Citation Numbers: 1 MacA. Pat. Cas. 521, 6 F. Cas. 538
Judges: Morsell, Orsell
Filed Date: 4/15/1857
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
In their amended specification, the applicants say : ‘ ‘ What we claim as our invention, and desire to secure.by letters-patent as a new product or composition of matter, is our artificial honey, composed of the within-enumei’ated ingredients' or their equivalents, combined with each other, substantially in the manner herein set forth.’ ’ In the description of the ingredients they say: ‘ ‘ Our artificial honey is composed of four pounds of sugar, one pint and a half of water, five grains of rosin or its equivalent antiseptic, two drams of butter (or other pure eatable oil), one and a half drams of cream of tartar, two drams gum arabic or gum Senegal, one and a quarter pounds of honey, eight drops of essence of peppermint, and one dram isinglass. These ingredients are combined with each other in the following manner, viz.: The sugar and water are incorporated with each other and raised to a boiling temperature; then the butter and rosin are melted together and thoroughly incorporated with the syrup formed by the union of the sugar and water; then boil the aforesaid mixture for the space of ten minutes or thereabouts; then add thereto the gum arabic and the isinglass in a mucilaginous state, and the cream of tartar, and boil the said increased mixture for the space of ten minutes or thereabouts; then add the honey to the mixture, and after boiling the same for the space of five minutes or thereabouts, remove from the fire, and when nearly cold, add the essence of peppermint and thoroughly incorporate it with the entire mass ; — -when the mixture will present the appearance of pure honey, and will have nearly the same flavor.”
There appears to have been several actions by the Office in relation to a decision upon the subject of this claim previous to the last and final decision of the Commissioner. The first appears
The Commissioner proceeds, and says: “The ground which the Office feds obliged to take is, that the factitious honey, although admitted to be a new composition of matter, so far as known to this Office, is not useful in the patentable sense of the term, but absolutely hurtful to the progress of the useful arts and to the community, and cannot be serviceable to any but the patentee in case he should obtain a patent; for even when the patent should expire, nobody would think of using, as a diet, the mixture of the drugs, &c., instead of pure honey,” &c. How, then, could there be any danger of deception, even if it could be supposed to be a deception, and not a useful article. The second is also in the form of a letter addressed to the same persons, dated the 13th June, 1855. And after referring them to a number of authorities on the subject of manufacturing syrups of various kinds, the Commissioner says : “So long as these facts exist, and are recorded in books, there is no patentable novelty involved in merely selecting materials that have not been before mingled with sugar or
For the purpose of a final action or decision, the subject was referred to two examiners — Mr. Foreman and Mr. Langdon — and they have made separate reports differing very essentially on the subject — the former sustaining the views of Doctor Gales, and which was accepted and affirmed by the Commissioner in rejecting the application of the appellant. This decision is dated the 6th of August, 1855. In his report he says that “the decision of the chief examiner, as contained in the Office letter of 13th of June, should be sustained, in which the composition is regarded as a syrupy mixture or an adulteration of honey. The composition of honey is well known, the elements having been separated by analysis, a knowledge of which is open to all. In reproducing the imitated article, the applicant uses, together with some real honey, various substances, which must be regarded as fully the equivalents of those composing the product of the bee. It is not claimed that any invention is used in determining or selecting his ingredients, nor any difficulty overcome in causing them to unite. If the applicant had used any substance in this composition having some property peculiarly fitted for it, and which he had been the first to discover, some merit might be recognized in the application ; but all the articles employed are really or substantially found in honey.”
At the foot of this report the Acting Commissioner says : “ The undersigned concurs in the above views, and affirms the action of the examiner rejecting the application.”
Mr. Langdon in his report says : ‘1 The directions of the Acting Commissioner are that the revision of the examiner’s action shall
From the decision of the Commissioner, as before said, the appeal has been taken; and the said Corbin and Martlett have filed five reasons of appeal. The first is founded on and in the words of the seventh section of the act of Congress of 1836, chapter 357. The second is because satisfactory references were not given, and arguments and assertions were used void of foundation and not justified by the science of chemistry nor by the practical knowledge of men acquainted with the peculiar art. Third. Because of inconsistencies in the three actions of the Office. Fourth. For error as to the utility of the invention and its liability to injure the health and well-being of society. Fifth is general, for error in concurring in the report of one of the examiners and not noticing the report of the one who was favorable to them.
This appears to be the state of the case from the original papers and decision of the Commissioner laid before me with the reasons of appeal. On the day and place appointed for the hearing of said appeal, the appellants appeared by their attorneys, and filed their argument in writing, and submitted said case.
The first reason substantially involves the consideration of all the material points in the case; that is, that part of the seventh section of the act of 1836 which points out and limits the power and duty of the Commissioner and defines the rights of the applicants to which I refer.
In the discussion of the objections, in order that they may be more clearly seen and distinctly understood, I shall separate what seems to be conceded from that which is contested.
