| Albert Hutchinson Putney - 1908 - 608 pages
...every enlightened government. It entered into the views of the framers of our Constitution. * * * It is the reward stipulated for the advantages derived...for the exertions of the individual, and is intended ns a stimulus to those exertions. The laws which are passed to give effect to this purpose ought, we... | |
| United States. Supreme Court - 1911 - 760 pages
...was said by Chief Justice Marshall in Grant v. Raymond, 6 Pet. pp. 241-243, 8 L. ed. 384, 385: "It is the reward stipulated for the advantages derived...intended as a stimulus to those exertions. . . . The public yields nothing which it has not agreed to yield; it receives all which it has contracted to... | |
| 1917 - 930 pages
...sale. As was said by Chief Justice Marshall in Grant v. Raymond, 6 Pet. 241-243: "It is the reword stipulated for the advantages derived by the public...Intended as a stimulus to those exertions. * * * The public yields nothing which it has not agreed to yield ; it receives all which it has contracted to... | |
| United States. Patent Office - 1913 - 780 pages
...the protection extended to the exclusive right, the Court, through Chief Justice Marshall, said : It Is the reward stipulated for the advantages derived...is intended as a stimulus to those exertions. The laws which are passed to give effect to this purpose ought, we think, to be construed in the spirit... | |
| Walter Forwood Rogers - 1914 - 902 pages
...their inventions for the time mentioned in their patents. It is the reward stipulated for the advantage derived by the public for the exertions of the individual,...is intended as a stimulus to those exertions. The laws which are passed to give effect to this purpose ought, we think, to be construed in the spirit... | |
| Richard Theodore Ely - 1914 - 542 pages
...220 (1832), pp. 241243:' It is the reward stipulated for the advantages derived by the public from the exertions of the individual, and is intended as a stimulus to those exertions (italics not in the original). . . . The public yields nothing which it has not agreed to yield; it... | |
| 1914 - 538 pages
...yields nothing which it has not agreed to yield; it receives all which it has contracted to receive. The full benefit of the discovery, after its enjoyment by the discoverer for fourteen years, is preserved ; and for his exclusive enjoyment of it during that time, the public faith... | |
| Charles William Bacon, Franklyn Stanley Morse - 1916 - 516 pages
...defined a patent as "the reward stipulated for the advantages derived by the public from the exertion of the individual and is intended as a stimulus to those exertions. . . . The public yields nothing which it has not agreed to yield ; it receives all which it has contracted to... | |
| John Barker Waite - 1920 - 328 pages
...one reads, "It (the patent) is the reward stipulated for the advantages derived by the public from the exertions of the individual, and is intended as a stimulus to those exertions." On the following page the court says, "The communication of the discovery to the public has been made... | |
| |