216 F. 937 | D. Minnesota | 1913
As indicated at the hearing, I hold now that claims 1, 2, and 6 sho-w no patentable novelty.
The great utility now claimed for this improvement was evidently not apparent to the plaintiff when it bought the patent and property of the Ashland Sieve Company in 1903, judging from the price which it paid and the terms of the contract. Nor does it seem to have been apparent to it for many years after that, considering that it never marked its sieves which contained this improvement with the date of the Mar-tien patent until 1910. A great deal of evidence has been taken upon this subject, and, after considering it, I am not able to say that the prima facie presumption of utility created by the granting of the patent has been overcome.
Section 4900 required the plaintiff to mark its sieves with the date of the patent. It appears that when the plaintiff bought the property of the Ashland Sieve Company it received from that company 110 sieves in all. Part of these, however, were of the Hixson type, and Closz, the president and general manager of the plaintiff, was unable to say how many were of the Martien type. He says that he re-marked the sieves with the date of the Martien patent, and as near as he can recollect sold between 30 and 40. Between 1904 and 1910 all of the sieves sold by the plaintiff contained the Martien ridges. The plaintiff sold during that time, not including those sold in 1910, 21,708 sieves. It marked upon a plate attached- to those sieves the dates of three other patents, but it did not commence to mark its sieves with the date of the Martien patent until after this suit was commenced, and about two months before Closz gave his testimony. It cannot be said that plaintiff has complied with section 4900 when it has sold 21,738 sieves, and of these has marked, 30, and failed to mark 21,708. Matthews & Willard Mnf’g Co. v. National Brass & Iron Works (C. C.) 71 Fed. 518. ,
It is claimed, however, by the plaintiff, that the defendant as early as the spring of 1901 commenced to deliberately pirate the Martien invention. If it did this, it must have known of the Martien invention. I have examined all the evidence in the case relating to this subject, and I cannot find any proof to show that the defendant knew anything about the Martien application or patent until it was given notice thereof on. April 28, 1909. Bull, the president of the defendant, says (page 2) that he never heard of it until the commencement of this suit. Robinson, the vice president, says (page 14) that the first information the company had was the receipt of a letter from Mr. Williamson, which was on April 28, 1909. Norton, the general manager, says (page 162) that he never knew of the Martien patent before the letter from Mr. Williamson. Russell, who was assistant sales manager in 1900, went to Ashland in the- fall of 1900. He then had a conversation with My-krantz. Mykrantz says that Russell’s sole business with him was to make a new contract for the next year for the purchase of the Hixson sieves.
There is no doubt but that all the sieves bought by the defendant from the Ashland people were of the Martien type. It would seem that there was no occasion for Mykrantz to give Russell any notice with reference to the Martien application. He says that Mr. Karth did most of the talking. It is true that Mykrantz testified (page 515) that Russell was told that the Martien patent was pending, but this was in answer to a leading question from the plaintiff’s counsel. In any event, there is no evidence that Russell communicated this information to Norton, or to any one else connected with the company. This casual conversation cannot be considered as sufficient evidence of knowledge on the part of the defendant company of the Martien application, so as to convict it of deliberate piracy. Hixson could not remember whether or not he told Russell of the Martien application. The only interview
Nor is there anything in the documentary evidence to show this. The correspondence which preceded the license contract of April 25, 1901, does not mention the Martien application. The license contract itself does not mention it. The chief object of this license contract was to give to the defendant a shop right on Hixson’s improvements, which were set forth in Hixson’s application No. 44,043. The number of this application and the date of its filing are given in the contract. This application described the new style of sieve which the defendant said in its letter of April 9, 1901, that it wanted. The last paragraph of the license contract is as follows:
“Said shop right shall include all further improvements made by said Hix-son subsequent to the above applications covering improvements in adjustable sieves, as well as incompleted applications made on same by said Hixson subsequent to and including United States letters patent No. 624,333, now claimed to be owned by the Ashland Adjustable Sieve Company.”
