■553 ^ ^^A■^ ^9- 6.Si> Congress } SENATE / Document \ No. 200 THE PROPOSED PATENT LAW REVISION AN ARTICLE FRONT TIIK HARVARD LAW REVIEW. VOL. XXVI, NO. 2. RELA riNC; TO THE PROPOSED PATENT LAW REVISION— WHAT IT MEANS TO INVEN- rORS, MANUFACTURERS. DEALERS, AND THE PUBLIC Bv GILBERr II. MONTAGUE (Copyright, 1912, by rhe Harvard Law Review Association) PRESENTED BY MR. BRANDEGEE OCTOBER 1, 1913. — Ordered to be printed WASHINGTON D. OF D. Us ms vCS* ^. 5 v" THE PROPOSED PATENT LAW REVISION. Oil the ovo of tho a<]j()nrnnuMi( of Con^ross, on Aii<]:ust S, 1912, the ComiiiittcMi on Pat(»nts rcportcil hark to tho JIouso of lioprcsonta- tivos the Oldiicld revision and ((xhlication of tho patont statutes ^ with an amon(huont in tho naturo of a sul)stituto, and rocommondod that tliis suhstituti^ ho j)assod. Tho ooniniittoo's purposo, expressed by its chalrnian, who is also the autli(>r of tho hill, was to ''"^ive everyhody an opportunity to study the question, and pfivo the people of tho country tho opportunity to see what is j)rovi(h'(i for in tho hill, and ascertain what i^ tho scMitimont of tho country upon tho pro- posal;" - and then to press tho hill for |)a.ssajT:e in tho session hotrin- nin^r in I)<'conil)or, 1912. I)urin<^ tho >>prin amend tho patent laws. Tho opportunity for porxuis otlior tlum tho sj)onsors of tlu* pro- posed legislation to learn of these hearings an. l(»ss than half a doz<»n favore(l tho pro|)osals which have boon embodied in tho bill recommended.' In all o-s<»ntial-. tlu' provi>i.»n- which evoked tho eni|)hatic oppo- sition of tho ovorwhohninj; nnijority of mamifactiirors. inventors, and n»|>re";entativ(»-. of c')nunor. 1912. p ll.TW. * Kr; CoTnmitroo nn ralpnis. fuJd Cone., 2d .sess., Uoiiso of Hoprcsentaf JVC's. No. llt.l. .Vug. S. m-2(\ •). p. 1. ♦0«M >. 1912. p. i\xa. • '• ' •'-- - - 'siKh as If. Wani l-.-onanl. Dr. L. II. )' .iii.>. K. J. I'l unlit'. .-vtiiiiK'i owt-n Kilinniid.s, Hi)rac«' I'otiil. Frank I>. Dyor, Walter F. Rogprs, ftnd Willmni W I>fvk'o; Tnnnnfnrfnrers rrprt^smnni' <-«.ncorns such a.s Thomas \. FdLson, Inc., V. S. Mail ' ' ' ■• " .„.r Co.. Cj" ' • y Razor Co.. Columbia I'honoirrajih Co., Brown '^ ' o., R. H .V: Rn».. and the I.idporwood Mfi:. Co.: roprosont- i^' .ii,,iw ., '• "tors' <;iiild. the .\mrrir-an Institute of Chem- '*"'' '■-^ ■;, the Merchants' .Vssociation of .'^ew "^'ork Citv. - . lun'rs. the F'ennsylvania Retail Jewelers' ARBociatiuii. iho ( h.iiiiUT.N of toiiiimrcc of Kotlu-i>icr and of Cleveland, and the Patent Law Association of Washington, D. C. 4 THE PROPOSED PATENT LAW KEVISIOK. Antitrust Act, wherever patents are involved, to specific transac- tions which are not now covered by that act and which, if no patents were involved, would under the existing law, or even under the other provisions of the substitute bill, lie outside the prohibition of the Sherman Antitrust Act. These were not contemplated in the original Oldfield bill, were neither discussed nor suggested by anyone upon the hearings, and were not foreshadowed by any patent legislation previously introduced in either branch of Congress. In scheme, they somewhat resemble the proposed amendments to the Sherman Anti- trust Act introduced earlier in the session by Senator La FoUette and Representative Lenroot;^ except that their bilb avowedly applied to all articles of commerce, patented as well as unpatented, while the substitute Oldfield bill, by limiting its application exclu- sively to patented articles, discriminates grossly in favor of unpat- ented articles. The three main proposals of the bill are briefly these: Compulsory licenses are authorized by providing ^ that if any applicant shall establish in a Federal district court that a patent owner who has purchased a patented invention from the original inventor is withholding it ''with the result of preventing any other person from using the patented process" more than three years after the patent is issued, the court shall order the patent owner to grant to the applicant a license to use the invention upon such terms or royalty as the court deems just. The nonenforcement of license restrictions is secured by provid- ing ^ that