delivered the opinion of the Court.-.
. ^ There has been long litigation between the parties in this suit, the last stage of which appears in 20 F. (2d) 830. The Wrigley Company was ordered to account for net profits on sales of its ‘ Doublemint ’ gum in a package dress that infringed the Larson Company’s ‘ Wintermint ’ gum package. During the accounting, questions arose that were decided by the Circuit Court of Appeals. To review one of these questions a writ of certiorari was granted by this Court. That question is whether, as held below with modifications that need not be mentioned, the Wrigley Company should be allowed to deduct the federal income and excess profits taxes from the profits with which it is to be charged.
No doubt there are cases in which such a deduction would be proper. But the question cannot be answered by the merely formal reply that if the Larson Company chooses to make the Wrigley Company its agent or trustee
ex maleficio
and to demand the profits made by the agent it must take the burden with the benefit and can have no-more than the agent made in fact. To call'the infringer an agent or.trustee is not to state a fact but merely to indicate a mode of approach and an imperfect analogy by which the wrongdoer will be made to hand over the pro
Decree as to allowance of federal taxes reversed.