. The plaintiff places great reliance upon this paragraph, as showing notice to the defendant of the adverse claim of the Ashland Company. The words “now claimed to be owned by the Ashland Adjustable Sieve Company” must refer either to patent No. 624,333, or to future improvements to be made by Hixson, or to incompleted applications made by Hixson. It is not necessary to inquire as to which one of these it does refer, for no one of them would cover the Hixson application, No. 44,043. It seems clear, however, that it refers to patent 624,333. This construction coincides with McCray’s letter, which clearly indicates that what Hixson claimed to have been defrauded out of was “the old corrugated sieve.”
■ The. situation of the defendant, then, was this: In April, 1901, it bought from Hixson the right to manufacture sieves described in his application No. 44,043. The sieve therein described is, as both parties agree, identical with the Martien sieve. At the time it acquired this right it had no knowledge or notice that Hixson was not the inventor of the improvement, or that Martien had made an application for a patent for the invention, or that a patent was ever issued. It commenced the manufacture of sieves of this type in 1901, and it continued it until April 28, 1909, in the same belief as'to Hixson’s rights, and in the same ignorance as to Martien’s rights.
It becomes important, now, to inquire as to what knowledge the plaintiff has of this infringement, and what action it took with reference thereto. Closz testified that at the time his company in 1903 bought the property of the Ashland Sieve Company, which included the Martien patent, he knew that the defendant was making that kind of a sieve, and that he knew as early as 1901 that it was doing so. Closz
It is very evident that one of two- things is true: The plaintiff either thought that the Martien improvement was of no value, and its failure to mark the sieves with the date of the patent would indicate this, or there was a deliberate purpose on the part of the plaintiff to allow the defendant to continue the manufacture of. these sieves in great quantities in ignorance of the plaintiff’s claim, and then, after a large amount of damages and profits had accumulated, to bring suit therefor. The statement of Closz, as an excuse for his delay, that he knew that the Case Company was responsible, and the fact that when the plaintiff did give notice the six-year statute of limitations upon its claim for damages was within two months of expiring, would indicate the truth of the latter hypothesis. Under the circumstances of this case, the plaintiff is clearly not entitled to an accounting for profits or damages prior to April 28, 1909. Layton Pure Food Co. v. Church & Dwight Co., 182 Fed 35, 104 C. C. A. 475, 32 L. R. A. (N. S.) 274. (8th Circuit).
Is plaintiff entitled to an accounting for profits since April 28, 1909? Suit was not commenced until October 11, 1909. Plaintiff did not commence to take its testimony until July 14, 1910. The plaintiff having remained quiet for six years with knowledge of defendant’s infringement, it was not unreasonable for the defendant to believe that, notwithstanding the notice of suit and its commencement, the plaintiff did not really intend to press its claim. Prior to the time when testimony was taken, which was July 14, 1910, sieves for the summer seasons of 1909 and 1910 had probably been distributed. There is some evidence to indicate that the defendant changed the construction of its sieves for the season of 1911, and did not use one of the Martien type. However this may be, I do not think that under the circumstances of this case, the plaintiff is entitled to any accounting at all.
The defendant claims that the plaintiff is not entitled even to an injunction. This claim, however, under the authorities, cannot be sustained. Layton Pure Food Co. v. Church & Dwight Company, 182 Fed. 35, 104 C. C. A. 475, 32 L. R. A. (N. S.) 274. In several of the cases cited by the defendant the bill was dismissed on final hearing, where the question of laches was raised. In some of these cases, however, the patent had expired at the time of; the final hearing. In one the validity of the patent and the question of infringement were not consid
1. That claims 1, 2, and 6 are void for want of patentable novelty.
2. That claims 3, 4, and 5 are valid, and that they have been infringed.
3. That the plaintiff is not entitled to any accounting.
4. That the plaintiff is entitled to a permanent injunction, as prayed for in the bill.
5. That neither party recover costs of the other. .