be filled with gravel and tar; and, 4th,
the filling. Though it may be true that every one of these
elements
Page 97 U. S. 130
had been employed before, in one kind of pavement or another,
yet they had never been used in the same combination and put
together in the same manner as Nicholson combined and arranged
them, so as to make a pavement like his. The one which makes the
nearest approach to it, and might, perhaps, be deemed sufficiently
like to deprive Nicholson of the merit of invention, is that of
John Hosking, which, in one form, consisted of alternate rows of
short and long blocks, the latter partially resting on the former
by their being mutually rabbeted so as to fit together. The spaces
thus formed between the longer blocks, and on the top of the
shorter ones, were filled with loose stone and cement or asphalt,
substantially the same as in Nicholson's pavement. It would be very
difficult to sustain Nicholson's patent if Hosking's stood in his
way. But the only evidence of the invention of the latter is
derived from an English patent, the specification of which was not
enrolled until March, 1850, nearly two years after Nicholson had
put his pavement down in its completed form, by way of experiment,
in Boston. A foreign patent, or other foreign printed publication
describing an invention, is no defense to a suit upon a patent of
the United States, unless published anterior to the making of the
invention or discovery secured by the latter, provided that the
American patentee, at the time of making application for his
patent, believed himself to be the first inventor or discoverer of
the thing patented. He is obliged to make oath to such belief when
he applies for his patent, and it will be presumed that such was
his belief until the contrary is proven. That was the law as it
stood when Nicholson obtained his original patent, and it is the
law still. Act of 1836, secs. 7, 15; Act of 1870, secs. 24, 25, 61;
Rev.Stat., secs. 4886, 4887, 4920;
and see Curtis,
Patents, secs. 375, 375a. Since nothing appears to show that
Nicholson had any knowledge of Hosking's invention or patent prior
to his application for a patent in March, 1854, and since the
evidence is very full to the effect that he had made his invention
as early as 1848, the patent of Hosking cannot avail the defense in
this suit.
It is unnecessary to make an elaborate examination of the other
patents which were referred to for the purpose of showing
Page 97 U. S. 131
an anticipation of Nicholson's invention. They are mostly
English patents, and we will only advert in a summary way to such
of them as seem to be most nearly relevant to the question in
controversy, premising that in England, the enrollment of the
specification is the first publication of the particulars of a
patented invention.
Stead's patent, enrolled in November, 1838, shows a plan of
pavement consisting of a series of hexagonal, triangular, or square
sided blocks, standing close together on the surface of the roadway
in a layer of sand and being a little smaller at the bottom than at
the top, so as to admit a packing of sand, or pitch and sand, in
the interstices between them below the surface. Small recesses at
the top, around the edges of the blocks, are suggested, apparently
for giving a better hold to the horses' feet. It had no prepared
foundation like Nicholson's, and no spaces filled with gravel,
&c.
Parkin's patent, enrolled October, 1839, proposes a pavement to
consist of blocks leaning upon each other and connected together
with a mixture of sand and bitumen, and connected by keys laid in
grooves, and having grooves cut in the surface, either across the
blocks or along their edges, to give the horses a better foothold.
This plan exhibits no spaces to be filled with gravel or other
filling.
Wood's patent, enrolled in April, 1841, shows a pavement made of
adjoining blocks fitted together, but alternately larger and
smaller at the top, like the frustrum of a pyramid, and not
parallel-sided, those larger at the top standing slightly higher
than the others so that, when pounded down or pressed by rollers or
loaded vehicles, they would act as wedges, binding the whole
pavement more tightly together. No filling is used on the surface,
and no prepared foundation is suggested. In one form of his
pavement, he describes continuous grooves, the grooves being formed
of blocks which are shorter than the others, and states that the
groove is to be filled with concrete, coal tar, &c., mixed with
gravel or sand, but there is no foundation described for the
pavement, and the description given for laying down the pavement,
viz., by ramming down the taller blocks after considerable
surface has been covered by the pavement, shows that the roadbed on
which the blocks
Page 97 U. S. 132
are to be laid is to be a yielding one, capable of conforming
itself to the under surface of the blocks in the same way as sand
does to the ordinary stone pavement when the stones are rammed.
