10 F. Cas. 40 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York | 1878
The bill in this case is founded on two patents. One of them [No. 54,860] was granted to Charles B. Clark and Oliver S. Garretson, May 22d, 1866, for an “improved mop-head.” The specification states that the invention consists (1) “in the combination of a collar provided with wings, or their equivalent, which carry the movable jaw, and an adjusting nut with which it is connected by means of a flange and lugs, with a threaded shank and fixed cross-head;” and (2) “in the manner of connecting the wire-frame, which constitutes the movable jaw, with the arms of the collar.” The patent has two claims: “(1) Connecting the nut with the collar which carries the movable jaw, by means of the lugs, or their equivalents, in combination witn the threaded shank of the fixed jaw, arranged and operating substantially as set forth. (2) Connecting the movable jaw with the collar by means of the bows, constructed and operating substantially in the manner and for the purposes specified.” The other patent [No. 67,643] was granted to Oliver S. Garretson, August 13th, 1867, for an “improved mop-head.” The specification states that the invention consists “in constructing that part of the loose jaw that forms the collar in two parts or halves, with the inner surfaces properly grooved to receive and retain the flange or wings of the nut, and to allow it to have a free rotary motion, by which means the parts, with the recesses and rivet-holes, may be cast complete, requiring no drilling or reaming in putting together.” The claim is: “Making the collar of the loose jaw in two parts, so that the nut may be placed between them, and, when connected together, the collar surrounds the nut and retains it in position, for the purpose above set forth.”
In April, 1S75, on final hearing on pleadings and proofs, an interlocutory decree was entered, finding that the defendants had infringed the first claim of the patent of 1866, and the whole claim of the patent of 1867, and decreeing that the plaintiff “recover of the defendants the profits made and received by the defendants, and the damages, if any, over and beyond the amount of such gains and profits, suffered by the complainant, by reason of the infringement and violation of the rights of the complainant, which it is adjudged have been so committed by the defendants,” and referring it to a master, George J. Sicard, Esquire, to take proofs of, and to compute the amount of, the said profits and damages, and report the same to the court, and awarding a perpetual injunction against the defendants. The master has filed his report, by which he finds that the plaintiff has not offered before him evidence of the damage suffered by the plaintiff, or of profits realized by the defendants, by reason of the infringement and violation by th'e defendants of the rights of the plaintiff in the inventions and improvements referred to in the decree, and that the plaintiff is entitled, under said decree, to nominal damages only against the defendants. The master has stated at length his reasons for his finding. He proceeds upon the view that it is settled law, that, when a patent is for an improvement of a machine, the plaintiff can recover only such damages as are occasioned by the use of the improvement, and the inquiry is as to what profit the defendant acquired by the use of the improvement alone, and not by the manufacture of the whole machine. The master states, and the record shows, that all the evidence offered by the plaintiff, has been
There is, thus, a pointed antagonism between the views of the master and those contended for by the plaintiff. 1 have cited, thus, fully, the text of the master’s views, because it would be difficult to express, in more apt words, the considerations properly applicable to the determination of the questions involved in this case. They may be amplified and illustrated, but the master has expressed, with clearness and force, the true principles which, on the evidence before him, apply to this case.
The argument on the part of the plaintiff is, that, at the time the defendants began to infringe, the plaintiff’s mop and the mop of one Taylor held a monopoly of the market, and were not competed with seriously by other mops, or to an extent which interfered with an arrangement which had been made between the proprietors of the patents covering the plaintiff’s mop and the proprietors of the patent covering the Taylor mop, whereby the price of those two mops was maintained at $2 a dozen, affording a profit of at least §1 a dozen; that the defendants sold the infringing mop at $1.75 a dozen; that the plaintiff had an establishment at which he could have made mops enough to fill all ordinary orders for mops; that his mop was known and his trade was established; that the effect of the infringement was to cause a large falling off in the plaintiff’s sales; that it was the taking, without right, of the plaintiff’s patented improvements, which enabled the defendants to enter the mop market, because the plaintiff’s mop and the Taylor mop had substantially driven out of the market all other mops, by making it impossible to sell such other mops at a profit; that, while it is generally true that the patentee of an improvement in an article is not entitled to the profits on the sale of the whole article, the rule is otherwise when, as a matter of fact, the improvement so dominates and controls the article in the market held as an exclusive monopoly by the patentee, that the only way in which the article can be sold at all at a profit, is through the sale of it with the patented improvement; that the advantage which the defendants gained was .a market for mops at a large profit, when there was no other form of mop open to the public by which they could have obtained any considerable sale at a profit; and that the only way to reach a result consonant with the substantial justice of this case, is to regard the mop as an article of commerce, under the operation of laws whereby an improved article will supersede and displace an unimproved one, destroying the possibility of producing it at a profit, and thus-•driving it out of existence, so that the superior article, by virtue of its superiority, dominates in the market until it in turn gives way in the progress of new improvements in its kind.