the patent owner shall no longer be permitted to bring an action for infringement of the patent, when the purchaser, lessee, or licensee of the patented article has committed a breach of the contract of sale, lease, or license by the conditions of which he ob- tained the patented article. The extension of the Sherman Antitrust Act is effected by provid- ing ^ that any patent, used as part of any combination in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States or with foreign nations, or to monopolize or in any attempt to monopolize such trade, or used in any manner prohibited by this act, may be condemned in the manner provided by law for the forfeiture, seizure, and condemna- tion of property illegally imported; and also by providing^ that a violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act shall be conclusively pre- sumed from any one of a long list of the most common business transactions, regardless of any surrounding circumstances.^ 1 S. 4931, H. R. 15926. 2 Sec. 1. - 3 Sec. 2. 4 Sec. 4. 5 Sec. 5. 6 Thus, a violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act sliall be conclusively presumed: (a) When the vendor of any patented article attempts to restrict the price at which such article may be resold; (6) when the vendor of any patented article attempts to restrain a customer from buying or using an article obtained from somebody else, whether such attempt be made by agreement against such purchase, or by a condition of sale of the patented article sold, or by making in the price of the patented article any discrimination based upon whether the customer buys the article from somebody else; (c) when the vendor of anj^ pat- ented article, with a view to preventing competition with such article, acquires any other patent or license; (d) when the vendor of any patented article, with a view to restraining competition, makes in the price of the patented article any discrimination (other than the ordinary wholesale discount) based upon whether the customer buys from him goods of a particular quantity or aggregate price; (t ) when the vendor of any patented article attempts to restrain competition, either by refusing to supply somebody, or by consenting to supply somebody only upon terms or conditions less favorable than are accorded to anybody else; (/) when the vendor of any patented article attempts to restrain competition by supplying to somebody, in any particular territory, patented articles upon terms or conditions more favorable than are accorded to other customers; (g) when the vendor of any patented article attempts to restrain competition by making any arrangement under which he shall not sell such patented article to certain classes of persons, or to those doing business in certain territory; (h) when the person dealing in any patented article does business under any name other than his own or that of his firm or corporation; (i) when the vendor of any patented THE PROPOSED PATENT LAW REVISION. 5 Tho provocation for those radical innovations and sweeping rh anodes, acconhng to the report accompanyin<^ tlie bill/ was: First. Tho ovil.s iirisinq: from the vendor of a patontprl artirlo (ixiiic: the priro at which the arti( Ic inuhall he permilted. With this in view, it was propo.s4Ml to take away speciljcally the rii;hl recoijni/ed hy the lower Federal courts to lix under the patJMit law prices at which arii( les shall be sold at retail, and also to lake away the riifhl re of the commit t(M\ Before turning to this testimony, the fundamental rights of a patent owner un ler the laws of the United States may be briefly stated. Congre^^s has the p >wer under Article 1, .section s of ihe Constitu- tion, to 'prom«)t(» the progr(»ss of seiene(» and useful arts by securing for limited times to authors and inventors, the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveric^s." Pursuant to tins p.