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E W BLISS CO. v. U S(1918)

 

No. 15

Argued: Decided: December 9, 1918

[248 U.S. 37, 38]   Messrs. George W. Field and Arthur C. Fraser, both of New York City, for appellant.

Mr. G. Carroll Todd, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee.

[248 U.S. 37, 39]  

Mr. Justice McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appeal from a decree of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals ( United States v. E. W. Bliss Co., 224 Fed. 325, 139 C. C. A. 633) amending and affirming a decree of the District Court for the Eastern District of New York entered in a suit brought by the United States against appellant ( herein referred to as the Bliss Company) restraining the latter from exhibiting or communicating the construction and operation of a torpedo known as the Bliss-Leavitt torpedo.

The controversy turns upon the construction and application of certain clauses of the contracts between the Bliss Company and the United States and is not, we think, in broad compass. In support of its contention in the main the United States has the sanction of the two courts.

The development, construction and operation of the torpedo gave animation and attraction to the argument, but it is enough to say that its method of propulsion is the balanced turbine method, so called, that is, turbines revolving in opposite directions. The United States asserts that to this method of propulsion the excellence and efficacy of the torpedo is due and that it was the conception of the United States; that it was the result of much experimentation on the part of its engineers and those of the Bliss Company and the expenditure of substantial sums of money by the government, and that because of the superior speed, range and power of this new weapon, other nations have been eager to learn the secrets of its construction.

The Bliss Company denies these assertions, opposes them, besides, by the contentions that the balancing of rotary bodies analogous to turbines rotating in opposite directions was a matter of common knowledge long prior to any transactions with the United States and that the [248 U.S. 37, 40]   torpedoes constructed by it under its contract contained balanced turbines, so called, of its own design and property; or, to quote counsel:

    ‘The torpedo is the product of the assiduity and genius of the defendant’s officers and engineers, and not that of the government.’

And, further, that it purchased from Lieutenant Davison, with full knowledge of the United States, all of his rights to foreign patents, and to this patent, it is said, the United States assigns a special excellence. This is the issue in outline. The Bliss Company asserts the right to have other customers than the United States and to seek other markets, and not subject to restriction by the United States. The United States claims an exclusive service and even concealment from all others except as it may concede it. The resolution of the contentions is in the contract of the parties.

Those transactions date to 1905 and are exhibited in three contracts, one of November 22, 1905, one of June 12, 1912, and an intervening one dated July 16, 1909. In the 1905 contract there was a provision, which it is admitted was embodied in all subsequent contracts. Disputes arose as to the meaning of the provision, the rights and restraints under it, and the Bliss Company brought them to litigation by expressing its desire to negotiate with Messrs. Whitehead & Company for the right to manufacture the torpedo in foreign countries. The Bureau of Ordnance objected, and on May 9, 1913, the company addressed the Secretary of Navy as follows:

    ‘As a means to this end we notify you hereby that it is our intention to communicate the complete construction and operation of the existing type of Bliss-Leavitt torpedo, and to make a demonstration of the operation of said torpedo, to a representative of Messrs. Whitehead & Company on or immediately after June 1, 1913.’

To restrain the threatened action this suit was brought. The prayer of the bill covers the balanced turbine and [248 U.S. 37, 41]   certain other features, and it is manifest that whether it should be granted depends particularly upon a provision of the contract which prohibits the exhibition of the torpedo or its performance to any person whatsoever or to any other government, or its representatives, than that of the United States. That provision is that the Bliss Company ‘will not make use of any device the design for which is furnished to it’ by the United States ‘in any torpedo constructed or to be constructed for any person or persons, firms, corporations, or others, or for other governments than’ the United States and ‘will not exhibit such device or in any way describe it to or give any information in regard to it to any person … or to other governments, or their representatives’ or exhibit its performance ‘either in shop or in service tests.’ A violation of the contract incurs its cancellation and releases the United States from all claims or demands under it. It is, however, provided that no design shall be considered as coming within the provisions unless the United States communicates in writing to the Bliss Company that it (the United States) thinks it is embraced by the provision. It is disputed whether the condition of the pro vision [248 U.S. 37, 42]   was performed, but both the lower courts have found that it was, and we concur in their judgment. The condition of the provision, then, having been performed, we come to its meaning, the Bliss Company contending that the device must be of the invention of the United States, and the latter contending that it need only be ‘furnished’ by the United States.

