212 F. 889 | 6th Cir. | 1914
This suit was brought by the" appellant, Frank P. D’Arcy, against the appellee, the Jackson Cushion Spring Co., for the alleged infringement of letters patent No. '785,-410, for improvements in springs, issued to D’Arcy, March 21, 1905, and relating to a wire fastening device for securing spring structures in upholstery construction. The defenses relied on were the invalidity of D’Arcy’s patent for want of invention, and non-infringement. After a hearing on the pleadings and proof, an interlocutory decree was
After this mandate had been filed in the court below the defendant moved for a final decree. The complainant resisted this motion and moved for an order to reopen the case and for leave to take further testimony. On consideration of these motions the court below entered a final decree, denying the complainant’s motion to reopen the case for further proof, adjudging that D’Arcy’s patent was valid, but had not been infringed by the defendant, and dismissing the bill, with costs. From this decree D’Arcy has again appealed to this court.
1. A preliminary motion' made by the appellee to dismiss the appeal was heard with the argument upon the merits. Several grounds of this motion obviously relate to the merits of the appeal. And as the only ground of the motion which was relied on in the argument, relating to the alleged incompleteness and insufficiency of the printed transcript, was met by the appellant by filing at the hearing, with the leave of the court, a complete supplemental transcript, this being done in accordance with a previous stipulation of counsel and without objection on the part of the appellee, the motion to dismiss must be dismissed, without consideration of its merits otherwise.
2. The chief contention of the' appellant on the merits of the appeal, is that the court below was in error in denying his motion to reopen the case for further proof; it being, in effect, conceded both in his oral argument and brief, that if there was no error in this regard, the court below, in view of the restricted scope given to claim 2 of D’Arcy’s patent in the opinion of this court on the former appeal, correctly held, on the record as it then stood, that there was no infringement by either of the defendant’s devices.
In the former opinion of this court it was held that, in view of the prior state of the art, in which D’Arcy was not a pioneer in inventing a wire fastener to secure the parts of spring structures together, but merely devised a new form of accomplishing this result, and in view of the express language of his claim and the description in his specifications, his invention did not extend broadly, as urged, to the use of a wire fastener made in the form of a “double loop,” without regard to the functions of its several parts, but was restricted to the form shown and described in his specifications and drawings, with the respective
The complainant, in support of his motion to reopen the case for further proof in the court below, offered certain affidavits in reference to the manner in which both the complainant and the defendant had applied their wire fasteners to the spring structures and testimony given hy an agent of the defendant in subsequent litigation between the parties relating to another patent, which, it was urged, would more fully illustrate the true principle of D’Arcy’s device, and show that it was of greater importance arid entitled to a broader interpretation than it had been accorded in the opinion of this court, and would, under such broader construction, show that his claim was infringed by both of the defendant’s devices, Style 1 and Style 3.
The court below was of opinion that, without the previous sanction of this court, it had no authority to reopén the case for further proof in reference to the question of the infringement by Style 3, which had been passed upon by this court; and that, even if it had authority to reopen the proof as to the question of infringement by Style 1, the complainant’s application should be denied for the reason that the proffered testimony, when considered in connection with that already in the case, would not justify a different conclusion from that which it had formerly reached as to the construction of the D’Arcy patent, or have any substantial tendency to change its own conclusion that it was not infringed by the defendant’s Style 1.
4. A different question is, however, presented as to reopening the case for further proof in the -matter of infringement by defendant’s Style 1. As the interlocutory decree was in favor of the defendant upon this branch of the case, the question of the infringement of the D’Arcy patent by defendant’s Style 1 was not brought before this court by the former appeal, and was not considered by it. This court did, however, upon the defendant’s appeal, in reaching its conclusion as to non-infringement by Style 3, consider and determine, on the merits, the underlying question as to the scope of the complainant’s patent which was necessarily involved in determining as to its infringement by either Style 1 or Style 3. We do not now decide, however, whether, in view of the authorities above cited, the determination of this question by this court, as shown by its former opinion, in reaching its conclusion in reference to enjoining infringement by Style 3, should
Furthermore, we may add, we entirely agree with Judge Knappen’s-conclusion that the additional testimony proffered — little of which appears to have been newly discovered — had, in connection with that already in the case, no substantial tendency to show that a wrong conclusion had been reached by the trial court, on the interlocutory hearing upon the pleadings and proof, as to the non-infringement of the D’Arcy patent by defendant’s Style 1, and would not have justified a. different conclusion upon that question. So that even if it be assumed that, if newly discovered evidence of a material character had been proffered upon this question, the trial court would have been authorized, in its discretion, to reopen the interlocutory decree for further proof upon this point, we are clearly of opinion that there was, in view of the character of the testimony proffered, no abuse of discretion in the action of the court below, and that, on the contrary, it correctly refused, in the exercise of a sound discretion, to reopen the proof upon this branch of the case.
5. We find no error in the decree of the court below. It will accordingly be affirmed, with costs.