Lеonard R. Kahn appeals the order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, 1 granting General Motors’ motion to stay the action before it, in favor of an action subsequently filed against Kahn and Hazeltine Research Inc. by Motorola, Inc. in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. We vacate the stay and remand for further proceedings.
Background
Leonard R. Kahn is the inventor of United States Patent No. 4,018,994 (“the ’994 patent”). The action here appealed (called “the New York action”) was commenced by Mr. Kahn on April 29, 1988. He charged General Motors with infringement of claims 53 and 54 of the ’994 patent based on General Motors’ manufacture and sale of certain AM stеreo receivers, and by amended complaint he also charged General Motors with certain tortious conduct in respect of Kahn’s AM stereo broadcast transmission system. Kahn sought a preliminary and final injunction and damages.
On May 27, 1988 Motorola filed a declaratory judgment action in Illinois (“the Illinois action”) against Kahn and Hazeltine Resеarch, Kahn’s licensee, seeking judgment that the ’994 patent is invalid, unenforceable, and not infringed by Motorola or by AM stereo receiver manufacturers, such as General Motors, that incorporate certain integrated circuits into their AM stereo receivers.
On June 10, 1988, at General Motors’ request, the district court in the New York action issued an Ordеr to Show Cause why the New York action should not be stayed pending final determination of the Illinois
The New York action was ordered stayed in all respects, the New York court holding that this was merely a “custоmer suit” against General Motors; that all issues would be settled in the litigation with Motorola in Illinois, as to all potential and actual infringers; and that the balance of convenience did not bar the stay.
I
General Motors raises the threshold question of whether the district court’s stay of the New York action is a final decision or otherwise an appеalable order.
In
Kerotest Mfg. Co. v. C-O-Two Fire Equip. Co.,
The manufacturer who is charged with infringing a patent cannot stretch the Federal Declaratory Judgments Act to give him a paramount right to choose the forum for trying out questiоns of infringement and validity. He is given an equal start in the race to the courthouse, not a headstart.
Id.
Kahn argues that the district court, by staying the New York action for a prolonged and indefinite period, not only denied his request for a preliminary injunction against General Motors, but barred prosecution of his tortious conduct claims until, at best, complеtion of the Illinois action. He asserts irreparable harm, based on the demise of his business, and invokes the safeguard of 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a).
See Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. v. Mayacamas,
We test the circumstances at bar against the criteria set forth in
Carson v. American Brands, Inc.,
Decrees staying an action based on an erroneously applied customer suit exception to the rules disfavoring stays have, without more, uniformly received interlocutory review.
William Gluckin & Co. v. International Playtex Corp.,
Recognition must be given to the strong public policy favoring expeditious resolution of litigation. The case before us is not a matter of an “order by a federal court that relates only to the conduct or progress of litigation before that court”, ordinarily not having the effect of an injunction and therefore not appealable under § 1292(a)(1).
Gulfstream,
Kahn’s claims against General Motors involving allegedly tortious conduct concerning Kahn’s AM stereo broadcast transmission system are not based on the ’994 рatent. The Illinois case, brought by Motorola, includes no jurisdiction over General Motors. The potential lengthy and indefinite stay of these claims pending resolution of an entirely different issue involving different parties will deprive these claims of practical remedy. It is the duty of courts to avoid unnecessary delay in resolving the rights of litigants. “[A]n order which is tо continue by its terms for an immoderate stretch of time is not to be upheld as moderate because conceivably the court that made it may be persuaded at a later time to undo what it has done.”
Landis v. North Am. Co.,
We conclude that the district court’s final Order staying the litigation before it is an appealable order.
II
General Motors argues that еven if the stay order is appealable, the New York district court acted within its discretionary authority in staying the proceeding before it, pending the outcome of Motorola’s Illinois action. Kahn responds that his primary right to choose the forum, the balance of hardship, and the court’s erroneous belief that the Illinois court would resolve his disputes with General Motors, show that the New York court did indeed abuse its discretion.
Kahn states that Motorola is not infringing the '994 patents; that the Illinois suit can not resolve his claims of patent infringement against General Motors; that in all events it will not resolve his state tort claims against General Motors; that even if Kahn were to prevail in Illinois, that court cаn not provide relief because General Motors is not a party in Illinois; and that irreparable harm will result if he is delayed indefinitely in resolving his claims against General Motors.
The general rule, and the rule in the Second Circuit, is that “as a principle of sound judicial administration, the first suit should have priority,” absent special circumstances.
Gluckin,
In
Gluckin,
The Customer Suit Exception
The customer suit exception is based on the manufacturer’s presumed greater interest in defending its actions against charges of patent infringement; and to guard against possibility of abuse.