The Bliss Company’s contention in its detail is somewhat difficult to state concisely. It rests as much in implication as in expression. It is said that the restrictive clause ‘applies only to a ‘device the design for which is furnished by the government” and ‘expressly and clearly excludes ideas, methods or principles.’ And it is further urged that–

    • ‘To furnish a design, it is necessary to furnish something concrete. A device is also something

[248 U.S. 37, 43]   

    concrete. One cannot accept an idea.’

To support these declarations legal and other definitions are adduced. One is selected from Armour Packing Co. v. United States, 209 U.S. 56 , 28 Sup. Ct. 428, which explains a device to be ‘a thing devised or formed by design, a contrivance, an invention.’ It is hence asserted that the United States did not comply with these definitional requirements-indeed, from the state of the art, could not; and therefore could not impose secrecy upon the Bliss Company.

The tangibility of the definitions and the arguments based upon them are not very clear nor what purpose they tend to establish. The company asserts a right to employ the principle of propulsion and this principle it asserts to be-to quote counsel-‘the balancing of rotary bodies analogous to turbines rotating in opposite directions and of equal speeds for the purpose of eliminating gyroscopic effect,’ and that it was ‘long prior to 1906 [the first contract was made in 1905] a matter of common knowledge and known to the defendant’ (the company); and again:

    ‘The balanced turbine principle was public property and not the property of the government. It was a matter of public knowledge and not a secret.’

Therefore, as we have said, the contention is that it was not within the prohibition of the contracts. Immediately it may be asked: This being the condition, of what value was the restrictive clause to the government? Surely the government sought to secure something valuable and practical, and yet it was apparently only the promise of words never to have effective realization. Instead of security the government got a controversy. Anything it might offer or suggest or, to use the word of the contract, ‘furnished,’ would be open to dispute and the charge of being anticipated, already in existence among the things available to the company as ‘public property and not the property of the government’-‘a matter of public knowledge and not a secret.’ And the govern ment [248 U.S. 37, 44]   could not even fortify itself by the presumptions of a patent. To have done so would have been to break the seal of secrecy and relieve the company from the obligations imposed by the contract. To this contention the Bliss Company is driven to get rid of the Davison patent, the design for which was furnished the company by the United States. Counsel say:

    ‘Assuming that the particular design of a balanced turbine produced by Davison was a secret, it lost every attribute of the secret upon the issuance by the United States government of letters patent to Davision.’

And further:

    ‘The issuance of this patent, therefore, became an act of the Navy Department. Thus the government through the same department by which it entered into the several contracts with the defendant [the company ], caused the secret of the balanced turbine to be laid open to the public.’

And, besides, it is said that the government ‘tacitly permitted Davison, one of its officers and subject to its discipline, to assign’ to the company ‘foreign patents for the device in issue’; and that therefore ‘it cannot now successfully contend that its design is within the restrictive clause.’ But this gives an exaggerated effect of publicity to a patent and cannot dispense with the explicit obligation of the restrictive clause. Indeed, we may repeat, Of what avail was the restrictive clause to the government under the contentions of the company? It was assured of nothing but opposition and litigation. We may cite in further illustration of this that the Bliss Company asserts that the Davison device was without novelty in the field of ‘opposite revolving turbines’ (another name for a balanced turbine) and that all he did was to take a ‘design of unbalanced turbine shown’ in a prior patent ‘and reverse one of the turbine wheels with the incidental and necessary change in the gearing.’ The assertion is that ‘the design of this gearing is what occupied Lieutenant Davison’s time and thought.’ We [248 U.S. 37, 45]   may say that we concur with the lower courts and think the patent is not so limited. The Bliss Company thought well enough of it to buy its foreign rights.

