108 F. 873 | 2d Cir. | 1901
This court, upon the appeal of the Cary Manufacturing Company, affirmed a decree of the circuit court for the Southern district of New York (99 Fed. 500) wherein upon a bill in equity brought by the Acme Flexible Clasp Company the Cary Company was adjudged to have infringed the Swett patent (41 C. C. A. 338, 101 Fed. 2(59). In the opinion the patented fastener was said to be a “fastener having two tapered or pointed shanks at the ends of an integral thin connecting strip, the connecting strip being-in such form and so proportioned as to bend readily in use, and without such elasticity as to tend to draw the shanks from the wood; the metal of the fastener, at the points of junction of the connecting strip with the shank, being sufficiently heavy to receive the force by which the shanks are driven into the wood of a package in use.” The defendant was making and selling a fastener which had tapered and pointed shanks at the ends of an integral connected strip which had been thinned and then split longitudinally. An in
The part of the judgment of the circuit court which directed a payment by the clerk to the complainant of one-half of the fine is objected to. ' The power of the circuit court to direct the payment of a part or all of the fine to the complainant in an application for contempt, as a compensation for his time and outlay in prosecuting the application, has been often recognized in the circuit courts, especially in this circuit; and in practice is a power which ought to be exercised when the expenses and trouble to which the complainant has been subjected justify its exercise. In re Mullee, 7 Blatchf. 23, Fed. Cas. No. 9,911; Macaulay v. Machine Co. (C. C.) 9 Fed. 698; In re Tift (D. C.) 11 Fed. 463; In re North Bloomfield Gravel-Min. Co. (C. C.) 27 Fed. 795; Wells, Fargo & Co. v. Oregon Ry. & Nav. Co. (C. C.) 19 Fed. 20. The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed, without costs.