Perring's patent, enrolled January, 1843, shows a pavement
consisting, in one form, of blocks leaning one upon another in
rows, with strips of board between the row, coming to within an
inch or so of the top of the pavement and the same distance from
the bottom, leaving gutters for the water underneath, and the
adjoining rows being connected with pins passing through the strips
of board. The rows are thus separated to enable the horses' feet to
get a better hold. No filling is suggested, and indeed would not be
admissible, as the boards have no support but the pins, and no
prepared foundation is required.
Crannis & Kemp's patent, enrolled Aug. 21, 1843, presents,
amongst other things, first a pavement consisting of rows of blocks
adjoining each other, but each block having a small recess on one
side on the surface, to enable the horses to get a better foothold;
secondly, a pavement of alternate blocks adjoining each other, but
differing in width, and slightly differing in height, the top of
one block being rounded off so as to make a groove next to the
adjoining blocks, and the rounded blocks in one row alternating
with the rectangular topped blocks in the next row, the object of
rounding off the alternate blocks being to give a foothold to the
horses. This pavement is to be built on a flooring of plank, either
of one or two thicknesses, but without any preparation to exclude
moisture, and it has no filling in the depressions or grooves
formed by rounding the alternate blocks.
A French patent, granted to Hediard in 1842, shows a pavement
constructed of rows of blocks laid on a board foundation, cemented
together by a thin filling (four tenths of an inch thick) of cement
or mastic, from top to bottom; no provision being made to prevent
the accession of moisture from the ground below, and no strips
between the rows to keep them separate from each other.
None of these pavements combines all the elements of
Nicholson's, much less a combination of those elements arranged and
disposed according to his plan. We think they present
Page 97 U. S. 133
no ground for invalidating his patent and no defense to this
suit.
The next question to be considered is whether Nicholson's
invention was in public use or on sale, with his consent and
allowance, for more than two years prior to his application for a
patent within the meaning of the sixth, seventh, and fifteenth
sections of the act of 1836, as qualified by the seventh section of
the act of 1839, which were the acts in force in 1854, when he
obtained his patent. It is contended by the appellants that the
pavement which Nicholson put down by way of experiment, on Mill Dam
Avenue in Boston in 1848 was publicly used for the space of six
years before his application for a patent, and that this was a
public use within the meaning of the law.
To determine this question, it is necessary to examine the
circumstances under which this pavement was put down and the object
and purpose that Nicholson had in view. It is perfectly clear from
the evidence that he did not intend to abandon his right to a
patent. He had filed a caveat in August, 1847, and he constructed
the pavement in question by way of experiment for the purpose of
testing its qualities. The road in which it was put down, though a
public road, belonged to the Boston and Roxbury Mill Corporation,
which received toll for its use, and Nicholson was a stockholder
and treasurer of the corporation. The pavement in question was
about seventy-five feet in length, and was laid adjoining to the
toll gate and in front of the toll house. It was constructed by
Nicholson at his own expense, and was placed by him where it was in
order to see the effect upon it of heavily loaded wagons and of
varied and constant use, and also to ascertain its durability and
liability to decay. Joseph L. Lang, who was toll collector for many
years commencing in 1849, familiar with the road before that time
and with this pavement from the time of its origin, testified as
follows:
"Mr. Nicholson was there almost daily, and when he came, he
would examine the pavement, would often walk over it, cane in hand,
striking it with his cane and making particular examination of its
condition. He asked me very often how people liked it and asked me
a great many questions about it. I have heard him say a number of
times that this was his first experiment with this pavement, and
he
Page 97 U. S. 134
thought that it was wearing very well. The circumstances that
made this locality desirable for the purpose of obtaining a
satisfactory test of the durability and value of the pavement were
that there would be a better chance to lay it there, he would have
more room and a better chance than in the city, and besides it was
a place where most everybody went over it, rich and poor. It was a
great thoroughfare out of Boston. It was frequently traveled by
teams having a load of five or six tons, and some larger. As these
teams usually stopped at the toll house and started again, the
stopping and starting would make as severe a trial to the pavement
as it could be put to."
This evidence is corroborated by that of several other witnesses
in the cause, the result of the whole being that Nicholson merely
intended this piece of pavement as an experiment, to test its
usefulness and durability. Was this a public use within the meaning
of the law?
An abandonment of an invention to the public may be evinced by
the conduct of the inventor at any time, even within the two years
named in the law. The effect of the law is that no such consequence
will necessarily follow from the invention's being in public use or
on sale, with the inventor's consent and allowance, at any time
within two years before his application, but that if the invention
is in public use or on sale prior to that time, it will be
conclusive evidence of abandonment and the patent will be void.