The several contentions of the company are but fragments of the broader one that there were in the world’s knowledge and available to the company practical devices as well as principles of operation which precluded a demand of secrecy by the government and which left the company free to use, or exhibit or sell to anybody torpedoes embodying them, the final and dominant contention being that the government’s reservation was only of inventions, inventions, however, undisclosed, patentable but not patented. Yet the word of the contract is ‘furnished,’ not invented, and the words are of different significance. To invent means to create; to furnish means to supply. And the difference was too important, too pertinent to the purpose to have been overlooked-indeed, must have been deliberately contemplated to achieve the object of the parties. The government in its situation, considering the use of torpedoes and the uncertainty against whom to be used, would want to avail itself of the whole universe of things then existing or that might be brought into existence, in whatever way or combination it could. It is easy to believe that an arrangement of old devices might have value. And secrecy was an especial object, as far as it could be maintained and for such length of time as it could be maintained. The fact and the time might in instances be critical and determinative of a decisive result. The government considered the provision important to insert in the contract of 1905 and to repeat in every subsequent contract, to and including that of 1912, and to disregard the plea of the company for some relaxation of it to accommodate the company’s interests. There was some relaxation in 1912 and 1913, but the confidential relation of the parties was emphasized as we have seen. [248 U.S. 37, 46]   This was the simple situation. It is free from the tangle and perplexities of the company’s contentions. It gives use to the restrictive clause, directness of right and remedy, not dependent upon explorations into the prior art or the delays and termination of lawsuits. These observations apply to other parts of the torpedo as well as to the balanced turbine. The remarks of the Circuit Court of Appeals are pertinent. The court said:

    ‘Throughout the entire record, in the contracts, correspondence and dealings of the parties, the importance of secrecy is everywhere manifest. The nature of the services rendered was such that secrecy might almost be implied. It is difficult to imagine a nation giving to one of its citizens contracts to manufacture implements necessary to the national defense and permitting that citizen to disclose the construction of such implement or sell it to another nation. The very nature of the service makes the construction urged by the defendant untenable. We are of the opinion, therefore, that the injunction should include all designs, drawings, plans and specifications used by the defendant in making the Bliss-Leavitt torpedo for the government which were approved by the Ordnance Bureau, notice of which was given to the Bliss Company pursuant to the provisions of Clauses 19 and 20 of the contracts in question.’

The court hence directed the amendment of the decree of the District Court, ‘adding such a provision.’

A rehearing was asked of the case, 229 Fed. 376, 143 C. C. A. 496. It was denied as to the balanced turbine and granted as to the other devices, that is, Double Regulation of Air, Ball Bearings for Gyroscope, and Inside Superheater. To the inclusion of these in the decree it is objected, as to the Double Regulation of Air, that written notice was not given the company as required by the restrictive clause. The assertion is that what was done by the government was [248 U.S. 37, 47]   nothing but suggestions, first verbal, and then by letter, but not accompanied by ‘blueprints of design.’ The objection is based on the contention already referred to that a device or design must be something concrete or, it is now said, if not that, ‘it at least imports something as to dimensions, size, shape, weight, etc., from which a device could be constructed.’ The objection [248 U.S. 37, 48]   is hypercritical and we are somewhat surprised at it. There was no uncertainty in the government’s demand and no misunderstanding of it. There were discussions concerning the practical means of using it, and it was testified that ‘the sole question practically reducing itself to whether or not they had sufficient space to apply this design or principle.’ And the design was subsequently worked out by the employes of the company. The objection was rested on other grounds, and it was rightfully dealt with by the Circuit Court of Appeals.

The same objection is not made as to the superheater and the ball bearings. It is said of them that they are not used in the existing type of torpedo. As this is conceded by the government and as we do not agree with its assertion that the company ‘displays a disposition to violate its trust whenever it seems advantageous to do so,’ we think the decree should not include the devices. In other words, it should be modified to exclude them, without prejudice, however, to the government’s right to obtain an injunction against their disclosure upon proper proof of an intention to use the devices in proceedings supplemental to this action or in an independent action. Hitchman Coal & Coke Co. v. Mitchell, 245 U.S. 229, 262 , 38 S. Sup. Ct. 65, L. R. A. 1918C, 497, Ann. Cas. 1918B, 461.