- Name
- Statutory Disclaimers in Patent Law
- Cite
- Statutory Disclaimers in Patent Law, Pasquale Federico: 1935.
- Year
- 1935
- Bluebook cite
- P.J. Federico, Statutory Disclaimers in Patent Law, Pasquale Federico: 1935.
- Author
- P.J. Federico
- URL
- Item Type
- book
- Summary
- Prior to 1837, there was no concept, in treatises or court decisions of the time, that a patent, granted for more than what a party was entitled to, could be enforced as to a part to which the patentee was entitled. 14. Discusses Evans v. Eaton. 15. Common law rule: “if one claim is invalid, the entire patent is void.†17. In 1837, the common law rule was relaxed, statutorily, so as to permit a patentee to disclaim overly broad or existing claims in his original application. 17 n.1. Case law, however, makes clear that the common law rule was not abolished by the Act of 1837, but remained in force. 19 (“The Act of 1837, ch. 45, in the ninth section, contemplated the rule of the common law as being then in full force; and, therefore, it seeks to mitigate it, . . .â€).
Excerpts and Summaries
- Created
- Monday 16 of January, 2012 21:06:07 GMT
by creilly1
- LastModif
- Monday 16 of January, 2012 21:06:07 GMT
by creilly1
The original document is available at
https://casesofinterest.com/tiki/item2525