But in this case it becomes important to inquire what is such a
public use as will have the effect referred to. That the use of the
pavement in question was public in one sense cannot be disputed.
But can it be said that the invention was in public use? The use of
an invention by the inventor himself or of any other person under
his direction by way of experiment and in order to bring the
invention to perfection has never been regarded as such a use.
Curtis, Patents, sec. 381;
Shaw v.
Cooper, 7 Pet. 292.
Now the nature of a street pavement is such that it cannot be
experimented upon satisfactorily except on a highway, which is
always public.
When the subject of invention is a machine, it may be tested and
tried in a building, either with or without closed doors.
Page 97 U. S. 135
In either case, such use is not a public use within the meaning
of the statute so long as the inventor is engaged in good faith in
testing its operation. He may see cause to alter it and improve it,
or not. His experiments will reveal the fact whether any and what
alterations may be necessary. If durability is one of the qualities
to be attained, a long period, perhaps years, may be necessary to
enable the inventor to discover whether his purpose is
accomplished. And though during all that period he may not find
that any changes are necessary, yet he may be justly said to be
using his machine only by way of experiment, and no one would say
that such a use, pursued with a
bona fide intent of
testing the qualities of the machine, would be a public use within
the meaning of the statute. So long as he does not voluntarily
allow others to make it and use it and so long as it is not on sale
for general use, he keeps the invention under his own control and
does not lose his title to a patent.
It would not be necessary in such a case that the machine should
be put up and used only in the inventor's own shop or premises. He
may have it put up and used in the premises of another, and the use
may inure to the benefit of the owner of the establishment. Still,
if used under the surveillance of the inventor and for the purpose
of enabling him to test the machine and ascertain whether it will
answer the purpose intended and make such alterations and
improvements as experience demonstrates to be necessary, it will
still be a mere experimental use, and not a public use within the
meaning of the statute.
Whilst the supposed machine is in such experimental use, the
public may be incidentally deriving a benefit from it. If it be a
grist mill, or a carding machine, customers from the surrounding
country may enjoy the use of it by having their grain made into
flour or their wool into rolls, and still it will not be in public
use within the meaning of the law.
But if the inventor allows his machine to be used by other
persons generally, either with or without compensation, or if it is
with his consent put on sale for such use, then it will be in
public use and on public sale within the meaning of the law.
Page 97 U. S. 136
If, now, we apply the same principles to this case, the analogy
will be seen at once. Nicholson wished to experiment on his
pavement. He believed it to be a good thing, but he was not sure,
and the only mode in which he could test it was to place a specimen
of it in a public roadway. He did this at his own expense and with
the consent of the owners of the road. Durability was one of the
qualities to be attained. He wanted to know whether his pavement
would stand and whether it would resist decay. Its character for
durability could not be ascertained without its being subjected to
use for a considerable time. He subjected it to such use in good
faith for the simple purpose of ascertaining whether it was what he
claimed it to be. Did he do anything more than the inventor of the
supposed machine might do in testing his invention? The public had
the incidental use of the pavement, it is true, but was the
invention in public use within the meaning of the statute? We think
not. The proprietors of the road alone used the invention, and used
it at Nicholson's request, by way of experiment. The only way in
which they could use it was by allowing the public to pass over the
pavement.
Had the City of Boston, or other parties, used the invention by
laying down the pavement in other streets and places with
Nicholson's consent and allowance, then, indeed, the invention
itself would have been in public use within the meaning of the law;
but this was not the case. Nicholson did not sell it nor allow
others to use it or sell it. He did not let it go beyond his
control. He did nothing that indicated any intent to do so. He kept
it under his own eyes and never for a moment abandoned the intent
to obtain a patent for it.
In this connection it is proper to make another remark. It is
not a public knowledge of his invention that precludes the inventor
from obtaining a patent for it, but a public use or sale of it. In
England, formerly, as well as under our Patent Act of 1793, if an
inventor did not keep his invention secret, if a knowledge of it
became public before his application for a patent, he could not
obtain one. To be patentable, an invention must not have been known
or used before the application; but this has not been the law of
this country since the passage of the act of 1836, and it has been
very much qualified in England.
Page 97 U. S. 137
Lewis v. Marling, 10 B. & C. 22. Therefore, if it
were true that during the whole period in which the pavement was
used, the public knew how it was constructed, it would make no
difference in the result.
