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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
HOLLISTER v. BENEDICT & BURNHAM MFG. CO., 113 U.S. 59 (1885)
113 U.S. 59
HOLLISTER, Collector of Internal Revenue,
v.
BENEDICT & BURNHAM MANUF'G Co.1
January 5, 1885
[113 U.S. 59, 60]
Asst. Atty. Gen. Maury, for appellant.
S. W. Kellogg and John S. Beach, for appellees.
MATTHEWS, J.
This is a bill in equity to enjoin the alleged infringement of
letters patent No. 93,391, issued to Edward A. Locke for certain
improvements in identifying revenue marks or labels, dated August 3,
1869, the appellees being assignees of the patentee,
[113 U.S. 59, 61]
and the appellant, the collector of internal revenue for the
Second collection district of Connecticut.
The specification and claims, with the accompanying drawings, are
as follows:
'This invention is designed more especially for use in sealing
liquor casks with identifying marks or labels for revenue purposes,
and in such a manner that, while truly designating the contents of
the cask, or giving such other indication as may be demanded, they
cannot be fraudulently removed. Fig. 1 represents a printed paper
revenue stamp, the circular portion at the right hand being the
stamp proper, which is applied to the cask or box, and the portion
at the left hand being the 'stub,' or that portion retained by the
government official.
[113 U.S. 59, 62] Fig. 2 represents a separate strip,
which is shown in Fig. 1 as attached at its left end to the stub of
the paper stamp proper, in such manner that its coupons may be
readily cut off and permanently affixed to the stamp proper when the
latter is secured to the cask. Fig. 3 represents a metallic piece or
strip, shown as detached, and before being applied to the stamp. The
main body of the sheet of paper being printed substantially as
shown, so as to designate by a letter of the alphabet, or otherwise,
the appropriate series, and with blanks for the particular number of
each series, and also with a number indicating numbers of gallons,
etc., in tens, has also a series of numbers, from one to nine,
inclusive, any one of which may be punched out by the proper
official, in accordance with the actual number of gallons contained
in the vessel. Thus, if 126 be the proper number of gallons, and 120
be the whole number printed upon the particular stamp, the officer,
in order to indicate 126, would punch through the digital number 6,
both upon the circular stamp and upon its 'stub' or counter-check.
'The piece shown in Fig. 3, I prefer to make of thin metal,
because more readily embossed or impressed with permanent or
ineffaceable characters, and because less destructible in handling
and transmission, after it shall have been torn away from the stamp.
This piece (also shown in part in Fig. 1) may be conveniently made
of oblong, or any appropriate form, its conditions being merely, so
far as concerns its shape, that it be of sufficient size to extend
beyond the opening made in the paper for the exposure of the letters
and figures made on it, and be capable of being retained in its
place between the paper and another backing-piece of paper, the two
pieces of paper being gummed together for this purpose. This
backing-piece I prepare with dried gum on its outer face, that the
stamp may be always ready by merely moistening the gum for instant
application to the cask. The strip shown in Fig. 2, I secure in part
to the left side of the paper by gumming its remaining portion, upon
which are coupons for the units, being dry-gummed on its under side,
so that, when the proper number of gallons has been* deter-
[113 U.S. 59, 63]
mined, the officer, upon cutting off the coupon at the figure
designating the unit or digital number required, may, by moistening
it, instantly, and without cutting or injuring the stamp, apply it
to the stamp, while the stub or remaining portion of the slip will
correspondingly indicate thereon just what has been so detached and
applied to the stamp. Thus, to indicate 126 gallons, 120 being the
whole number of the stamp, the coupon slip is cut off between the
numbers 6 and 7, and the piece so cut off is moistened on the back
and permanently attached to the face of the stamp, the 6 being the
significant figure of the coupon.
