199 F. 185 | N.D.N.Y. | 1912
The complainant in its bill of complaint alleges infringements by the defendant of two patents owned by the complainant for noninterference fire alarm signal boxes, viz., patent No. 553,873, dated February 4, 1896, applied for June 28, 1890, for “noninterfering signal apparatus,” issued upon the application of. John J. Ruddick, and known as the “Ruddick” or “later Ruddick” patent, and patent No. 553,839, issued upon the application of Frederick W. Cole. The bill of complaint charges, as do the moving papers, that the defendant has made two types of infringing boxes. The defendant's reply papers assert that the defendant has made but one of these two Apes of boxes. P'or the purposes of this motion, therefore, the complainant accepts this assertion, and presses the motion for a preliminary injunction with respect to the type of box which the defendant admits it has made and sold. As this type of box is claimed to infringe the Ruddick patent, No. 553,873, only, the complainant now bases its motion upon the validity and alleged infringement of said Ruddick patent only. This Ruddick patent, as well as the Cole patent referred to, were adjudged valid in a suit between the Gamewell Fire Alarm Telegraph Company, the present complainant, and Mayor and Council of City of Bayonne, N. J., defendants, January 25, 1912 (see 194 Fed. 147), and both patents were held infringed. It is not denied that the then existing Star Electric Company, of Binghamton, N. Y.,
In another action for infringement of the said Ruddick patent, brought by the same complainant against the Hackensack Improvement Coinmission (199 Fed. 182), Judge Cross again held the patents valid and infringed, and it is contended on the part of the complainant here that the present defendant assumed the defense in that case, and admitted infringement of the Ruddick patent by making and selling the fire alarm signal box now complained of. The defendant here, the present Star Electric Company, absolutely denies this, and by an amended answer has put this question squarely in issue, as well as the validity of the said Ruddick patent, if construed so broadly as to cover the structure complained of and also denies infringement. The validity of the said Ruddick patent is in issue, as well as the question of infringement, and after carefully considering affidavits presented on both sides I cannot hold that this defendant has ever admitted the validity of the Ruddick patent or infringement, or that there has been any adjudication whatever against this defendant in favor of this complainant to the effect that the Ruddick patent is valid, or that the structure complained of is an infringement thereof, if valid.
In this case the defendant corporation was organized in July, 1910, to purchase, and did purchase, the assets of the old corporation, Star Electric Company, which became a bankrupt, and has been in business ever since. There is no claim or pretense that it is insolvent, or that it 'is or will be unable to respond to any judgment or decree for damages, or profits, or both, that complainant may secure against it. The Ruddick patent will expire in February, 1913. An injunction is npt of paramount importance to the com
Conceding the patent to be valid, we still have the question of its proper construction, and whether or not it covers the device now made and sold by the defendant, and here there is great doubt in-any event. In Scott v. Tazell (C. C.) 169 Fed. 661, it was held that a preliminary injunction to restrain alleged infringement of a patent should not be granted, when the question of infringement is in serious doubt. And in Wright Co. v. Herring-Curtiss Co., 180 Fed. 110, 103 C. C. A. 31, reversing the order of the Circuit Court, 177 Fed. 257, it was held that a preliminary injunction against an alleged infringer of an unadjudicated patent should not be granted, when the question of infringement is concededly one of fact as to the operation of defendant’s device, and the showing is entirely by ex parte affidavits, which are conflicting. Here there has been an adjudication as to the validity of the patent in suit in two cases, but both by the same judge, and one of these cases is now pending and undetermined on appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals. There was no real question presented to the court in either of those cases for its determination whether the device now in question constitutes an infringement.
“In this record, upon the question of fact above stated, there is a sharp conflict of evidence; numerous affiants testifying. All their statements are ex parte affidavits, made without an opportunity to test their probative force by cross-examination. Under such circumstances, it seems to us, irrespective of any of the other questions in the case, that infringement was not so clearly established as to justify a preliminary injunction. See decisions of this court in Westinghouse v. Montgomery, 139 Fed. 868, 71 C. C. A. 582; Hall Signal Co. v. General Railway Co., 153 Fed. 907, 82 C. C. A. 653. The order is reversed, with costs.”
The motion is denied, on condition defendant keeps an accurate account of all signal boxes made, and of all sold, with name of purchaser, and date when sold, and price for which sold.
So ordered.