 | 1842
...expense. It was objected, in the course of the argument, that the quality or degree of invention was so small, that it could not become the subject-matter...that a person who could procure a license to use the hot air blast under Neilson's patent, had a full right to apply that blast to coal of any nature whatever,... | |
 | William Newton - 1842
...expense. It was objected, in the course of the argument, that the quality or degree of invention was so small, that it could not become the subject-matter...necessary to consider the labour, pains, and expense incurved by the plaintiff in bringing his discovery to perfection, that there is evidence in this cause... | |
 | 1842
...expense. It was objected, in the course of the argument, that the quality, or degree, of invention, was so small, that it could not become the subject-matter...coal of any nature whatever, whether bituminous or stone-coal. But we think, if it were necessary to consider the labor, pains, and expense, incurred... | |
 | 1842
...expense. It was objected, in the course of the argument, that the quality, or degree, of invention, was so small, that it could not become the subject-matter...coal of any nature whatever, whether bituminous or stone-coal. But we think, if it were necessary to consider the labor, pains, and expense, incurred... | |
 | Thomas Webster - 1844 - 1098 Seiten
...(*'). It was objected, in the course of the argument, that the quality or degree of invention was so small, that it could not become the subject-matter...that a person who could procure a license to use the hot air blast under Neilson's patent, had a full right to apply that blast to coal of any nature whatever,... | |
 | Thomas Webster - 1844
...(i). It was objected, in the course of the argument, that the quality or degree of invention was so small, that it could not become the subject-matter...that a person who could procure a license to use the hot air blast under Neilson's patent, had a full right to apply that blast to coal of any nature whatever,... | |
 | William Carpmael - 1851
...expense. It was objected, in the course of the argument, that the quality or degree of invention was so small, that it could not become the subject-matter...stone coal. But we think, if it were necessary to con* Dero&nc v. Fnirrif, vol. ip 664. | The King v. Daniel/, vol. ip 1,»3. VOL. II. XX sider the labour,... | |
 | Great Britain. Bail Court - 1869
...invention was so small that it could not become the subject of a patent—that the person who had procured a license to use the hot-air blast under Neilson's patent, had a full right to subject to that blast coal of any nature whatever, whether bituminous or stone-coal. But we think,... | |
 | United States. Supreme Court - 1887
...expense. It was objected, in the course of the argument, that the quality or degree of invention was so small that it could not become the subject-matter...But we think, if it were necessary to consider the labor, pains and expense incurred by the plaintiff in bringing his discovery to perfection, that there... | |
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