'The mode of applying a stamp so made to a cask may be, by way of
greater protection against liability to damage or accident, as shown
and described in m patent No. 58,847; that is, by boring a shallow
depression in the wood of the cask or case, and after affixing the
stamp by its gum to the bottom of this depression, then placing over
it a ring having down- turned edges, and, by pressing the same,
forcing its outer edge into the wood. Or the wood may have an
annular groove cut therein to receive the edge of the ring when so
forced home. Instead of making the removable piece out of metal, or
of making it in a piece separate from the stamp, it may be made of
the same piece of paper of which the stamp is composed by simply
having its outline perforated after the manner of postage stamps,
but ungummed at its back, so as readily to be torn away and detached
from the stamp. Although I have shown and described a lining-paper,
between which and the stamp or surface-paper the metal slip is held,
yet I may dispense with such lining and employ a thicker paper for
the stamp, the metal strip in such case, if preferred, being
confined or held to it by having its ends pass through slits made in
the paper for such purpose. Or the metal piece may have points or
projections at its ends or corners, or elsewhere, which may be
forced or passed through the paper and clinched on the under side.
For the purpose of readily separating the circular stamp from the
sheet, I perforate it about its periphery with any
[113 U.S. 59, 64]
suitable slits, cuts, or openings adapted to the thickness or
texture of the paper. I also prefer to have the stamps prepared with
blanks and dotted lines, on which the collector, gauger, and
store-keeper may place their signatures, as shown in Fig. 1.
'It is to be understood that the metallic or other slip, the stub
or check part of the stamp paper, and also the stub of the coupon
piece, are all to be consecutively numbered alike for each
alphabetical series, the capital letter, A, in the drawings
indicating the alphabetical series, and the number immediately to
the right thereof indicating a number in the consecutive numbers of
such series. For convenience I prefer to have the stamps, after
being printed, bound up in book form, after the manner of merchants'
or bankers' check-books, so that each stamp, as cut out, shall leave
in the book its corresponding marginal piece or stub, having thereon
a record of letters, figures, marks, etc., according with those upon
such stamps.
'I claim (1) a stamp, the body of which is made of paper or other
suitable material, and having a removable slit of metal or other
material, displaying thereon a serial number or other specific
indentifying mark corresponding with a similar mark upon the stub,
and so attached that the removal of such slip must mutilate or
destroy the stamp. (2) In a paper revenue stamp for indicating the
contents of a cask, and having thereon a number designing the number
of gallons or other measure, providing the stamp, and also its stub
or check-piece, with corresponding digital numbers, to be punched
out to indicate the units, substantially as described. (3) In
combination with a paper stamp having a check-piece or stub, from
which it is detached when applied for use, a coupon slip, whose
coupons are to be secured to the face of the stamp, as and for the
purpose described.'
The following is a copy of the face of the tax-paid internal
revenue stamp used by the appellant, and claimed to be an infringement
of the patent: [113 U.S.
59, 65]
As described by the complainant's witnesses, this stamp 'is
composed of a single thickness of paper, on the face of which the
number and registering marks are conveniently placed. On the back of
this stamp is a piece of paper somewhat wider
[113 U.S. 59, 66]
than the surface, on which the number and registering marks are
printed. The two edges of this back-piece are caused to adhere to the
back of the stamp, one above and the other below that portion of the
surface which indicates the number, contents, etc. The back of the
stamp, between the two edges of this strip or back-piece, is free and
loose. The bject of this is that when the back of the stamp is coated
with adhesive material and attached to the barrel, that portion of the
surface of the stamp which is covered by the strip or back-piece will
not adhere to the barrel; hence, after the stamp is secured to the
barrel, that portion of the stamp on which are the registering marks
may be removed, and preserve the marks and figures thereon, the
removal of that part defacing the stamp as well as preserving the
record, and this can be done because that portion of the stamp which
is removed is prevented from adhering to the barrel. To remove this
portion it is only necessary to separate that portion from the body at
its two edges.' This is marked in the record as 'Complainant's Exhibit
Hollister Revenue Stamp.' The present controversy relates to the first
claim of the Locke patent, in respect to which alone the decree
appealed from established an infringement. It is as follows: 'A stamp,
the body of which is made of paper or other material, and having a
removable slip of metal or other material, displaying thereon a serial
number or other specific identifying mark corresponding with a similar
mark upon the stub, and so attached that the removal of such slip must
mutilate or destroy the stamp.' One of the defenses relied on by the
appellant is thus stated in the answer, and, in matter of fact, is by
stipulation admitted to be true: 'First. That any and all acts
complained of in said bill by the said petitioner, as done by the
respondent, were done and performed by him in the discharge of his
duties as collector of internal revenue for the United States for a
designated collection district of the state of Connecticut, and by
direction of the commissioner of internal revenue, an officer of the
treasury department of the United States; that any revenue stamps by
[113 U.S. 59, 67]
him used have been furnished by the bureau of internal revenue,
of which said commissioner is the official head, for use in the
discharge of said duties as collector, and the same have been used
solely as a means of collecting the taxes due to the United States,
which said taxes have been imposed by the laws of the United States,
and the manner of said collection, as followed by said collector,
regulated and authorized by such laws; that said respondent has acted
as such collector by virtue of legal appointments thereto by the
president of the United States, duly confirmed by the senate of the
United States, for and during all the times mentioned in said bill of
complaint.'