It is sometimes said that an inventor acquires an undue
advantage over the public by delaying to take out a patent,
inasmuch as he thereby preserves the monopoly to himself for a
longer period than is allowed by the policy of the law; but this
cannot be said with justice when the delay is occasioned by a
bona fide effort to bring his invention to perfection or
to ascertain whether it will answer the purpose intended. His
monopoly only continues for the allotted period, in any event, and
it is the interest of the public as well as himself that the
invention should be perfect and properly tested before a patent is
granted for it. Any attempt to use it for a profit, and not by way
of experiment, for a longer period than two years before the
application would deprive the inventor of his right to a
patent.
The next question for consideration is whether the defendants
have infringed the patent of Nicholson. On this question we
entertain no doubt. The pavement put down by the defendants in the
City of Elizabeth differs in nothing from that described by
Nicholson in his patent except in the form of the strips placed
between the rows of blocks and the nicks or grooves made in the
blocks to fit them. In Nicholson's description, they are simply
strips of board standing endwise on the foundation. The patent
describes the strips as
"so arranged as to form spaces of about one inch in thickness
between the rows of principal blocks. The auxiliary strip may be
about half the height of the principal block, but it must not be
permitted to fill up the grooves permanently and entirely when the
pavement is completed, or to perform any part of the pavement."
The strips used by the defendants are substantially the same as
here described, and perform the same office. The only difference in
their construction and application between the blocks is that they
are beveled by being made wider at the top than at the bottom --
the extra width of the top part being let into a notch or groove in
the blocks. If they perform the additional office of partially
sustaining the
Page 97 U. S. 138
pressure of the blocks and locking them together, they do not
any the less perform the office assigned to them in Nicholson's
pavement. Their peculiar form and application may constitute an
improvement on his pavement, but it includes his.
It is objected that the blocks of the Elizabeth pavement have
not parallel sides, as prescribed in Nicholson's patent, by reason
of the notch or groove in the side into which the strips are
fitted, but this notch or groove does not take from the blocks
their general conformity to the requisition of the patent. They are
parallel sided blocks, with a groove made in the lower part to
receive the edges of the strips. The parallel sided blocks
described in Nicholson's patent were probably intended to
distinguish them from such blocks as those described in Stead's
patent, which were hexagonal and triangular in form, or those in
Wood's patent, which were of a pyramidal shape, the opposite sides
being at an angle with each other. As contradistinguished from
these, both the Nicholson blocks and those used by the appellants
are properly denominated blocks with parallel sides.
The next subject for consideration is the form and principles of
the decree rendered by the court below. The bill prayed a decree
for damages and profits, but, as it was filed before the passage of
the Act of July 8, 1870, which first authorized courts of equity to
allow damages in addition to profits, the court below correctly
held that a decree for profits alone could be rendered. It is
unnecessary here to enter into the general question of profits
recoverable in equity by a patentee. The subject, as a whole, is
surrounded with many difficulties which the courts have not yet
succeeded in overcoming. But one thing may be affirmed with
reasonable confidence -- that if an infringer of a patent has
realized no profit from the use of the invention, he cannot be
called upon to respond for profits; the patentee, in such case, is
left to his remedy for damages. It is also clear that a patentee is
entitled to recover the profits that have been actually realized
from the use of his invention, although, from other causes, the
general business of the defendant, in which the invention is
employed, may not have resulted in profits -- as where it is shown
that the use of his invention produced a definite saving in the
process of a manufacture.
Mowry v.
Whitney,
Page 97 U. S. 139
14 Wall. 434;
Cawood Patent, 94 U. S.
695. On the contrary, though the defendant's general
business be ever so profitable, if the use of the invention has not
contributed to the profits, none can be recovered. The same result
would seem to follow where it is impossible to show the profitable
effect of using the invention upon the business results of the
party infringing. It may be added that where no profits are shown
to have accrued, a court of equity cannot give a decree for profits
by way of damages or as a punishment for the infringement.
Livingston v.
Woodworth, 15 How. 559. But when the entire profit
of a business or undertaking results from the use of the invention,
the patentee will be entitled to recover the entire profits if he
elects that remedy. And in such a case, the defendant will not be
allowed to diminish the show of profits by putting in
unconscionable claims for personal services or other inequitable
deductions.
Rubber Company v.