>wer ('ongress has provided in section 4884 of the ReWsed Statutes that a patent owner slndl have the "exclusive riL'ht to make. use. and vend the invention or discovery." As the piu}Useol(»gy of the statute indicate^, this exclusive right consists ()f three components, i. e.. the (exclusive right to make, the exclusive right to un(\ and the exclusive right to vend the patented article. artipl'^ altoiupf s to pn-vont compptitlon »«y supplying such article at a price at or t)olow tho cost of produc- tion aiul iitlon. , . r.. ... Tho liill makfs th.'s«»fnrthor provisions: Wlvm'vrn* ion of tho .Sh<^nnan Antitrust Act is stiown to control anv pat«'nt«w| nrtjrl.^ riMvsnnHM ifijctiin . prothiction. Krn<>ral con.sninpti«.n. or usi>. an«I'-n<. i.. imiu ii.-ly siiJ.stitiiU- anoth.T article thon'for of .-iiial utilitv,'* th<' . nwrn-r to coiitinn." to siijiply th<' pat.-nted nr(,..i. • ,,„i,l ....,,.. ,>tK. r .,(..,. ... ,; I 'ii»>i) paymt'nt of fithfr "a roasonatile J.,, amoiini of c<>: n i«a.vaM«> iicoording to any valid ^,„ • in n fivil jt lint n '1«'f"n'l!mt has violated the Sheruiiui .\ntitru.st .\rt 1.. •! shall const it uU;. a.H against such «l.«f..ndant. i''^ t^f ''VV '" ''*^°'" Qf — -• -- - -■ ,.;.-: ., ; c. 7). ^\ hi'niM'or a J, -lu-rman .\nmnist Act l)y tho use Qf luv; to havo Iw'on injured by such condiHt mav. wuJiin ilir.^- v.'ar> tii-n-Hflor. uit*r%.iif, hjkI .shall !«• u'«nUine from snoh injurv in just th • .sam.^ manner and oxlont as if ho had U'Kun an initi>d. anv jwrson or Stat«' thn-atoned with injury may at any time intervene as a party (soc. 10) Whenever it is allogf^l in an action I'V the Federal (JovemuK'nt under the Sherman Antitrust Act that a r • - • ' ' -i u.s«'d in anv manner hondnlM-fore prohibited, no department or ollicial of the United St;i- t to biiv anVthing from the defondant or its subsi'liaries until such alloKation "be found '<:. ''^ be iin'found»Hl." unless no substitute of equal utility at a reasonable price can bo found (SIK-. 11 ;. In aiiv suit arLsing out of the infrincoment of any patont or the bre^h of any contract whatsoi>ver it shall l>e a complete defense that " the plaintifl or the real party in interest at th<' time of the making of such contract, or of its aUegeach, or at tho time of the allegod infringement, at the time of the U'ginnini: of said suit was cngagohed by liiniself. was strictly in line \\'ith aU these authori- ties. Far from being a recent development, the rule in that case was simply an application of the principles established by the unbroken trend* of judicial (h'cisions al)oV(' mentioned. How iincliallenged tiiese j)rinciple> have been, until the Mirpii>in^' dissentin<; o})inion in the Mimeograph case, appears from the decisions of the Supreme Court in Cnited States r. Bell Telephone Co.' and Bement r. National Harrow Co." and the Paper Bag Patent case,"* in which, it is inter- esting to note, the author of this dissenting opinion participated and concurred. Notwithstanding tlie foreboe spelU tn)iil)le only for those people who, with knowledge of the conchtions on which alone the j)atent owner con-ents to part with hi^ })atente(l article, expre-sly agree to these conditions in order to obtain tlie article. anf the ])atent owner: or those people who. fullv knowing tiiat a user (»f a patented article ha> expressly agreed to the conditions on which alone the patent owner consented to part with it. thereupon deliberately instigate such n-. I'a.. I'.HX.). New Jersey Patent Co. v. Schaefer. ISQFe^l 171 (C C . E 1). Pa.. 1W»»K .New Jersov I'atent Co. r. Martin. 172 Fe>: Henry t. \. IJ. Dick Co.. 224 V S.,1 .«^31 (1912). » See authoriii..,, II., io<| in Tho Sherman .\nli-injM .\rt and the Patent Law. by ««•»« t«- 224 r. S.. 1. 4.' ^l.tl-'). other En^li>;h cases are colUvted in Henry r. -\. B. Dick Co.. '224 I . S., 1,39-4J (1912)» and in The Sherman Antitrust .\.t and the Patent Law, by Ciillicrt H. Montague, supra, i Henry r. A H. Dick Co.. 224 V. S., 1 (1912i. • Report, p. 2. ' 167 U.S., 224 (1897). • 186 r. S., 70(1902). •Continental Paper Ban Co. r. Eastern Paper Bag Co., 210 U. S., 405 (1908). •« Incandftst^nt Gas Light Co., Ltd., r. Cant«llo, 12 Pat. Cas., 262 (1895), approved and followt^d in National Phonograph Co. of Australia (Ltd.) v. Menck 11911], A. C. 336. 