It was authoritatively declared in James v. Campbell,
104 U.S. 356 , that the right of the patentee, under letters
patent for an invention granted by the United States, was exclusive of
the government of the United States as well as of all others, and
stood on the footing of all other property, the right to which was
secured, as against the government, by the constitutional guaranty
which prohibits the taking of private property for public use without
compensation; but doubts were expressed whether a suit could be
sustained, such as the present, against public officers, or whether a
suit upon an implied promise of indemnity might not be prosecuted
against the United States by name in the court of claims. If the right
of the patentee was acknowledged, and without his consent an officer
of the government, acting under legislative authority, made use of the
invention in the discharge of his official duties, it would seem to be
a clear case of the exercise of the right of eminent domain, upon
which the law would imply a promise of compensation, an action on
which would lie within the jurisdiction of the court of claims, such
as was entertained and sanctioned in the case of U. S. v. Great Falls
Manuf'g Co., ante, 306, decided at the present term. And it may be
that, even if the exclusive right of the patentee were contested, such
an action might be brought in that court involving all questions
relating to the validity of the patent; but as we have concluded to
dispose of the present ap eal upon other grounds, it becomes
unnecessary to decide the question arising upon this defense. It is
referred to only for the purpose of excluding any infer-
[113 U.S. 59, 68]
ence that might be drawn from our passing it over without
notice.
The course of business in the collection of the revenue upon
distilled spirits, so far as the use of these stamps is involved, is
explained by Mr. Chapman, a witness for the defendant below, who had
been chief of the stamp division in the internal revenue office. He
says:
'After spirits have been produced, they are drawn from the
cistern into the barrels, and there is attached to each barrel a
stamp called a warehouse stamp, together with certain marks and
brands put on simultaneously with the stamp; this stamp is an oblong
piece of paper properly engraved, with blanks in which are inserted
the numbers of the package, the number of wine and proof gallons
contained therein, name of the distiller, location of the
distillery, and are signed by the storekeeper and gauger on duty at
the distillery. This stamp is merely used as a check, and does not
represent a tax; the stamp consists of but one piece of paper about
three by two inches, and is attached by paste or other adhesive
material, and by tacks at the corner and center, by the gauger on
duty at the distillery. This stamp (warehouse) has been in use from
1868 to the present time, and no change has been made in the
construction of the same, the only changes being in the quality and
kind of paper used and the designs of the engraving.
'The package is then removed to the bonded warehouse of the
distillery, where it remains until the distiller files with the
collector of the district a paper, called an entry for withdrawal;
this paper is accompanied by the amount of the tax upon the spirits
contained in the package; the collector thereupon fills out, signs,
and forwards to the gauger the tax-paid stamp, which is a piece of
paper nearly square, upon the face of which is engraved the body of
the stamp, together with nine coupons, of which stamp and coupons,
with the stub which remains in the books from which the stamp is
cut, complainant's Exhibit Hollister Revenue Stamp is a copy. From
1868 until about 1871, this stamp, which has always been called the
tax-paid stamp, was constructed of two pieces of paper; before the
stamp was printed, the paper of which the
[113 U.S. 59, 69]
body of the stamp was composed was perforated with a round
aperture, about one and a half inches in diameter; to the back of
the paper was then attached, by paste or mucilage, a piece of tissue
paper, completely covering said aperture; the stamp was then
printed, the engraving covering both the body of the paper and so
much of the tissue paper as appears through the aperture. From about
1871 to 1875 the stamp was composed of but one piece of paper, the
use of the tissue paper and the aperture having been abandoned. In
August, 1871, there was added to the tax-paid stamp a piece of
paper, which was pasted by its edges upon the back thereof, as shown
in complainant's Exhibit Hollister Revenue Stamp. Stamps of the
latter character have been in use from August, 1875, to this date.
