195 F. 764 | N.D. Ill. | 1912
This bill was filed to enjoin infringement of the two claims of patent No. 554,675, granted to A. W. Grant, February 18, 1896, for a rubber tired wheel. The claims read as follows, viz.:
“1. A vehicle-wheel having a metallic rim with angularly-projecting flanges to form a channel or groove with tapered or inclined sides, a rubber tire, the inner portion of which is adapted to fit in said groove or channel and the outer portion having sides at an angle to the inner portion, the angle or corner between the outer and inner portions being located within the outer*765 periphery of the flanges, and independent retaining-wires passing entirely ihrough'the inner portions of said tire and also within the outer peripheries of the flanges, substantially as described.
“2. A vehicle-wheel having a metallic rim with outwardly-projecting flanges at an angle to the plane of said wheel so as to form a channel or groove having tapered or inclined sides, a rubber tire, the inner portion of which is adapted to fit in said tapered groove or channel and the outer or exposed portions formed at an angle thereto, the angle or corner between the said portions being placed within the outer periphery of said flanges, openings extending entirely through the unoxposed portion of said tire, and independent retainirg-wires in said openings, and a reinforcing-strip of fibrous material placed at the bottom of said tire and wholly within said flanges, substantially as specified.”
Prima facie proofs were made by complainant. Defendant introduced no evidence. No defense is made as to the issue and validity of the patent, and these facts are found by the court to be satisfactorily established by the evidence. Strenuous defense is, however, made to the sufficiency of the evidence as to title and infringement. On the hearing, the following stipulation was entered into, viz.:
“It is hereby stipulated that prior to the commencement of this suit the defendant had a regular and established place of business in the Northern District of Illinois, to wit. in the city of Chicago, in said district, at which place of business prior to the commencement of this suit defendant sold rubber vehicle tires, made by it in Akron. Ohio, such as those illustrated by the section of rubber vehicle tiro marked ‘Complainants’ Exhibit, Section of Defendant’s Tire.’ which correctly represents and shows the type of rubber tires so sold by defendant at its regular place of business in said Chicago prior to the commencement of this suit. Further stipulated that in the pamphlet submitted herewith and marked, ‘Complainants’ Exhibit, Illustrations of Defendant's Tires,’ the cuts shown therein at the top of page 1 and the cut shown on page 5 correctly illustrate, and show the typo, construction, and character of the rubber tires so made and sold by defendant prior to the commencement of this suit, and that the cuts on page 16 of said pamphlet illustrate the shape of the rubber tire, and the cuts shown on page 20 of said pamphlet the shape of the channel used in connection with said rubber tires which were sold by defendant as aforesaid. Further stipulated that the defendant is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Ohio.”
It appears that the first-named complainant is a New Jersey corporation ; that the second-named complainant is an Ohio corporation; that the defendant is also an Ohio corporation; and that the alleged infringing act took place in this district, where defendant has a regular and established place of business. Both claims in suit call for a vehicle-wheel. The drawings show both a wheel and sectional parts thereof.
The bill sets up two adjudications of the claims in suit, one by the Circuit Court for the Southern District of New York sustaining the patent, in a case against the Firestone Tire & Rubber Company (147 Fed. 739), which was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Judicial Circuit (151 Fed. 237, 80 C. C. A. 589), and the other by the same courts in a case against the Diamond Rubber Company (157 Fed. 677, 85 C. C. A. 349), wherein said patent was again sustained. This latter decision seems to have been taken to and affirmed by the Supreme Court (220 U. S. 428, 31 Sup. Ct. 444, 55 L. Ed. 527). In both of said causes complainants’ title was sustained, though it does not seem to have been placed in issue. Defendant’s answer sets
“Do hereby sell, assign * * * the entire right, title, and interest in and to a certain invention devised-by me in rubber tire wheels, and in and to the letters patent therefor, which invention is fully described and set forth in*767 an ¡¡pi>JUv¡.'oii for letters patent executed by me—this day for improvements in rubber tired wheels,” etc.
—-the number not being given. No attempt was made to show that other applications for like improvements were not made on said day. Afterwards, and on December 3, 1897, the inventor and patentee, Grant, executed and delivered to the Rubber Tire Wheel Company another assignment of said letters patent, in which he recites the former assignment and the record thereof in the Patent Office, “in order that the title to said letters patent may be fully and clearly vested in the said Rubber Tire Wheel Company, and the identity of said letters patent be clearly established of record.” This, of course, would be conclusive evidence of title, except as against a prior grantee, if any, whose title would not have been affected by the first assignment. As above stated, no attempt has been made to exclude this hypothesis. Were this defect the only one in the presentation of the case, perhaps it might be overlooked. Complainants have been given two opportunities to correct errors or omissions in the evidence, and may not in fairness ask for further indulgence. The proof of title is not sufficient to establish the right of complainants to the relief sought. Wright v. Randall (C. C.) 8 Fed. 599; N. Y. Paper Bag Co. v. Union Paper Bag Co. (C. C.) 32 Fed. 788. In order that complainants may be advised of the judgment of the court upon the case made for infringement, that question will be considered.
These matters are material in any case, and even more important in a proceeding in a district in which neither of the parties reside, being jurisdictional. Westinghouse Co. v. Stanley Company (C. C.) 116 Red. 641. Ror the same reason, even if alleged in the bill, there could be no recovery for contributory infringement, were it otherwise proper. A bill for infringement of a patent is not sustained by evidence showing the sale of any number of the elements of the patent less than the whole thereof, unless it be shown by evidence-that the part manufactured or sold was sold for that purpose or could only be used in the device alleged to be infringed, and was so used. Even assuming that it should be shown that defendant sold tires for use in wheels, it may well be that they were sold for such use to persons in a foreign country, where they might be assembled into a wheel like complainants’ or to replace a part of a licensed wheel, and such use might well be assumed in the absence of proof to the contrary. Here there is no evidence showing or tending to show contributory infringement. In Bullock Electric & Mfg. Company v. Westinghouse Electric Mfg. Company, 129 Fed. 105, 63 C. C. A. 607, and in Chadeloid Chemical Company v. Chicago Wood Finishing Company (C. C.) 180 Fed. 770, it is held that incomplete acts would not constitute infringement for purposes of giving jurisdiction. The case is so beset with irregularities and insufficiencies in matter of proof, both of title and acts of infringement, that to sustain it the court must on almost every vital question resort to assumptions and deductions of facts which it is evident may, if they be facts, be substantiated. In the judgment of the court complainant has not made out a case for injunctional relief.
The bill will be dismissed for want of equity.