Lowell v. Lewis

U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
15 F. Cas. 1018 (1817)
ELI5:

Rule of Law:

For the purpose of patentability, an invention is 'useful' if it is not frivolous or injurious to the well-being, good policy, or sound morals of society; it need not be superior to or more effective than existing inventions.


Facts:

  • In 1813, Jacob Perkins was granted a patent for an 'improvement in the construction of pumps.'
  • The plaintiff acquired the rights to Perkins's patent through an assignment.
  • The plaintiff's patented device was a square pump with a specific design of triangular valves.
  • The defendant used a pump designed by a Mr. Baker, from whom the defendant had also acquired rights by assignment.
  • The defendant's pump was designed for a circular tube and used oval-shaped 'butterfly' valves.
  • The plaintiff alleged that the defendant's pump was substantially the same as Perkins's invention and therefore infringed on the patent.

Procedural Posture:

  • The plaintiff, as the assignee of a patent from Jacob Perkins, brought an action for patent infringement against the defendant in a federal circuit court.
  • The case was tried before a jury.

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Issue:

Does the requirement that an invention be 'useful' under the patent act mean that it must be superior to existing technologies or of general, widespread utility?


Opinions:

Majority - Story, Circuit Justice

No. The 'useful invention' requirement in the patent act does not mean an invention must possess general utility or be an improvement over existing technology. The law requires only that the invention is not frivolous or injurious to the well-being, good policy, or sound morals of society. The word 'useful' is incorporated into the act merely as a contradistinction to mischievous or immoral inventions, such as a device to poison people or facilitate crime. Whether an invention is more or less useful than another is a commercial question for the patentee, not a legal one for the court. The defendant, by using a similar pump, implicitly admits its utility, and therefore it does not lie in his mouth to contest its general utility.



Analysis:

This case establishes a foundational principle in U.S. patent law by setting a very low threshold for the utility requirement. By defining 'useful' as merely 'not harmful or frivolous,' the decision prevents courts from engaging in subjective evaluations of an invention's commercial value or technological superiority. This doctrine encourages innovation by protecting even minor or niche inventions, ensuring that patentability depends on objective criteria rather than on market success or a judge's assessment of its comparative merit. It remains a cornerstone of the utility doctrine, simplifying the inquiry for both inventors and the judiciary.

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