53 F. 592 | 2d Cir. | 1892
This is an appeal from an order of the circuit court granting an injunction pendente lite restraining the defendant from making, using, or vending the incandescent electric lamps of the patent granted to Thomas A. Edison, January 27, 1880, No. 223,898, of which the complainants are the owners. The order was granted pro forma, in the view that a final. disposition of the questions involved might be promptly made by the decision of this court. The validity of the patent, and the infringement of its second claim by such lamps as the defendant makes, were adjudged by the circuit court for the southern district of New York, July 14, 1891, in a decree at final hearing. That suit was brought against the United States Electric Lighting Company, and was defended by the Westinghouse Electric Company, a corporation which since October 10, 1888, has been the owner of the business carried on in the name of the present defendant. The business of the defendant consists exclusively in the manufacture of the infringing lamps. The decree of the circuit court adjudging the validity of the second claim of the patent, and its infringement by lamps such as are made by the defendant, was upon an appeal affirmed by this court October 4, 1892. See 52 Fed. Rep. 300. That decree, among other things, awarded the complainants a perpetual injunction. The present suit was brought subsequently to that affirmance.
It is apparent that the order for the present injunction is, in effect, one to extend the terms of an injunction already granted in a suit determined by the court of last resort between the same parties, or their privies, so as to include a new infringement. For an understanding of the grounds upon which the defendant contends the injunction ought not to have been granted, the following narrative is necessary: For several years subsequent to 1880, the Edison Company and the United States Electric Lighting Company were the only manufacturers of incandescent lighting apparatus in this country doing any considerable business. The United States Electric Lighting Company began manufacturing incandescent lighting apparatus, including the lamps which have been held to be an infringement of the Edison patent, in the summer of 1880, and continued in such business until a recent period. In May, 1885, a suit was brought against it upon the present patent. Another corporation, the Consolidated Electric Lighting Company, was organized in September, 1882, and began the manufacture of incandescent lighting apparatus. This company was the owner of and operated under what are known as the “Sawyer-Man Patents” for electric lighting apparatus; and under these patents it assumed that it had the exclusive right to make - and sell the lamp claimed in the patent in suit. In May, 1885, suit was brought against it by the Edison Electric Light Company upon the patent in suit, and about the same time it brought suit against the Edison Company for infringement of its own patent. In 1883 a corporation known as the “Tliomson-IIouston Company” began the manufacture and sale of electric apparatus for lighting and power. As the result of negotiations between the Consolidated Electric Lighting Company and the Thomson-Houston Company, the Sawyer-Man Company, the present defendant, was organized in September,
The defendant insists that the preliminary injunction should not have been granted because, (1) owing to the laches of the owners of the patent in asserting their claims and enforcing them, a large capital has been invested in the manufacture and sale, not only of the lamps, but also in electric lighting apparatus, which will be greatly depreciated in value unless the lamps can be used with it, and that an injunction will cripple and perhaps ruin the local ilhiminating companies who have invested in the plants of the Westinghouse Companies if they are prevented from using the lamp of the patent, and thereby subject to great inconvenience those whom these plants furnish with light, and displace a large number of persons who are employed in operating the plants; (2) because the complainants and the other corporations with whom the complainants are associated, the competitors of the Westinghouse Company in the business of making and supplying electric power and lighting, have entered into
The question whether there has been any laches in asserting the patent was considered by the circuit, court of appeals upon the appeal from the decree of the circuit court, and that court declared that no case was shown to authorize the refusal of an injunction on any theory of laches or equitable estoppel by reason of undue delay in bringing suit, or acquiescence in known infringement. If the owners of the patent proceeded with due diligence as respects the United States Lighting Company, no cither infringers of the patent can he heard to complain with reason that suit was not brought against them upon the patent previous to the adjudication of its validity in the circuit court, it is a matter of notoriety that that litigation vas a very expensive and arduous one; and its progress must have been familiar to all tliose who were extensively interested in having the patent defeated. As regards the present defendant, there are no new' facts of importance bearing upon the question of laches to distinguish the case from that shown in the former suit. We see no reason for changing the opinion expressed by this court in the former case, and do not deem it necessary, because the same defense has again been urged upon substantially the same state of facts, to add anything to that opinion. Every one of the manufacturing corporations. tlie competitors of the Edison Companies, commenced their operations with a knowledge of the existence of the patent in suit. They were controlled by business men of intelligence and experience. Their promoters and managers may have believed, and probably did, that, the patent could not he successfully maintained; but they entered upon the business with an understanding of its risks, and of the consequences which would befall them as infringers, if the patent should he sustained. "None of them can now he justly heard to say that an injunction which is essential, if not indispensable, to the protection of the owners of the patent and their licensees ought not to he granted because of the great pecuniary loss which may result. If, in consequence of being deprived of the use of the lamps, their investments in other electric apparatus will he greatly depreciated, they must take the consequences.
