130 F. 893 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania | 1904
The defendants are charged with having violated the injunction which was issued to restrain the infringement of the patent in suit, and which was served upon them January 2, 1903. The affidavits on which the rule to show cause was granted have been materially supplemented by the evidence recently taken in the proceedings before the master for an account, and a state of affairs is disclosed thereby which is decidedly damaging to the defendants, being nothing less than an attempt to overcome the adverse decision of the court by which the patent was sustained, and to evade the injunction issued to enforce it.
The device in controversy is a coil clasp for fastening together the ends of belts, and consists, in .general terms, of spiral coils of wire screwed into holes in the ends of the material to be united; the coils being brought together and locked by a pin run through their inter-meshing spaces. For convenience of use, a machine which will make and insert the coils is necessary, and each of the parties to this liti
The law would be a laughing stock if any such flimsy arrangement to get around it could succeed. The infringement of Hamilton is deliberate and obvious; the pretext which he gives, and his attempts to cover it up, only serving the more to fasten it upon him. The only question is how far the defendants are involved. It will have to be admitted that it starts very close to their doors, and I am convinced that it stays there. Not only is Hamilton induced to go into the scheme by Rahrer, their foreman, but out of their shop come the coiling machine and the wire which set him up in business, and from the papers in their office the list of names which is furnished him is obtained. It is difficult to see how any of this could have been accomplished without their knowledge and consent, and it is hardly credible that Rahrer, of his own motion, would make this effort to get around the injunction for their benefit without prompting or suggestion on their part. This is more than a suspicion. It is a conclusion which is forced from the facts found. Nor does it by any means stand alone. It is the undisputed evidence, as we have already seen, that the defendants consulted their counsel to see whether they could not refer to a convenient third party the orders for coils which were sent them by customers; and Spielman, in his answer to the rule, declares that they were under the impression there was no objection to their turning over to another concern, with which they had no connection, “the wires and stuff for fasteners,” for which they had no further use, all of which is in exact correspondence with what was subsequently done. It is said, however, that, according to Rahrer,- Spielman knew nothing till he inquired what had become of the old coiling machine, and that, when he found out, he told Rahrer that he ought not to have done what he did. Just what this mild protest referred to is not clear. It may have been simply to his giving away the machine and material. At all events, it was not followed up by any effort to stop the infringing use which the gift of these articles incited and furthered. But Kelley, in his testimony, does not pretend to any such want of knowledge. He admits that since the injunction his company has given coils to Hamilton for the very pur
This observation applies only to Frank Kelley and E. W. Spielman, and not to H. L. Kelley, who seems to have taken no part in what was done, and is only on the record in a representative capacity, as an executor of Edward Kelley, one of the original defendants, who is now deceased. It is suggested in relief of the parties named that since the suit was brought the defendants have become incorporated as the Peerless Belt Lacing Machine Company, which has taken over the entire business, and that they are not, therefore, liable individually. But they were sued as individuals, and the decree'and the injunction both went against them as such, and they cannot shield themselves from their individual acts by a subsequent change in their relation to each other. Janney v. Pancoast, etc., Co., 124 Fed. 972.
Let a decree be drawn adjudging the respondents, Frank Kelley and E. W. Spielman, in contempt for having violated the writ of injunction which was served upon them, and imposing a fine of $250, with costs.