The prerequisites of the statute, such as petition, specification, oath of the party, specimen,&c., may be considered as all regularly complied with. So, as a whole, the composition is admitted to be new, ánd that nothing known to the Office is analogous to or identical therewith. So, as to the proposed object of the invention, that it should be a substitute for the real honey. It is admitted th^t in thickness or consistency, in color, in taste, and in flavor it closely resembles the real article, so that persons may not be able to distinguish the spurious from the genuine article; that “the re
Now, as the real, genuine honey is unquestionably esteemed a very useful article of diet and trade, and there is such a perfect resemblance between the factitious and the real, and also as the artificial can be made and supplied at all times for one-half the price less than the real, it is not easily to be conceived why it should not be deemed a new and useful manufacture of trade, and for that reason a patentable article ; but, so far from that, the Commissioner makes it a ground of objection; and the reason assigned is that granting a patent for it might give it a sanction and facility .in imposing upon and deceiving the public by a factitious honey instead of the genuine article. This would seem to be a strange, unfounded fear, for in the specification, which would form a part of the description in the patent, the applicant has in the most solemn manner announced that their claim is for an invention of a factitious, not a real, honey, all the ingredients of which they have also set forth. In the latter part of the same report, want of consideration is stated as a further ground or reason, because it is alleged that after the expiration of the time for which the patent was granted nobody would think of using a diet or purchasing a drugged article of food — a mixture of the drugs, cream of tartar, rosin, &c. This seems to me to be at least a slight inconsistency; but I shall not rely on anything of that kind. The reply may be made as above stated, and also that the drugs used in the composition are of the most simple kind, and in very small proportions, without the least danger of a deleterious effect in the use of them in the combination. It is, ■therefore, improbable that there would be any such failure of consideration. It is further objected that it is a syrupy composition ; and I have been referred to a number of authorities to show the great variety of syrups as common, well-known things in constant use, and as being the same in principle with the invention of these applicants. It may be admitted that the simple syrup of sugar and water forms a part of the ingredients of this composition, but it by no means constitutes the principal part of the essential elements thereof. The invention claimed by the appellants as new and useful is their arranged, ascertained proportions of the
In this connection may also be considered the additional objections raised in the last report, which purports to sustain the report of the chief examiner, and the one which the Commissioner adopts as his final decision. The objection is because “ the composition of honey is well known, the elements having been separated by analysis, a knowledge of which is open to all; that the substances used by the applicant, together with some real honey, must be regarded as fully the equivalents of those composing the product of the bee, and therefore no invention.’ ’ I do not understand the Commissioner as stating that in the analysis of honey alluded to any fixed proportions have been discovered as in this invention; nor have I been able to discover from the authorities furnished to me in this cause any one that has afforded me that information; and it must be admitted, I think, that, as the nature of honey depends upon the different kinds of flowers from which the bee extracts its substance, none such can be shown; but however that may be — that it is a knowledge open to all — honey is not the product of the invention of any man, and the truths and principles or laws, if known, are those of natural science, and have an existence antecedent to and independent of the operations of man; and therefore such knowledge can be no sufficient objection, because not embraced within the provisions of the section of law alluded to, which was intended only to act upon the embodiment of them when applied in a practical sense, and which .with such clothing may become the subject of a patent, showing a useful purpose, and not having been before invented. The like objection, as in this case, might be raised to the imitation of iron, to a new application of steam, electricity, and the like instances, a number of which may be found mentioned in almost any book on patent law. It is, as before said, in the use of such principles, . embodied for a useful, practical purpose, that the patent is asked for in this case.
I will now state one or two adjudged cases on patent law applicable to the points I have been discussing, and which, I think, will be sufficient to put at rest all the objections which have been made under the head of composition of matter. Curtis, section 104, states the law to be: “With regard to this class of subjects,
In the case of Le Roy v. Tatham, decided by the Supreme Court of the United States, 14 Howard, 156, Judge McLean, in announcing the opinion of the court, says : ‘ ‘A principle in the abstract is a fundamental truth, an original cause, a motive. These cannot be patented, as no one can claim in either of them an exclusive right,’ ’ &c. In another part of the opinion, speaking on the same particular subject, he says : "In all such cases the processes used to extract, modify, and concentrate natural agencies constitute the invention. The elements of the power exist. The invention is not in discovering them, but in applying them to the useful objects. Whether the machinery used be novel, or consist of a new combination of parts known, the right of the inventor is secured against all who use the same mechanical power, or one that shall be substantially the same. ’ ’
In conclusion, I refer to the learned report of Mr. Langdon, one of the examiners appointed by the Commissioner, on the matter of this case. The views he takes of the nature and principles of the invention are very strong, and not to be refuted. I would desire to notice it particularly for the experimental fact which he states, the truth of which no one dare deny; it is, that the composition produces a cheaper and more healthy article of food. He says: ‘ ‘ That it is cheaper, is manifest. Of its effects upon the stomach, I do not pretend to be able to judge; but it is believed that the assertions of the applicants upon this point are not denied; and from some months’ use of such an article myself, I am inclined to credit the position.” Here, then, is knowledge derived from a practical source, and fully corroborates what I have said on this particular point.
These views have brought me to the conclusion that the decisions of the Commissioner is erroneous, and ought to be reversed.