The users who ha,ve supplied themselves with electric lighting plants from the infringers, which required for their operation lamps of the patent, are of course infringers; bub those who did so before the decision of the circuit court sustaining the patent, and at a time when judicial decisions in foreign countries interpreting the patent wore in conflict, and who are now willing to accept their lamps from the complainants upon reasonable terms, have much stronger equities than the manufacturing infringers. These equities the court will not disregard; but what would he reasonable terms, if an appli
We are not disposed to investigate upon the present case the character of the combination which has been formed under the name of the “General Electric Company.” Whether that combination is intended to fetter competition, and is illegal as one in restraint of trade, is a question which we should not undertake to decide upon the evidence before us and in a suit to which it is not a party. The present complainants are entitled by the patent laws to a monopoly, for the term of the patent, of the manufacture and sale of the lamps made under it. The right to this monopoly is the very foundation of the patent system. They do not lose that right merely because they may have joined in a combination with others, holding other patents securing similar monopolies, which combination may, when judicially examined in a proper forum, be held to be unlawful. We do not feel justified in assuming upon the facts before us in the present suit that the use which the complainants propose to make of the injunction — an injunction which seems necessary to secure their monopoly and make'their patent fruitful — will be such as to promote any other monopoly. When it shall be made to appear that some one, to whom in fairness and good conscience these complainants should sell their lamps, has been arbitrarily refused them, save upon oppressive and unreasonable terms, it will be time to consider whether the complainants should be allowed to continue in possession of the injunction.
The alleged estoppel seems to be farfetched and shadowy. The history which has been given shows that, before the Sawyer-Man Company was organized, litigation upon the patent in suit and upon the Sawyer-Man patents had commenced; that in 1887 the stock in the Sawyer-Man Company owned by the Thomson-Houston Company was sold to the Consolidated Company, a party to the suits; and that subsequently, in 1888, the Westinghouse Company, an actual party to the litigation, bought that portion of the stock from the Consolidated Company which had been owned by the Thomson-Houston Company. The estoppel lacks the elements which ordinarily create an estoppel in pais, namely, an injury or a harm to one person, resulting from a reliance upon the acts, conduct, or declarations of another, in which there was an element of bad faith or willful neglect of duty. The history of the connection of the Thomson-Houston Company from 1886 to 1888 with the Consolidated Company, and with the Sawyer-Man Company, the defendant, shows that all these companies knew of the existence of the litigations in which the life of the present patent and of the Sawyer-Man patent was at stake. There can be no charge of concealment or constructive fraud. When the sale and the agreement of 1888 were made, there was no implied obligation upon the Thomson-Houston Company to remain in alliance with the Westinghouse system. The con
The injunction order appealed from should be modified so as to cover only lamps made in infringement of the second claim of the patent, the other claims not having been infringed, according to the adjudication of the circuit court or of this court. It should also contain a provision reserving the light to the defendant to move hereafter for the vacation, suspension, or modification of the injunction upon proof of specific instances of refusal on the part of the complainants, or either of them, to supply the lamps of the patent upon terms reasonable, under the circumstances of the particular case, to the owners of electric lighting plants which were Installed before the rendition of the interlocutory decree of the circuit court sustaining the validity of the patent.