'On receipt of the tax-paid stamps by the gauger, he proceeds to
affix them to the head of the barrel, together with certain marks
and brands; he, together with the storekeeper, having first signed
the same at the places indicated in complainant's Exhibit Hollister
Revenue Stamp. The gauger puts this stamp on the barrel by means of
some adhesive material and tacks; he then cancels it by the use of a
stencil-plate, imprinting across the face of the stamp and extending
over each side upon the head of the barrel waved lines; he also
imprints upon the head with a stencil- plate his name and official
designation. The whole surface of the stamp is then varnished with a
transparent varnish; no varnish can be used which is oily enough to
affect the paste. The package is then removed from the warehouse and
passes into the custody of the distiller or owner. If t e owner
desires to purify the contents of the package, it is then taken to
the establishment of a duly authorized rectifier of distilled
spirits. The rectifier then notifies the collector of the district
that he desires to dump, for rectification, the contents of certain
specified packages, whereupon the collector directs a gauger to
proceed to the rectifying establishment and gauge the specified
packages. When the packages are gauged, the gauger is required by
regulations to cut from the tax-paid stamp a designated portion
thereof, and transmit the same to the collector, with a report of
his operations. The packages are then dumped*
[113 U.S. 59, 70]
into the tubs of the rectifier, and the identity of their
contents lost . ... The portion of the tax-paid stamp detached or
cut and forwarded by the gauger, as heretofore described, includes
the serial number of the stamp, the date on which the tax was paid,
and the number of proof gallons; the number of the cask, the
location of the warehouse, and the person or firm to whom delivered,
and the signature of the collector; the part so cut out is over the
paper back.'
The employment of the paper backing in the stamp used by the
appellant, whereby the part to be cut out is prevented from adhering
to the head of the barrel, and the arrangement of a part of the stamp
so as to indentify the package with that described in the stub, the
removal of which destroys the stamp so that it cannot be used again,
constitutes the alleged infringement of the first claim of the Locke
patent, which covers every stamp within that description.
The counsel for the appellee describes 'the Locke stamp as a
combination of three parts: (1) a part which is designed to become a
stub when the stamp proper is separated therefrom, and displays a
serial number ; (2) a constituent part of the stamp proper which is
designed for permanent attachment to the barrel; (3) a constituent
part of the stamp proper displaying the same identifying serial number
as the stub, which part, after the stamp proper has been affixed to
the barrel, bears such relation to the permanent part that it can be
so removed therefrom as to retain its own integrity, but mutilates and
thereby cancels the stamp by its removal.' In this combination it will
not be questioned that the first and second elements were well known,
and that the third, so far as its contents are identical with those on
the stub, is not new. The question turns on that feature of the third
element where, by a removable part of the stamp proper, the contents
of which indentify the stamp with the stub after the stamp has been
attached, can be so removed as to retain its own integrity, but
mutilates and thereby cancels the stamp by its removal. This is what
we ascertain to be the precise idea embodied in
[113 U.S. 59, 71]
the invention described and claimed in the patent, and which,
although we find to be new in the sense that it had not been
anticipated by any previous invention, of which it could therefore be
declared to be an infringement, yet is not such an improvement as is
entitled to be regarded in the sense of the patent laws as an
invention.