8 THE PROPOSED PATENT LAW REVISION. sand such suits were successfully prosecuted, the damages would be small in each and uncollectible in most and less than the expense of litigation in all. Meanwhile, the patent owner would practically be helpless before the instigator of this piracy. The evils which the House Committee on Patents declare to be their provocation for sweeping away all these patent rights were not established by the testimony taken before the committee. By numerous witnesses, who cited scores of examples, it was shown that the difficulties of merchandising are enormously increased in the instance of novelties. All patented articles are novelties at first, and most of them continue to be novelties to most of the public until the 17-year patent period expires. Considering the natural handicap thus imposed on the selling of patented articles, and the further fact that the patent owner must reap his reward before the expiration of the 17-year patent period, no aid which the existing law lends to the merchandising of patented articles can well be called unfair. In his evidence, Mr. Louis D. Brandeis says: The fixing of a price has possibly prevented one retail dealer from selling the article a little lower than the other, but the fixing of that price has tended not to suppress but to develop competition, because it has made it possible in the distribution of those goods to go to an expense and to open up another sphere of merchandising which would have been absolutely impossible without a fixed price. The whole world can be drawn into the field. Every dealer, every small stationer, every small druggist, every small hardware man, can be made a purveyor of that article by comprehensive advertis- ing. You have stimulated, through the fixed price, the little man as against the department store and as against the large unit which may otherwise monopolize that trade. * * "^ As you develop the article you are inciting invention, and what is more important than the invention, you are inciting the commercial development of the competing article.^ By the same token, license restrictions agreed to by owners when they obtain patented articles solely upon condition that they use thern only with supplies that are specially prepared for them, or in continuity with machines that are especially adapted to them, or in some particular manner requisite in order to accomplish the pur- poses for which they are intended, were declared by numerous wit- nesses to be both necessary and proper. Mr. H. Ward Leonard, a well-known inventor and an officer of the Inventors' Guild, made this explanation: It may be that the article is of such nature that in order that it shall work properly, it shall require very great care in selecting certain conditions of use, certain mate- rials to be used in connection with it. It certainly is a fact that in some instances a man's market for a good article would be completely destroyed if he could not insure himself in seeing that it was properly used after it left his hands. ^ The notion that such license restrictions might give patent owners the ^'practical monopoly of the market'' for unpatentable products 1 Hearing before the Committee on Patents, House of Representatives, on H. R. 23417 (hereinafter "Called "Hearing"), No. XVIII, p. 4. To the same effect see also the testimony of Fletcher B. Gibbs, representing the national catalogue committee of the National Association of Stationers and Manufac- turers, and of Frank L. D5'er, president of Thomas A. Edison (Inc.), and of Horace Pettit, Hearing, No. II; of R. E. Shanahan, general manager of Bissell Carpet Sweeper Co., Hearing, No. V; of Thomas W. Pelham, sales manager of Gillette Safety Razor Co., Hearing, No. VII; of M. Dorian, treasurer of Columbia Phonograph Co., and of G. A. Le Roy, representing the Western Clock Co., Hearing, No. VIII; of J. George Frederick, vice president of the Business Bourse, Hearing, No. IX; of J. A. Jochum, sales manager of Gem Cutlery Co., Hearing, No. XI; of Daniel Kops, Hearing, No. XIII; of Charles T. Johnson, president t)f Dover Mfg. Co., Hearing, No. XVII; of Pierrepont B. Noyes, president of Oneida Community, Hearing, No. XIX; of J. P. Archibald and John M. Roberts, representing the Pennsylvania Retail Jewelers' Asso- ciation, Hearing, No. XX; of William H. Ingersoll (manufacturer of "IngersoU watches") , Hearing, No. XXII; of Thomas A. Edison, Hearing, No. XXIII; and of George Eastman (Eastman Kodak Co.), Hearing, No. XXIV. « Hearing, No. Ill, p. 24. To the same effect see also the testimony of Frank L. Dyer, Hearing, No. II; Dr. L. H. Baekeland, Hearing, No. IV; Edwin J. Prindle, Hearing, No. X; Samuel Owen Edmonds, Hearing, No. XII, and Frederick P. Fish, Hearing, No. XXVI. THE PROPOSED PATENT LAW REVISION. 