We decided these appeals in 1935
(2
Cir.,
The alleged patent infringements were of two classes: (1) the replacement of new, for worn-out, parts in distributors and other ignition devices, sold by the plaintiff and others; and (2) the direct infringement of the Wollenweber patent (No. 1,669,888). As to the first, so far as the defendant’s “breaker-arms” and the like replaced worn-out parts of apparatus sold by the plaintiff, the sales were not infringements at all. The plaintiff’s argument appears to be that when a “contact point”, for example, is worn out, the buyer is licensed to replace only that, though to do so will cost more than to buy and install the “breaker-arm” which contains it. In Automotive Equipment Co. v. Connecticut T. & E. Co.,
In ‘addition to the supply of new parts for apparatus sold by the plaintiff, it charges the defendant with supplying repair parts for infringing articles sold by others. It is of course true that as to these the plaintiff gave no implied license, and, if the evidence stopped there, we should have to consider the validity of the patents. But, when scrutinized, the charge becomes baseless, and merely serves further to illustrate the plaintiff’s purpose to centre in itself a monopoly of the whole business. The only evidence that the defendant has furnished repair parts to the users of infringing apparatus concerns “Delco-Remy” and “Northeast” parts, sold by the United Motors Service, a branch of the Delco Remy Corporation. The plaintiff, in conjunction with that company and four others, got up and published a joint catalogue for the year 1932, in which appear, side by side, the “service parts” of both companies. The sale of parts, jointly advertised in this way, certainly could not be an infringement, and the defendant could not in its turn be a contributory infringer, unless it were. The plaintiff also vaguely charges that the defendant sells repair parts for apparatus sold by still other manufacturers, but we can find nothing in the record to support the assertion. It is apparent that the whole *568 point is an afterthought anyway; the judge did not mention it in his opinion, it .does not appear in the assignments of error, and -the bill of particulars mentioned only “Delco-Remy” and “Northeast” parts.
Finally, we think that claims 3 and 11 of Wollenweber’s patent are not valid over Ericson (No. 1,385,368) and Schwarze (No. 1,286,803); and we can see no reason to add to the discussion of that question in our earlier opinion.
Other points are raised, but they too were adequately dealt with before. After carefully going over the case again, we can find no reason to change our first disposition of it.
Decree reversed; bill dismissed. •
