157 F. 236 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1907
Letters patent Nos.’581,123, 581,124, arid 603,428, dated April 20, 1897, and May 3, 1898, were issued to the complainant for improvements in binders, loose sheet binders, and temporary binders. Iri consideration of the payment of royalties and commissions on'the manufacture and sale of the patented devices, the complainant, who was the inventor, assigned the patents to the defendant. It Was in terms agreéd — and the agreement is evidenced by two contracts referred 'to in the bill — that by the assignment of the
The defendant has filed a demurrer alleging that the court is without jurisdiction, that the relief sought cannot be granted because complainant has an adequate remedy at law, and that the bill on its face shows that this is not an action for the infringement of a patent. I am inclined, however, to hold that the complainant is entitled to the equitable interposition of this court, even though no relief by way of injunction is demanded. The gist of the bill upon which the accounting seems to depend is the manufacture and sale of devices by the defendant which are protected by the patents in suit. It was obviously the duty of the defendant to have protected the complainant against infringers, but, taking the allegations of the bill as true, it has in fact become an infringer by the manufacture and sale of the Deckert device. Whatever rights the defendant had to make and sell the devices in suit were obtained from the assignment of the patents by the complainant, and in my judgment the bill sufficiently charges infringement of the complainant’s patented devices by the use of the Deckert construction with the object, as claimed, of depriving the patentee of his royalties and commissions. A decision of the controversy involves the construction of the patents and claims in suit and of the Deckert patent to ascertain whether there has been infringement by the defendant, and therefore I think this is an action, suit, or controversy under the patent law and within the jurisdiction of this court. The law is well settled that when a royalty has been established or a license granted for the manufacture and sale of a patented article, the recovery of damages for failure to comply with the agreement must be in an action at law; but in this case, as already intimated, it is essential to establish the infringement by the defendant of the patents in suit before there can be an accounting. The defendant principally contends that as no relief by way of injunction is asked in the prayer, the bill, on the authority of Root v. Railway Company, 105 U. S. 189, 26 L. Ed. 975, lacks equity and must be dismissed. Ordinarily this contention probably would be entitled to controlling weight; but, as pointed out
“The most general ground for equitable interposition is to insure to the patentee the enjoyment of his specific right by injunction against a continuance. of the infringement; but that grounds of equitable relief may arise, other than by way of injunction, as where the title of the complainant is equitable merely, or equitable interposition is necessary on account of the impediments which prevent a resort to remedies purely legal, and such equity may arise out of, and inhere in, the nature of the account itself, springing from special and peculiar circumstances which disable the patentee from a recovery at law altogether; or render his remedy in a legal tribunal difficult, inadequate, and incomplete, and as such cases cannot be defined more exactly, each must rest upon its own particular circumstances as furnishing a clear and satisfactory ground of exception from the general rule.”
Complainant’s title to the patents is equitable, and an accounting of royalties and commissions is apparently dependent upon whether the Deckert device is an infringement of complainant’s patents; and, although the damages may be readily determinable on account of the provisions of the contracts to pay royalties and commissions, yet the nature and extent of the use by the defendant of the Deckert device is involved in the question of infringement or its pretended use by the. defendant.
The demurrer is overruled, with costs. The defendant is directed to answer within 20 days.