9 used with a patent (m1 device is disposed of by the fact that such a prac- tical rnorionoly, Uir from offendintj: the ])ublic policy, actually promotes tlie t^eueral welfare; because tlie })ateiit owners can attain it only by cheapeninoj the cost of manufacture of the patented article, and can contuuie it only so lonL^ as their invention is not superseded bv sub- sequent inventions stih furtlier cheapeninjj: the cost of manufacture.^ As the Supreme Court explained in the Mimeograph case: ^ The inurkpt for tho sale of .-^udi articles (i. e.. unpatented tJiipplies) to tlie users of his machined, e.. the patent owner's patented machine), which, by nuch a con- dition, he takes to himseu, was a market which lie alone created bv the making and Hcllinj^ of a new invention. Had he kept his invention to himself, iio ink could have been sold by others for u«e upon inachin»'s t-nibodyint,' that invention. By selling it Hubject t<) the restriction he took nothinfj from others and in no wise restricted tlieir Icjritimate market. ♦ ♦ ♦ The jmblic is always free to take or refuse the patented article on the terms imposed. If they be too onerous or not in keeping; with the benefit.-^, the patentiMl invention will not lind a market. The public, by per- mitting; the invention to go unu.'<'e the invention without compensation or restriction.' Thus are the first and second classes of evils relied upon by the commit t<'e proved unreal upon anaylsis. The third class of evils, by which the committee seeks to justify the substitute Oldfield bill, are "evils arising from <»\vners of patents suppressing the same or pr(>hi})iting their use in order to prevent competition with other patented or nn[)atl all. of liie valuable palenis lor the manu- factun^ of barbed wire, and lh<* ma«hine.s for s])idation and starvation conditions have been staved off in the United States during the past 20 years only by the the puhllr that jt shojild pet the latast improvement. I can not .s«e why the public should be asked to chan^' "" - - • ■ ■ , -■ ■ - V ' . , .V . .. . _ ._^^j ^Q Yie could have a basis on whk-l iduced an improved machine. Befori _ , :.ore injustice has been worked to the public by the alleged suppression of patents (or other reasons than those which were due to improve- ment"? " f HeaVinj:, XX III. p. :h ^ The dLstin(ti->n thus drawn by Mr. Edison between the willful sup- t:. if ter careful experimentation and trial, in favor of ' Miplish the same purpose more satisfactorily, must 1« ill . IV. J.I'll,, in,- ^.i.i.i.i Mi .airlV. ' Iri ' . J. I. Case Threshing Machine Co., 154 Fed., 365, 371 (1906). »( .' s, 19,2, p. 113;«. ' Report, p. ill. * Fleport, p. 9. » Joseph J. O'lirien, heiirniK, No. XXVU, p. 94 I 12 THE PROPOSED PATENT LAW REVISIOIT. progress of invention.^ The result of such a scheme of compulsory license, it was graphically shown before the committee, would be to diminish the inventor's market for his invention, to enable any strong competitor to crush its weak rivals, to impede every patent owner in developing and introducing his invention, to retard the patenting of inventions, and to discourage the large-scale invention and industrial experimentation on which civilization depends for solving the increasing problems of existence.