See Codex Corp. v. Milgo Elec. Corp.,
Kahn assеrts that the district court erred in identifying Motorola as the manufacturer and General Motors as a simple customer, and that the court’s reference to Motorola as “the real party in interest” based on its “technology” showed misunderstanding of the ’994 patent and its claims.
Patent claims 53 and 54, the only claims at issue in the New York action, are directed to AM stereo receivers. Motorola denies that its technology infringes these claims, or any claims in the ’994 patent. Motorola is not a manufacturer, user, or seller of such receivers. Whether Motorola’s “technology” is used in the AM stereo receivers manufactured and sold by General Motors is pertinent only if Motorola would be liable, under law, for infringement. Motorola’s position, with which Kahn agrees, is that it would not. The labeling of a party as an infringer, or as a mere producer of unpatented “technology”, is not a “semantic game” as General Motors describes it.
See Ciba-Geigy Corp. v. Minnesota Mining and Mfg. Co.,
The district court held that General Motors was simply a customer of Motorola, and that the customer suit exception applies. However, in those cases in which a customer suit exception has been held to favor the forum of the second-filed action, the second action would resolve all charges against thе customers in the stayed suit, including liability for damages. Such undertaking is absent in the case at bar. Were Kahn to prevail against Motorola on the issues raised in Illinois, he would still have to relitigate the question of infringement against General Motors, and perhaps also of validity. And as we have remarked, the Illinois action can not dispose of the tortious conduct claims against General Motors.
Kahn correctly asserts that his damages against General Motors can not be assessed in the Illinois court, not only because General Motors is not a party, but because the measure of General Motors’ obligation for damages and Motorola’s (if any) involve different parameters. Thesе
Decisions staying a “customer action” in favor of a subsequent suit brought by the manufacturer show controlling differences from the case at bar. In
Gluckin,
General Motors relies on
Refac Int’l v. IBM,
The district court stated that General Motors’ manufacture of the completed receiver would make it, at most, a “guilty” customer rather than a manufacturer.
Kahn,
The New York district court stated that the Illinois сourt could enjoin Motorola from manufacturing its integrated circuits and therefore that Motorola could not pass this technology to its customers. This presupposes that there is no other source of the circuits, a supposition disputed by Kahn, and also that Motorola’s “technology” could be an infringement of claims 53 and 54 — although both Mоtorola and Kahn maintain that it can not. The remedy of damages and an injunction against General Motors is not available, since General Motors is not a party in Illinois. It is clear that whatever the outcome involving Motorola, the New York litigation against General Motors would not be resolved.
We conclude that the district court erred in hоlding that the Illinois action would “be an adequate vehicle for the complete and prompt resolution of the issues between the parties,” as required by
Gulfstream,
Other Factors
In accordance with Kerotest, Motorola as a declaratory plaintiff can not move the suit to its choice of forum in order to litigate the same issues that were the basis of Kahn’s complaint in New York, unless Motorola were able to establish sufficient reason for rejection of Kahn’s choice of forum. Absence of entitlement of General Motors to the customer suit exception, the factors of the balance of convenience and the presumptive right of the first litigant to choose the forum weigh heavily in Kahn’s favor.
Although the balanсing of conveniences is in the sound discretion of the district court,
Kerotest,
General Mоtors expressed no view as to its own convenience, for it is not a party in Illinois. Motorola’s asserted convenience is not sufficient reason to invoke the court’s discretionary power to stay the first-filed action.
Bancroft,
There is nо reason to shift to Kahn any inconvenience to Motorola, who was not a party to the suit against General Motors. No sufficient showing was made that the balance of convenience or any other factor favors stay of the New York action in favor of the Illinois action. Precedent shows the general disfavor with which stays are viеwed. In
Landis
the Supreme Court stated that abuse of discretion resides in any “stay of indefinite duration in the absence of a pressing need.”
Landis,
Conclusion
We conclude that the district court exceeded its discretionary authority in granting the stay. The stay is vacated, and the case is remanded to the district court for proceedings on the merits. 4
Costs
Costs in favor of Mr. Kahn.
VACATED AND REMANDED
Notes
.
Kahn v. General Motors Corp.,
. Kahn asserts that this Order was issued without prior notice or a "special cause" finding justifying the urgency of issuing an Order to Show Cause without notice, as required by local rule. In view of our disposition we do not consider this asserted procedural lapse.
. In matters of jurisdictional consequence this court takes guidance from interpretations of the regional circuit in which the сause arose.
. We take note that on October 23, 1989, the District Court for the Northern District of Illinois dismissed Motorola’s suit. We have considered whether the case before us is mooted by this action, and have concluded that such determination can not be made at this stage because of uncertainty as to the status of any possible appeal in Illinois, and in the interest of expeditious reopening of the New York action, in view of Kahn’s assertions that he is prejudiced by delay.
