*1005 MEMORANDUM OPINION
Motion of Plaintiff to Dismiss Certain Paragraphs of Defendant’s Second Amended Countercomplaint
Plaintiff, La Salle Street Press, Inc., originally charged defendant, McCormick & Henderson, Inc., with infringement of the former’s United States Letters Patent No. 3,136,248 entitled “Process and Apparatus for Temporarily Indicating Corrections in Text of Printed Matter.” Essentially, this patent describes a printing process which allows one reading proofs or “galley sheets” to readily check corrections made in succeeding proofs without re-reading the entire document. As such, the system is of the greatest utility for proofreading complex legal or financial documents. Defendant moved for summary judgment on the issue of infringement and plaintiff filed a cross-motion for summary judgment. On May 29, 1968, we sustained plaintiff’s cross-motion.
Since that time, defendant has submitted its second amended counterclaim. In paragraph 13 of Count II of that counterclaim, defendant alleges that plaintiff has attempted to monopolize a portion of the Chicagoland printing business by demanding that defendant pay an exhorbitant license fee under United States Letters Patent No. 3,136,248 while plaintiff offered other firms licenses under said patent at substantially lower rates. Defendant further alleges, in paragraph 14 and 15, that certain acts of the plaintiff are in violations of 15 U.S.C. §§ 13(a) and 45. Under Rule 12(b), Fed.R.Civ. P., plaintiff has moved to dismiss paragraphs 14 and 15 of defendant’s second amended counterclaim.
Defendant acknowledges that “there is no specific provision in the Robinson-Pat-man Act” applicable to the alleged discriminatory licensing practices of the plaintiff. (Defendant’s Brief Opposing Plaintiff’s Motion, at 3). Nevertheless, referring specifically to 15 U.S.C. § 13 (a), it urges that plaintiffs actions are in violation of a Congressional intent that price discrimination in patent license rates is unlawful.
Section 2(a) of the Clayton Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 13(a), prohibits price discrimination between purchasers of similar commodities where such discrimination has an anticompetitive effect. For a claim to be properly grounded under this section, the transaction must, among other things, involve tangible commodities of a like grade and quality. See Rowe, Price Discrimination Under the Robinson-Patman Act 59 (1962). This tangibility requirement has been applied in the Seventh Circuit in Columbia Broadcasting System v. Amana Refrigeration,
Citing no case for support, but attempting to bring a patent licensing agreement within the statutory framework of Section 13(a), defendant does not contend that the patented process is a tangible item, but urges instead that the commodity involved is the “printed matter produced by the patented method.” (Defendant’s Brief, supra, at 5). However, this is not sufficient. “To the extent generalization is possible, the rationale of the cases is that price quotations fusing physical elements with
dominant
intangible factors cannot beget price discriminations in commodity sales within the ambit of the Act.” Rowe, supra at 61. In Tri-State Broadcasting Co. v. United Press International Inc.,
*1006
(a). Id. at 269. The court recognized that “(v)irtually no transfer of an intangible in the nature of a service, right, or privilege can be accomplished without the incidental involvement of tangibles,” in that case, written news reports, but concluded that the dominant nature of the transaction, in that case, the right and privilege of broadcasting the supplied news and not merely the purchase of the physical reports, was the purpose of the transaction. Id. at 270. In large measure the court relied on the Sixth Circuit’s decision in General Shale Products Corp. v. Struck Construction Co.,
The sale of a patent license is the sale of the right or privilege of using a particular method or process, in this case a proofreading process. As such, it is quite similar to the rights of access to a news service or the broadcasting or newspaper public which have been at issue in the
Columbia
and
Tri-State
eases. As such, it does not fall within that substantial, but decidedly limited, family of tangible and movable chattels which is covered by the term “commodity.” Gaylord Shops, Inc. v. Pittsburgh Miracle Mile Town and Country Shopping Center, Inc.,
We turn now to a consideration of defendant’s case under 15 U.S.C. § 45. The purpose of this section is to enable the Federal Trade Commission to stop unfair methods of competition in their incipiency. Federal Trade Commission v. Cement Institute,
“The Federal Trade Commission Act while declaring certain acts and practices unlawful, gives no right of action to private litigants based on such unlawful acts. The Federal Trade Commission is set up to enforce the provision of the Act, and relief from alleged violations must be sought from the Commission in the first instance and not from the courts.” Samson Crane Co. v. Union National Sales, Inc.,87 F.Supp. 218 , 221 (D.Mass.1949), affirmed per curiam,180 F.2d 896 (1st Cir. 1950).
LaPeyre v. Federal Trade Commission,
In summary, a patent license agreement involves the sale of an intangible right of use which is not covered by the term “commodity” in 15 U.S.C. § 13(a). Relief under 15 U.S.C. *1007 § 45 must be afforded by the Federal Trade Commission and not the judiciary. Thus, defendant’s allegations in paragraphs 14 and 15 of its second amended counterclaim fail to state a claim upon which relief can be granted and plaintiff’s motion to dismiss those paragraphs with prejudice is granted.