It is a weak point in the argument for the plaintiff, that it assumes, without sufficient evidence, that the market for the plaintiff’s mop was made solely by the fact that the mop contained the improvements patented by the plaintiff’s patents. This would not follow, even from the fact that the mop, with such improvements, had driven other mops out of the market. Energy, diligence, business tact, superior facilities and skill, and fortuitous circumstances, contribute largely to the success in the market of even an article which has all the superiority, in its line, that is claimed for the plaintiff’s mop. In the present case, there was an especial element, entirely outside of the plaintiff’s patents, which made the manufacture and sale of the’ plaintiff’s mop profitable, and that was the combination' with the owners of the Taylor patent, under which the price of' both mops was fixed at $2 a dozen.
The argument on the part of the plaintiff leads to the conclusion, that, when an article or a machine, with a given patented improvement embodied in it, has a controlling-' preference in the market, over the article or machine which does not embody such ito-provement, it must be conclusively inferred that such preference is due to the improvement; and that the patentee, in case of infringement, is entitled to the profits made by the infringer from the manufacture and sale of the whole article or machine, and is entitled, as damages, to the profits he would have made on the manufacture and sale of an equal number of entire articles or machines made and sold by the infringer. This would often cause a small improvement on a costly machine to draw to itself very large profits, entirely out of proportion to the relation existing between the improvement and the rest of the machine, and, in cases where the unpatented parts of the machine were quite as indispensable to the machine as the patented improvements, and even more indispensable. The profit on the entire machine would virtually become the license fee for the use of the patented improvement. In the case of a machine em
The plaintiff’s exceptions to the master’s report are all of them overruled. Those which relate to the admission of testimony objected to by the plaintiff, (conceding that such objections can be availed of by exceptions to the master’s report,) become immaterial, in view of the fact, that, because the -plaintiff failed to give adequate evidence as to profits and damages, the defendants were not put upon their defence in that respect, and it is unimportant whether they gave ■competent evidence or no evidence. If the •evidence objected to is all stricken out, the defendants are protected by the plaintiff’s failure. They are not called upon to rebut until the plaintiff has made out a case. Black v. Munson [Case No. 1,463]. The l'th exception, that the master excluded material evidence offered by the plaintiff, and sustained the defendants’ objections thereto, is too general. The 19th exception, that the master received in evidence testimony offered by the defendants, and overruled the plaintiff’s several objections thereto, is too general.
The exceptions being overruled, the plaintiff asks that the case be referred back to the master, with instructions setting forth the principles on which the proper assessment of damages and profits should be made, and directing the master to receive such further evidence pertinent thereto as the parties may offer. This application is not made on .any showing that the plaintiff failed, through inadvertence, to give other or further evidence, or that there exists any other or further evidence which he can give. The idea ■of inadvertence is negatived by the entry on the record, before referred to, at the close of the plaintiff’s testimonj', when the defendants moved to dismiss the proceedings on the ground assigned. No proper foundation is laid for granting the application.
There must be a decree in accordance with the master’s report, and awarding to the plaintiff the costs of the suit, except the costs of the reference before the master, and of his report, and of the exceptions, and of the hearing thereon, and awarding to the defendants the costs of such reference, and report, and exceptions, and hearing.