3 F. 566 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1880
This cause has now been heard upon the master’s report, and exceptions thereto. The patent is for an
The master reported that between August 24, 1868, the antedate of the patent, and February 23, 1869, the date of its actual issue, the defendants made and sold a considerable, number of organs, and between February 23, 1869, and May 1, 1874, a large number more, all of which contained partial sets covered by the orator’s patent, and on all but a very few •of which they received profits in additional price on account of the partial sets, stated separately for each space of time; that the wave-tuning was an important factor in producing the additional profits for the partial sets; that horizontal partial sets placed on the upper surface of the reed board, instead of being inclined into it, not covered by any patent, and not then in use, would have been practically as good as the inclined sets; that the orator testified that be should judge that a firm of which he was a member would have sold at least 100 organs a month more than they did if they had controlled the patent, and that there was no other evidence as to damages, whereupon none were allowed; and that he allowed to the orator the whole profits stated, subject in whole and in detail to the opinion of the court upon the questions presented.
The principal questions raised upon the report and exeep
Although this patent was granted under the act of March 2, 1861, which provided, in section 16, that all patents should remain in force for the term of 17 years from the date of isspe, it was subject to the provisions of section 8 of the act of July 4, 1836, (5 St. at Large, 117,) which were not superseded by the act of 1861. DeFlorez v. Raynolds, 17 O. G. 503.
By the provisions of that section the applicant for a patent could have it take date from the time of filing the specification and drawings, but not more than six months prior to the actual issue. This patent was not antedated more than six months, and came within those provisions. It is not like-a re-issued patent, expressly restricted in operation to causes of action thereafter arising, (Act of 1836, § 13; Rev. St. § 4916; Moffit v. Garr, 1 Black, 273;) but it has the full authority of the act of congress, giving it effect from the prior date; and congress has as full power to protect the rights of an inventor before the granting of a patent as after.
The wave-tuning was common and free to all alike, the same as the wood of the reed boards, or the metal of tlm reeds; neither the defendants nor any one else had any monopoly of it. When the defendants used it in appropriating the orator’s invention, the rights and liabilities arising were precisely like those arising from the use of the wood and metals; that is, they became entitled to be allowed its cost in accounting for the profits. The patented-invention was the orator’s property; he is entitled to the profits of the use-
The tuning cost nothing but the labor and skill of the tuner, and for that the master has allowed, The sets of reeds are arranged for making music by being tuned in any mode open to use, and the defendants are not entitled to have the profits of the partial set governed by what it would have brought independently of this kind of tuning any more than of any other; nor any more than they are entitled to have them reckoned at what it would have brought independently of the air to operate the reeds, or of the principles of music by which the instruments could be played, except what this kind of tuning might have cost more than those would. This case is very different from Mowry v. Whitney, 14 Wall. 620, relied upon by the defendants. There the patent was for a process of making wheels, which, as a product, were not covered by the patent. The defendants were charged by the circuit court with the whole profits on the wheels, instead of the profits of the savings by the patented process. This was held to be wrong, and the plaintiff there was required to distinguish the profits due to the patented process from those received on the whole wheel, before he could recover them. What was required to be done there has already been done here. Large profits were made by these defendants on these organs, aside from those on the partial sets, for which there has apparently been no attempt to charge them.
