266 F. 546 | W.D. Pa. | 1920
This is a motion to dismiss the bill, first, for misjoinder of parties plaintiff; and, second, for misjoinder of parties defendant. At the argument plaintiffs’ counsel asked leave to amend the bill alleging conjoint or co-operative infringement by the defendants. The motion being allowed, the bill will be considered as so amended.
As to misjoinder of parties plaintiff: The bill is for infringement of two patents. The title to one, No. 935,283 -is as follows: Assignment from John H. Stringham to the Westinghouse Machine Company, dated May 24, 1905, and duly recorded; assignment from the Westinghouse Machine Company to the Colonial Trust Company, as trustee, dated May 9, 1911. The title to patent No. 1,066,252, is by two assignments — one dated January 24, 1913, from Leroy C. Chown-ing, and one dated March 31, 1914, from said Chowning et al., to the Chowning Regulator Corporation.
The bill then alleges that by virtue of a written agreement between the Westinghouse Machine Company and the Chowning Regulator Corporation, dated October 6, 1916, the Chowning Company acquired an exclusive license to manufacture, use, and sell the invention of patent No. 935,283, throughout the United States, upon certain terms and conditions appearing in said agreement, and that by letters patent of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, dated June 15, 1917, the Westinghouse Machine Company and the Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company became merged, forming the Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company, one of the plaintiffs, in which the equitable title to said patent No. 935,283 became vested.
It thus appears from the bill: First, that the Colonial Trust Company, trustee, and the Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company, have no right, title, or interest whatever in the Chowning patent, owned and held by the Chowning Regulator Corporation. For any
Under equity rule 26 (201 Fed. v, 118 C. C. A. v), “when there is more than one plaintiff, the causes of action joined must be joint.” In whose favor, under the patent laws, does a cause of action arise on a patent? This is made clear by Chief Justice Taney, in Gayler v. Wilder, 10 How. 477, 13 E. Ed. 504. The Chief Justice there elucidates these fundamental propositions:
1. Tnat the patent law confers upon the inventor the exclusive right to the use of the improvement, and that prior to such issue no suit can be maintained.
2. The act of Congress makes every patent assignable in law by an instrument in writing, to be recorded within the time specified, the thing assigned being the monopoly which the grant confers, the right of property which it creates, and under an assignment suit must be brought by the assignee.
3. That tiie monopoly granted is -one entire thing, “the exclusive right of making, using, and vending to others for use the improvement covered by the patent, and, as the monopoly is created by act of Congress, no rights can be acquired in it unless authorized by statute, and in the manner the statute prescribes.”
4. The law recognizes three assignments only: (a) The whole interest in me patent; (b)an undivided part of the entire interest, whereby the patentee and assignee become joint owners of the whole interest secured by the patent; (c> the assignment of an exclusive right within a specified part of the United States.
Under the second of these, the patentee and assignee sue jointly. Under the third, the assignee sues in his own name; but, to entitle him to do so, the assignment must convey to him the entire and unqualified monopoly which the patentee held in the territory specified, excluding even the patentee himself, and that any assignment short of this is a mere license.
A contract for the purchase of any portion of the patent right may be good and enforceable as a license, as between the parties themselves;
“A transfer of either of these three kinds of interests is an assignment, properly speaking, and vests in the assignee a title in so much of the patent itself, with a right to sue infringers — in the second 'case, jointly with the assignor; and in the first and third cases, in the name of the assignee alone. Any assignment or transfer short of one of these is a mere license, giving the licensee no title in the patent, and no right to sue at law in his own name for an infringement.”
While the grant of an exclusive right to manufacture and sell the invention throughout the United States would in legal effect be an assignment of the patent, such an assignment could not be operative in this case, because of the prior outstanding title in the Colonial Trust Company, trustee. We must therefore assume that, by reason of the “terms and conditions” contained in the contract with the Chowning Regulator Corporation, the grant is a mere license, as the plaintiff calls it, and not an assignment, which attempted to convey the title. Such license carried with it no right of action in the Chowning Regulator Corporation for infringement. That right remained in the owner or owners of the title. As was said by Chief Justice Taney in the case above referred to:
“It was obviously not the intention of tlie Legislature to permit several monopolies to be made out of one, and divided among different persons within the same limits.”
This for the reason that it would lead to fraudulent impositions upon purchasers and a harassing multiplicity of suits. As the facts appear in the bill, there being more than one plaintiff, I do not think that the causes of action joined are joint, within the true meaning of equity rule 26, nor do I think that this ruling conflicts with that of Judge Dickinson in the case of Low v. McMaster (D. C.) 255 Fed. 235, upon which plaintiffs chiefly rely.
The motion to dismiss the bill is sustained, and the bill dismissed, with costs.