delivered the opinion of the Court.
The subject of this controversy is the measure of petitioners’ liability for damages and profits under a decree for an accounting by infringers of a patent.
Respondent, complainant below, is the owner of a patent, number 1,182,739, .for the making of laminated glass, which will crack, but not shatter. The product is better known as “safety” or “shatter-proof” glass, and is *450 used very largely in the making of automobiles. In the process of manufacture, a sheet of pyralin or celluloid is sandwiched between two thin sheets of plate glass, each % of an inch thick, the pyralin being cemented to the opposite glass sheets by a film of gelatin. The heat and pressure necessary to induce adhesion are applied- to the “sandwiches” in a receptacle known as an autoclave, a steel boiler of large size. At the end of the process, the glass and thé pyralin are firmly joined together with the appearance of a single sheet. For users of motor cars the risk of injury from flying glass is greatly reduced, if not removed altogether.
Complainant- had a decree against the Duplate Corporation, one of the petitioners here, for an infringement of this patent. 42 F. (2d) 737; 42 F. (2d). 739. Later a supplemental decree was entered against the other petitioner, Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company, the owner of. fifty per cent of the stock of Duplate. Pittsburgh was a contributory infringer, supplying Duplate, its subsidiary, with the -glass, which was then wrought into the finished product. An accounting followed before a master. The defendants satisfied the master that they were not conscious or deliberate infringers. The finding by the master in that regard was approved by the District Court and later .by the Court of Appeals. It will be accepted as a datum here. The account is to be stated on the assumption that the defendants, though infringers, have acted in good faith. Cf. R. S. §§ 4919, 4921; 35 U. S. C. §§ 67, 70;
Larson Co.
v.
Wrigley Co.,
The controversy as to the measure of liability divides itself into two branches, one concerned with the defendants’ profits, the other with the complainant’s damages. In reckoning the profits, the master made allowance to the defendants for the cost of labor and material wasted without fault in the manufacturing process. This *451 amounted to $1,192,264.32 ($435,207.52 for loss of glass; $219,036.93 for loss of pyralin; $538,019.87 for loss of labor and material other than' glass or pyralin.) The master made allowance also for the cost of labor and material that entered into merchandise returned by the defendants’ customers. for defects afterwards discovered-. This amounted to $504,137.45. He refused to make allowance for more than the manufacturing cost of the material bought by one defendant from the other, but. did allow the saving effected by the use of patented devices. He found himself unable to ascertain the specific costs of operation to be attributed to sales that had been made at known prices, and refused in stating the account to compare specific prices with average costs of operation, and fix the liability accordingly. Instead, he treated the business as one continuous infringement, a unitary transaction, comparing average costs with average prices. Through this method of computation he arrived at the conclusion that during the period covered by the accounting the defendants had operated at a net loss of $276,-857.47 in the sale of the infringing product. That being so there was nothing owing on the score of profits.
“In patent nomenclature what the infringer makes is 'profits’; what the owner of the patent loses by such infringement is damages.’ ”
Diamond Stone-Sawing Machine Co.
v.
Brown,
The District Court modified the report by striking out the item of damages by reason of price reductions ($2,807.89) and confirmed it as thus modified, adding, however, interest on $414,120.70, the award of general damages, from the date of the last infringement (May 31, 1930).
1. Factory losses incurred as a necessary or normal incident to the completion of sales effected at a gain.
A sale resulting in a loss may not be offset by an infringer against another and independent sale resulting in a gain for the purpose of extinguishing or reducing a liability for profits.
Crosby Valve Co.
v.
Safety Valve Co.,
Adherence to that principle sustains the ruling of the master that in measuring the gain from particular trans.actions the defendants should have allowance for the expense of incidental wastage, unless the wastage is so great as to overpass the bounds of reason. Cf.
Continuous Glass Press Co.
v.
Schmertz Wire Glass Co.,
*455
In the light of these findings and others to . the same effect, the distinction becomes evident between the situation in this case and that in the case of the Crosby valves.
The ruling of the master as to the items here considered is accordingly approved.
2. The allowance of the cost of glass sold by Duplate to its customers, and returned by the customers for defects afterwards discovered.
