A Treatise on the Law of Patents for Useful Inventions as Enacted and Administered in the United States of AmericaThe Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., 2005 - 794 lappuses The final edition of a landmark treatise on patents. Originally published: Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1873. xxxvii, 749 pp. "The work of Mr. Curtis on the 'Law of Patents for useful inventions, as enacted and administered in the United States of America, ' is one of genuine merits. The fact that it has reached the fourth edition is evidence both of the ability and need of the work. The first edition was issued in 1849, the second in 1854, and the third in 1867. The present edition is a revision and enlargement of the third, and contains references to most of the important decisions in England and in this country. The statute of 1870 is given in full, in addition to the other statutes on the subject. The present edition of this valuable work is quite indispensable to the patent lawyer. Among the recent decisions we notice Maury v. Whitney, 14 Wall. 434, in reference to the expiration of patents; Rubber Company v. Goodyear, 9 Wall. 788, in reference to the extension of patents; Leyman v. Osborne, 11 Wall. 516, in reference to proceedings at the patent office, and unity or diversity of invention. This treatise ranks among the legal classics." -Albany Law Journal 98 (1874) 9: 98 Better known for his Nationalist interpretation of the Constitution, George Ticknor Curtis [1812-1894] was a prominent New York patent attorney and the author of works on admiralty and equity jurisprudence. Some of his notable works include History of the Origin, Formation and Adoption of the Constitution of the United States, with Notices of its Principal Framers (1854), Digest of the English and American Admiralty Decisions (1839), and Rights and Duties of Merchant Seaman (1841). |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 85.
... mode of using it , may be the subject of a patent . A mere principle is an abstract discovery , incapable of answering the term " manufacture " ; but a principle so far embodied and connected with corporeal substances , as to be in a ...
... mode or process of applying them , in respect to the order , or position , or relations , in which they are used ... modes of making iron from the native ore ; and yet the really new discovery , in 1 1 § 24 . such cases , could not well ...
... mode of attaining an old result ; or a mode of attaining a new result , in a particular department of industry , which result may not of itself be any new machine , manufacture , or composition of matter ; or finally , an entirely new ...
... mode of preparing the paper , by put- ting upon it a glazed enamelled surface , by means of white lead and size ... modes of preparing the paper.2 So , also , in another case , where the object - of the plaintiff's invention was to ...
... mode of operation , separate from any particular mechanism , but a function or mode of operation is embodied in mechanism de- signed to accomplish a particular effect , it will be a machine in the sense of the patent law . A very ...
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112 | |
CHAPTER IV | 140 |
Extent of Principle 140 | 155 |
CHAPTER V | 193 |
CHAPTER VI | 249 |
CHAPTER VII | 332 |
Infringement | 369 |
CHAPTER IX | 470 |
CHAPTER X | 538 |
CHAPTER XI | 599 |
CHAPTER XII | 623 |
CHAPTER XIII | 652 |
CHAPTER XIV | 661 |
STATUTES | 667 |