Goodyear, 9 Wall. 788. These general propositions
will hardly admit of dispute, and they will furnish us some guide
in deciding the questions raised in this case.
Only the defendants have appealed, and the errors assigned by
them on this branch of the case are the following:
1st,
"The court erred in decreeing that the complainants do recover
of the defendants, the city of Elizabeth and George W. Tubbs, the
sums set forth in the decree, because the master did not find that
said defendants had made any profits, which failure to find was not
excepted to by complainants, and because no proof was offered by
complainants of any profits whatever made by said defendants."
2d,
"The court erred in finding that the profits received by the
defendants were the fruits of the use of the devices described and
claimed in the first and second claims of the Nicholson patent --
there being no proof of any advantage derived by the defendants
from such use of the Nicholson devices -- or was incident to the
use of the devices of the Brocklebank & Trainer patent. The
failure to specifically show such profits makes the recovery
nominal."
3d,
"The court erred in decreeing the whole amount of profits made
by the New Jersey Wood Paving Company in the construction of the
pavements referred to in the master's
Page 97 U. S. 140
report. Whereas if any profits ought to have been decreed, they
should have been confined to the amount of the license for a
royalty which the complainants had been accustomed to receive, and
were bound by the terms of their title to accept, from any party
constructing such pavement in New Jersey."
We will consider these assignments in order.
The first seems to be well taken. The party who made the profit
by the construction of the pavement in question was the New Jersey
Wood Paving Company. The City of Elizabeth made no profit at all.
It paid the same for putting down the pavement in question that it
was paying to the defendant in error for putting down the Nicholson
pavement proper -- namely, $4.50 per square yard. It made itself
liable to damages, undoubtedly, for using the patented pavement of
Nicholson, but damages are not sought, or at least are not
recoverable, in this suit. Profits only, as such, can be recovered
therein. The very first evidence which the appellees offered before
the master was the contracts made between the city and the other
defendants for the construction of the pavement, and these
contracts show the fact that the city was to pay the price named,
and that any benefit to be derived from the construction of the
pavement was to be enjoyed by the contractors.
It is insisted that the defendants, by answering jointly,
admitting that they were jointly cooperating in laying the
pavement, precluded themselves from making this defense. We do not
think so. That admission is not inconsistent with the actual facts
of the case, to-wit that this cooperation consisted of a contract
for having the pavement made, on one side, and a contract to make
it, on the other, and is by no means conclusive as to which party
realized profit from the transactions. The complainants themselves,
by their own evidence, showed that the contractors and not the city
realized it.
The appellant, Tubbs, is in the same predicament with the city.
Several of the contracts were made in his name, it is true, but
they were made in behalf of the New Jersey Wood Paving Company, for
whose use and benefit the contracts were made and completed. Tubbs
only received a salary for his superintendence.
Page 97 U. S. 141
The next assignment of error, based on the hypothesis that the
profits received by the defendants were not the fruits of the use
of Nicholson's invention, appears to us destitute of foundation.
This matter is so fully and ably presented in the opinion of the
circuit court as to require but little discussion from us. The
Nicholson pavement was a complete thing, consisting of a certain
combination of elements. The defendants used it as such -- the
whole of it. If they superadded the addition made to it by
Brocklebank & Trainer, they failed to show that such addition
contributed to the profits realized. The burden of proof was on
them to do this. The evidence, if it shows anything, tends to prove
that the addition diminished the profits instead of increasing
them, but it could not have had much influence either way, inasmuch
as the evidence shows that the profit made on this pavement was
about the same as that made on the pavement of Nicholson, without
the improvement. The appellants, however, obtained an allowance of
nearly $14,000 for the royalty paid by them for the use of the
Brocklebank & Trainer patent. This allowance went so far in
diminution of the profits recovered.
Equally without foundation is the position taken by the
appellants that other pavements, approaching in resemblance to that
of Nicholson, were open to the public, and that the specific
difference between those pavements and Nicholson's was small, and
that therefore the Nicholson patent was entitled to only a small
portion of the profits realized. Nicholson's pavement, as before
said, was a complete combination in itself, differing from every
other pavement. The parts were so correlated to each other from
bottom to top that it required them all, put together as he put
them, to make the complete whole and to produce the desired result.