The master has carefully distinguished the profits arising directly from the partial sets from the rest. He has ascertained the difference between what it cost the defendants to make and sell that, and what it brought them. This was the profit on that thing. The fact that the defendants might have employed a horizontal partial set to nearly or quite the same profit, does not vary this aspect of the case. The partial set, arranged in a reed board according to the orator’s patent, was a tiling by itself, different from anything else, and there was no exact equivalent for it. It was that, upon which they made the profit charged. If they had employed the horizontal set instead of it, they would not have tres
As no profits accrued to the defendants on a part of the organs made and disposed of by them containing the orator’s improvement, none can be decreed to the orator on account of that infringement. It is what the defendants did gain, not what they might have gained, that they are accountable for by way of profits. Livingston v. Woodworth, 15 How. 546; Elizabeth v. Pavement Co. 97 U. S. 126. If such profits, when recovered, will not make the patentee whole, he must resort to his remedies for damages. The statute provides that in cases like this an account of the damages may be taken and they be decreed to the orator. Rev. St. U. S. § 4921. But they must be proved to the master, as in actions at law they must be to the jury. This ease furnishes no evidence from which such damages could be found with any satisfactory or sufficient degree of exactness. It does not at all' appear that the orator would have supplied organs in place of these, on which no profit was made, for the partial set, if the defendants had not disposed of them without profit; and without some such proof the damages could not be found.. Buesk v. Imhaeuser, 14 Blatchf. 19. Neither does the evidence as to other damages afford any sufficient basis from which the master would be warranted in finding any. It did not appear that the defendants were supplying the same markets
According to these views the defendants are liable to account to the orator for the profits actually received by them from tho use of his invention after the time to which the patent was antedated, and not for any other supposed profits or damages. The actual cost of making the partial sets containing the invention, from which profits were received, was $53,900.28; the amount actually received for them was $202,-948.28; and the actual profit on account of them was $149,-089. These profits came to the defendants’ hands in money, and the amount appeared upon their hooks. It was received for an infringment upon the orator’s rights, and they became trustees of it, although unwilling, for him to whom it belonged. They know of the patent in suit, although they supposed that another patent to the plaintiff, which they owned, covered the right to make this partial set. Such an infringement was treated as being deliberate and intentional by Woodruff, J., in Russell v. Place, 9 Blatchf. 173. In Littlefield v. Perry, 21 Wall. 205, it is intimated that interest may be allowed upon profits actually realized under such circumstances, in order to give complete indemnity for tho wrong. On principle, money so received ought to hear interest while wrongfully detained. Ekins v. East India, Co. 1 P. Wms. 395; People v. Gusherie, 9 John. 71; Wood v. Robbins, 11 Mass. 504; Crane v. Thayer, 18 Vt. 162.
Before the disclaimer, however, this money was not wrongfully detained. Without the disclaimer, as has been held in this case, the orator could not have a decree. The defendants are to he supposed as having known that he had a right to disclaim and have a decree, hut they could not know that he would disclaim, and therefore could not know that they would have the money to pay over, and could not be in default for not paying it until that was done, and the evidence of it produced. While the money so laid in their hands they were not wrongfully detaining it, and could not justly bo charged with the interest upon it. Hubbard v. Charleston R. Co. 11 Met. 124. But after the disclaimer was filed in the
The right of the orator to costs depends wholly upon the provisions of the statute. They are a creature of statutes, and were not recoverable at all at common law. This suit could not have been maintained at all but for the provisions of section 4922, Rev. St., allowing a disclaimer of what would otherwise defeat the patent. If the disclaimer is filed before suit, the case stands, as to costs, like any other case for infringement; but, where the disclaimer is not filed until after suit, although that may not prevent a decree or judgment for the plaintiff, the statute is express that, in every such case in which a judgment or decree shall be rendered for the plaintiff, no costs shall be recovered. The provision is not that no costs shall be recovered until after disclaimer, but it is as extensive as the whole existence of the case, and prohibits the recovery of any costs at all in the case.
Other questions have been debated to some extent, and considered, but they either relate to questions of fact disposed of by the master upon warrantable evidence before him, or-are not controlling upon any decisive feature of the case, and no further notice of them is thought to be necessary.
It follows that the orator is entitled to a decree for the payment to him, by the defendants, of the sum of $149,039, with interest thereon from the fourth day of December, 1878.
The foregoing decision embodies the concurring views of the circuit judge and the district judge before whom the case has been heard.
The exceptions are respectively overruled and sustained