^ In its zeal to insure the nonenforcement of license restrictions, the committee proposes by the substitute Oldfield bill to enforce solely against patent owners a Draconian code of business practice which is not and never has been imposed upon any other class of roperty owners. Litigation under the Sherman Antitrust Act turns requently, if not generally, upon close questions of law. By a salutary result of the existing law property which is not in transit does not become forfeited in the event that a combination in restraint of trade is found to exist. The substitute Oldfield bill, however, provides that under such circumstances all property in the form of patents involved in such litigation shall be forfeited, while all other forms of property shall remain unaffected. Under the pro- visions of the bill the vendor of any patented article becomes a criminal, if he attempts to secure a year's business as a condition of selling to a retailer; if he attempts to hold the retailer bo his agreement to buy his patented goods exclusively or to a certain extent; if he attempts to hold the retailer to his agreement to main- tain a standard price on the patented goods; if he licenses the use of a delicate patented machine on condition that it be used only with specially prepared supplies or in continuity with specially adapted machinery necessary to insure perfect operation; if he avails himself of the quality of his patented inventions to induce licensees to use his machines, either exclusively or in part, for all their needs; if he agrees with a retailer in a town to sell his patented goods to no one else in the same town or to sell to other retailers only on less favorable terms, in consideration of which the retailer shall push the sale of the goods; or if he sells his patented goods in any particular territory at a less price than he seQs elsewhere. Each of these transactions, which good morals and honorable business practice, to-day and from time immemorial, have always sanc- tioned, is made by the bill conclusive proof of the violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act. The fact that the transactions might reasonably be shown to have no tendency to restrain trade can not 1 "The period since 1891 has beon anything but one of impoverishment, and it is no uncertain guess which assigns a reason for this general prosperity. It has been due to two causes, acting together, and both of them must continue to act if we are destined to escape disaster. The first is production on a vast scale, carrying with it a corresponding increase of efliciency, and the second is improvement in productive method, the brilliant succession of mechanical inveation and other devices wliich, in every field of industry, have accomplished again and again what is called 'making two blades of grass grow "where one grew before.' * * * Technical improvement is highly indispensable. Without it, and with our increasing popula- tion, life on our planet would be unendtarable. Stop the succession of inventions that add to our powder over nature and you will liring labor soon to a starvation limit. Merely check the rapiditv of this tech- nical progress and you will cause grievous hardship."— John Bates Clark," professor of economics in Colum- bia University in the control of trusts, pp. 9-12 (1912). 2 See the testimony of Frank L. Dyer, president of Thomas A. Edison (Inc.), Hearing, No. II; of H. Ward Leonard, chairman of the legislative committee of the Inventors' Guild. Hearing, Nos. Ill and IV; of Dr. L. H. Baekeland, president of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers and a member of the Inventors' Guild, Hearing, No. IV; of Edwin J. Prindle, Hearing No. IX; of Samuel Owen Edmonds, Hearing, No. XII; of Livingston Gifford, Hearing, No. XIV; of Spencer Miller, chief engineer of the Lidgerwood Manfacturing Co., Hearing, No. XXIV; of Frederick P. Fish, Hearing, No. XXVI; of Walter F. Rogers, president of the Patent Law Association of Washington; and of William W. Dodge, E. W. Bradford, and others. Hearing, No. XXVII. THE PROPOSED PATENT LAW REVISION. 13 save the unluckv patent owner, for the bill expressly provides that "restraint shall Ix' conclusivoly deemed to have been or to be unrea- sonable and to be in violation of the provisions of said act'' ^ (i.e., the Sherman Antitrust Act) as to any party who performs any of these transactions. The penalty which the patent owner may suffer for doin^ anv of these thin Sec. 5. « Report, p. 21. * Report, pp. 21, 23, 24. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 030 016 957 ^ 6 957