The foundation impervious to moisture, the blocks arranged in rows,
the narrow strips between them for the purposes designated, the
filling over those strips, cemented together, as shown by the
patent -- all were required. Thus combined and arranged, they made
a new thing, like a new chemical compound. It was this thing, and
not another, that the people wanted and required. It was this that
the appellants used, and, by using, made their profit, and
prevented the appellee from making it. It is not the case
Page 97 U. S. 142
of a profit derived from the construction of an old pavement
together with a superadded profit derived from adding thereto an
improvement made by Nicholson, but of an entire profit derived from
the construction of his pavement as an entirety. A separation of
distinct profit derived from Brocklebank & Trainer's
improvement, if any such profit was made, might have been shown,
but, as before stated, the appellants failed to show that any such
distinct profit was realized.
We have looked over the various items claimed by the appellants
by way of reduction of profits, and disallowed by the master and by
the court below, and we are satisfied with the result which they
reached. The gross profits of the work over actual expenses for
material and labor were conceded to be $123,610.78. The total
deductions claimed before the master amounted to $139,875.63, which
would have been considerably more than sufficient to absorb the
whole profits. The master and the court allowed deductions to the
amount of $48,618.62, which reduced the profits to $74,992.16, for
which amount the decree was rendered. The deductions overruled and
disallowed amounted to $91,257.85. Of these, $31,111.92 was a
profit of twenty percent, which the appellants claimed they had a
right to add to the actual cost of lumber and other materials and
labor. It is only necessary to state the claim to show its
preposterousness. Other items were one of $7,000 for salaries, and
another of $3,000 for rent, for a period of time that occurred
after the work was completed. Another item was one of $2,675.09 for
the cost of a dock which the parties built on their own land, and
another of $25,000, paid for an interest in the Brocklebank &
Trainer patent. As the appellants still hold these properties, we
cannot well conceive what the purchase of them has to do in this
account. They also claim $15,241.33 for that amount abated from the
assessments of some of their stockholders who owned lands along the
streets paved. As this was a gratuity which they made to
themselves, they cannot claim a deduction for it here. The last
item was $6,572.75, claimed to have been profits made upon other
work, which were allowed to be included in these contracts. As this
is not explained in any satisfactory way, we think the master did
right in rejecting it.
Page 97 U. S. 143
We are entirely satisfied with the disposition made of these
various items and with the correctness of the decree so far as the
statement of the account is concerned.
But the appellants assign a third error. They insist that the
appellee, as assignor of the Nicholson patent for the State of New
Jersey (which was the ground of its title), was entitled to recover
only thirty-one cents per square yard in any event -- being limited
to that charge for the use of the patent by the terms of the
assignment, sixteen cents of which was to be paid to the
proprietors and fifteen to be retained by the appellee.
This matter is quite satisfactorily disposed of in the opinion
of the court below. The stipulation was between third parties, and
the appellants have no concern in it. It only applied by its terms
to cases where, by reason of the decisions of the courts or
otherwise, it should be found impracticable for the appellees to
obtain contracts for laying the pavement in any town or city or
where the work of constructing pavements should be required by law
to be let under public lettings, open to general competition. The
object was to secure as extensive a use of the pavement as
possible, as thereby the emoluments of the proprietors would be
increased. But the assignment gave to the appellee the exclusive
right in the patent for the State of New Jersey. It did not
prohibit the appellee from constructing the pavements itself, if it
could obtain contracts for doing so, and making thereby any profit
it could. There was no obstacle to its doing this in the City of
Elizabeth. On the contrary, it did obtain from the city large
contracts, and would have obtained more if the appellants had not
interfered. There is nothing in this state of things which entitles
the latter, after making large profits from the use of the
invention, to refuse to respond therefor. It is not for them to say
that the hands of the appellee are tied by its contract with its
grantor. This would be to take advantage of their own wrong.
Whatever bearing the stipulation in the assignment may have on the
measure of damages in an action at law, it affords no defense to
the appellants when called upon to account for the profits which
they have wrongfully made by pirating the invention.
We think there is no error in the decree of the circuit court
except in making the City of Elizabeth and George W. Tubbs
Page 97 U. S. 144
accountable for the profits. As to them, a decree for injunction
only to prevent them from constructing the pavement during the term
of the patent should have been rendered, which, of course, cannot
now be made. As to the New Jersey Wood Paving Company, the decree
was in all respects correct. A decree for costs in the court below
should be awarded against all the defendants.
The decree of the circuit court therefore must be reversed with
costs, and the cause remanded to said court with instructions to
enter a decree in conformity with this opinion, and it is
So ordered.