These sales were mere futilities. They did not yield a profit for which the sellers have been charged. They
*456
were, not preliminary to other sales refilling the same orders. At least there is nothing in the record to imprint that quality upon them. They have no place in the account at all. By the ruling of the master the cost of these futilities was allowed to the infringers. This we think was error. The infringers being relieved of any charge by reason of such transactions are not entitled to a credit. • The ease of the
Crosby Valve Company
(
3. The measure of the allowance for glass fabricated by one infringer and furnished to the other.
Duplate bought its glass in sheets % of an inch thick from its contributory infringer, Pittsburgh. In the computation of the profits allowance has been made for the material so furnished on the basis of manufacturing cost. The defendants now insist that the basis should be market. value. The acceptance of such a measure would enable the infringers to profit by their wrong. There was no use in the automobile industry for glass so thin as this except in connection with the process described in the complainant’s patent. Cf. Duplate Corporation v. Triplex Safety Glass Co., 42 F. (2d) 739, 741. If there had been no infringing business, the large amount of glass that went into the infringing product would never have been sold at all. True, glass of that thickness was used in other industries, in train windows and toilet mirrors. The master finds, however, that Pittsburgh had been able, .while supplying glass to Du-plate, to respond to all demands that .came from other users, the railroads and the glaziers; If as part of this accounting it is given credit for the glass at a price above the cost, it will thereby have enlarged its. market to an equivalent extent and reaped a profit as infringer. Equity forbids that this result should be attained. We *457 are referred by the defendants to Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. Standard Asphalt & Rubber Co., 30 F. (2d) 281, 284, as well as other cases. They were well decided on their facts, ór so we now assume. The facts do not suggest the inference, that the effect of the infringement was to open up a market that would otherwise have been lost.
4. The allowance of the saving effected by the use of patented devices. ■
Pittsburgh was the owner of twenty-six patents which it used for its own benefit in the making of its glass. The claim is made that if the glass is . not to be taken on the basis of. market value, there must at least be an allowance of a reasonable royalty as compensation for the economies effected through the- patented devices. But this is to misconceive utterly the position of an infringer accounting for illicit profits. “An infringer cannot be heard to say that his superior skill or intelligence enabled him to realize profits by his infringement which a person of less skill might not have realized.”
Lawther
v.
Hamilton,
5. The method to be employed in stating an account.
Sales of the infringing product were not made at a level price. At times the price was high; at others it was low.
*458
The owner of the patent in holding the infringers to an accounting is not confined to all or nothing. There maybe an acceptance of transactions resulting in a gain with a rejection of transactions resulting in a loss. Upon a statement of an account, a patentee is not looked upon as a “quasi-partner of the infringers,” under a duty to contribute to the cost of the infringing business as a whole.
McKee Glass Co.
v.
H. C. Fry Glass Co.,
The privilege of election is not contested by the defendants if costs as well as prices can be ascertained with precision. They take the ground, however, that if such precision is unattainable, the privilege must fail. But the master has found, and the parties are agreed, that in a business of this order there is no method of accounting, not impracticably burdensome, whereby the costs of operation can be apportioned and distributed except upon an average basis. At all evénts, if such a method was available, the defendants did not use it. They kept their books upon the basis of the method they decry, and measured loss or gain accordingly. Average cost, even if not identical with actual cost, is the best approximation known to accountants. Cf.
Norfolk & Western R. Co.
v.
North Carolina,
*459 6. Damages, interest and an inspection of the books.
The master advised an award of damages measured by a reasonable royalty on the amount of the defendants’ sales. R. S. § 4921; 35 U. S. C. § 70. This was done on the assúmption that the complainant had been unable to make proof of actual damages by reason of diverted sales, and that the defendants were not accountable for profits for the reason that the business had been conducted at a loss. Much of the discussion of this subject in the briefs and at the bar may be discovered to be moot when the account has been restated in accordance with the principles laid down in this opinion.
If, however, an award of damages upon the basis of a reasonable royalty becomes appropriate again, we think that interest should run from the date when the damages are liquidated, and not, as by the present decree, from the date of the last infringement.
Crosby Valve Co.
v.
Safety Valve Co., supra,
at pp. 457, 458;
Tilghman
v.
Proctor,
A word is needed in conclusion as to the asserted right of the defendants to examine the complainant’s books. The defendants insist that with the aid of an inspection they can show that actual damages were suffered by reason of diverted sales, and damages so substantial as to forbid the award of a reasonable royalty, a substituted method of assessment to be used if other standards fail. It is not easy to see how the diversion of business, a negative condition, will be made apparent by the books. As we interpret the record, the defendants did not so contend when they asked for an inspection at the hearing before the master. Their position then was that “the damage to the plaintiff arising out of its alleged loss of sales was inconsiderable in amount.” If, however, it shall appear upon the restatement of the account that in *460 the belief of the defendants, reasonably entertained, an inspection of the books is still material and necessary, the propriety of such a remedy may be reconsidered by the master and. the court in the light of the entire situation developed at that time.
The decree should be modified in accordance with this opinion, and as modified affirmed.
It is so ordered.
