MUNSON v. CITY OF NEW YORK.

124 U.S. 601

8 S.Ct. 622

31 L.Ed. 586

MUNSON
v.
CITY OF NEW YORK.1 (Cross-Appeals.)

February 13, 1888.

[Statement of Case from pages 601-604 intentionally omitted]

[Royal S. Crane, for Munson.

Fredk. H. Betts and J. E. Hindon Hyde, for City of New York.

Mr. Justice GRAY, after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.

1

What the plaintiff, in different parts of his specification, calls his 'improvement,' his 'system,' and his 'invention,' consists in providing one or more blank books, resembling common scrap-books, of which each page will hold a bond and its coupons, and has a heading describing the bond, and all the pages are numbered and ruled into spaces, in which the bonds and the coupons, on being presented and paid, may be pasted in the order of their numbers,—the bonds on the successive pages, and the coupons of each bond on the same page with it,—or, when any bond or coupon is paid without being surrendered, memoranda concerning it may be made. The claim is for the so preserving, filing, and verifying of the bonds and coupons, and for the book so constructed and used. If upon the face of the specification this could be considered as an 'art, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter,' within the meaning of the patent laws, (upon which we express no opinion,) it is quite clear that, in the state of previous knowledge upon the subject, there was no patentable novelty in the plaintiff's scheme; inasmuch as the only difference between it and the earlier scheme of Warren was that in Warren's books there was no place for the bonds, and the coupons were grouped according to their dates of payment, instead of being grouped together with the bonds to which they respectively belonged. The providing of spaces or the bonds, and the change in the order of arrangement of the coupons, cannot, upon the most liberal construction of the patent laws, be held to involve any invention.

2

Decree reversed, and case remanded to the circuit court, with directions to dismiss the bill; the original plaintiff to pay the costs in both courts.

1

Reversing 3 Fed. Rep. 338. See, also, 16 Fed. Rep. 560.

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