In reaching this conclusion, we have allowed its due weight to the
presumption in favor of the validity of the patent arising from the
action of the patent-office in granting it; and we have not been
unmindful of the fact, abundantly proven, and indeed not denied, that
the adoption of the present tax-paid stamp, in lieu of that previously
in use by the internal revenue bureau, has proven its superior utility
in the prevention of frauds upon the revenue. The testimony on that
point of the commissioner of internal revenue from his official
reports is quite conclusive. In his report for 1875, he mentions the
adoption of 'new regulations in regard to the use of tax-paid stamps,
by which a portion of the stamp is cut out at the time of dumping and
returned with the gauger's report,' and says: 'This effectually
destroys the stamp and prevents its reuse, while, at the same time, a
sufficient mount of the engraving is shown upon the slip to determine
whether the stamp is genuine;' and, in 1876, that official reported
that 'the plan of requiring the return of a portion of the tax- paid
stamps, whenever a package to which it is attached is dumped for
rectification, has been found to be such a valuable prevention of
fraud that it has been extended to include all stamps for rectified
spirits and wholesale liquor dealers' stamps. These three varieties of
stamps for distilled spirits are now prepared at a trifling additional
cost, with a paper back affixed to each in such a way that the portion
of the stamp containing all the important data can be cut therefrom
and filed with the commissioner or collector, thus furnishing
conclusive evidence of the destruction of the stamp, (rendering its
reuse impossible,) and furnishing also evidence as to the contents of
the package bearing the stamp. It is believed that this system affords
the government a very effectual protection against the perpetration of
frauds [113 U.S. 59, 72]
in connection with the collection of the tax on distilled
spirits.'
Such an increased utility, beyond what had been attained by devices
previously in use, in cases of doubt, is usually regarded as
determining the question of invention. But in the present case we are
not able to give it such effect. No change, it will be observed, was
made in the character of the stamp, so far as the relation between the
stamp proper and the stub is concerned, nor in the identifying marks
which constituted the written and printed matter upon both; and the
expedient of using a paper backing which prevented the adhesion to the
package of the part intended to be detached and removed, it is
manifest would be adopted by any skilled person having that end in
view. The idea of detaching that portion of the stamp, with the double
effect of destroying the stamp by mutilation and preserving the
evidence of the identity of the package on which it had been first
placed in use, which is all that remains to constitute the invention,
seems to us not to spring from that intuitive faculty of the mind put
forth in the search for new results or new methods, creating what had
not before existed, or bringing to light what lay hidden from vision;
but, on the other hand, to be the suggestion of that common experience
which arose spontaneously, and by a necessity of human reasoning, in
the minds of those who had become acquainted with the circumstances
with which they had to deal. Cutting out a portion of the stamp, as a
means of defacing and mutilating it so as to prevent a second use, was
matter of common knowledge and practice before the date of this
patent; and cutting out a particular portion on which the identifying
marks had been previously written or printed was simply cutting a stub
from the stamp instead of cutting the stamp from the stub, as before.
So that when the frequency and magnitude of the frauds upon the
revenue, committed by the removal of tax-paid stamps from packages on
which they had been originally placed by the officer to others
surreptitiously substituted for them, or by emptying the packages of
their original contents and fraudulently refilling them with spirits
on which no tax* [113
U.S. 59, 73] had been paid, attracted the general
attention of the revenue department, the answer to the problem of
prevention was found by immediate inference from the existing
regulations, in the adoption of the expedient now in question. As soon
as the mischief became apparent, and the remedy was seriously and
systematically studied by those competent to deal with the subject,
the present regulation was promptly suggested and adopted; just as a
skilled mechanic, witnessing the performance of a machine, inadequate
by reason of some defect, to accomplish the object for which it had
been designed, by the application of his common knowledge and
experience perceives the reason of the failure and supplies what is
obviously wanting. It is but the display of the expected skill of the
calling, and invo ves only the exercise of the ordinary faculties of
reasoning upon the materials supplied by a special knowledge, and the
facility of manipulation which results from its habitual and
intelligent practice; and is in no sense the creative work of that
inventive faculty which it is the purpose of the constitution and the
patent laws to encourage and reward. On this ground the decree of the
circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to
enter a decree dismissing the bill; and it is so ordered.
Footnotes
[
Footnote 1 ] S. C. 4 Fed. Rep. 83.
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