delivered the opinion of the Court.
Philip A. Luckett is a citizen óf Connecticut. He brought this bill in equity in thé District Court of the United States for the District of New Jersey against Del-
Section 51 of the Judicial Code provides that where the jurisdiction is founded on the fact that the action is between citizens of different States, suits shall be brought only in the district of the residence of either the plaintiff or the defendant. The requisite diverse citizenship between the plaintiff and the defendants exists in this suit, but the District of New Jersey is not the district of the residence of either the plaintiff or the defendants. And against defendants’ objection, jurisdiction on that ground can not be sustained.
The plaintiff asserts that jurisdiction exists as of a suit under the patent laws under the Judicial, Code, § 24, par. 7, § 48 and § 256. Section 48 provides that “ in suits for the infringement 6f letters patent,, the.District Courts of the United States shall have jurisdiction in law or in equity in the district of which the defendant is an inhabitant, or in any district in which the defendant, whether a person, partnership or corporation, shall have committed acts of infringement and have a regular and established place of business.” The question in. this case, then, is whether, it being averred that the defendants regularly do business in New Jersey, and have made and sold there the patented articles referred to in the bill, its allegations make tíie suit one arising under the patent laws. ’
The averments of the bill are that Delpark, Incorporated, has acquired control of the stock of the Parker, Ford & Dick corporation, and the defendants are acting together; that the Delpark corporation refuses to pay to "Luckett any royalties due under its exclusive license of the generic patent; that the Parker, Ford & Dick corporation refuses to pay any royalties under plaintiff’s assignment to it of the specific patent, and refuses to push the sale of “ My Pal ” suits; that this refusal is to prevent competition of the “ My Pal ” suits with the Delpark suits,
The seventeenth paragraph in the bilí, and the only one which uses the word “ infringement,” is as follows:
“(XVII) And your orator further shows unto your Honors, that Delpark, Incorporated, is a large concern, with substantial capital, and ever since the issue of Letters Patent No. 1,284,391 on November 12,1918, has been actively engaged in* the manufacture and sale of the Del-park garment so-called, which infringes the claims of the said Letters Patent and also the claims of Letters Patent No. 1,156,301; and that large numbers of the said garment have been made and sold upon which royalties are now due to .your orator, the amount of which he is wholly unable to state with definiteness, but which is far larger than three thousand dollars, exclusive of interest and costs; and that though often requested as hereinbefore set out, no accounting has ever been had between your orator and Delpark, Incorporated, or Parker, . Ford &, Dick, Inc., either as to royalties due or as to damages for failure to observe'the contract to exploit the ‘My Pal’ garment.”
The plaintiff sets out thirteen prayers f6r equitable relief. He asks that the defendants file statements of the garments made and sold under both patents containing retail prices at which the garments were sold, in order to show the royalties due; also a statement of the orders received for. the “ My Pal ” garments but not filled, with prices, to show the royalties lost; and that they be compelled to permit access to their books, of account. He further prays that the Parker, Ford & Dick Corporation be required to execute a formal reassignment of Letters
In prayer J, the plaintiff asks that a preliminary injunction issue against both defendants to prevent their making sale or delivery of the so-called Delpark garment or the so-called “ My Pal ” garment, or any other garment infringing the claims of the two letters patent of-the plaintiff, until further order of court. By prayer K, a similar permanent injunction is asked. There is a-prayer for an order sending the cause to a master to take and state the account of profits and damages both as to royalties due and accrued, and as to damages for suppression of the “ My Pal ” garment and to report the same to the court.
We do not think that this suit arises under the patent laws. Its main and declared purpose is to enforce the rights of the plaintiff under his contracts with defendants for royalties and for pushing the sales of “ My Pal ” garment. In addition he seeks the reconveyance of one patent, on forfeiture for failure of condition, to remove a cloud on his title and a cancellation of all agreements of license of the other, for their breach, in order presumably that, unembarrassed by, his assignment and licenses, he may enjoin future infringement.
It is a general rule that a suit by a patentee for royalties under a license or assignment granted by him, or for any remedy in respect of a contract permitting use of the patent is not a suit under the patent laws of the United; States, and can not bé maintained in a federal court as such.
Wilson
v.
Sandford,
In Wilson v. Sandjord, supra, a bill in equity was filed in a federal circuit court setting forth complainant’s ownership of a patent, an assignment to. defendants of a license in consideration of five promissory notes, with a condition of reversion to complainant on failure to pay any note. The bill averred that the first two notes were not paid, insisted that the license was forfeited by the failure and the licensor was fully reinvested at law and in equity with all his original rights, that the defendants were using the patented machine and were infringing the patent, prayed an account of profits since forfeiture, a temporary and permanent injunction, and a re-investiture of title in the complainant. On demurrer, the bill was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction as- not arising under the patent laws. -Chief Justice Taney, speaking for the Court, said:
“The rights of the parties depend altogether upon common law and equity principles. The object of the bill is to'have the contract set aside and declared to be forfeited ; and the prayer is, ‘that the appellant’s reinvestiture of title to the license granted to the appellees, by reason of the forfeiture of the contract, may be sanctioned by the Court,’ and for an injunction. But the injunction he asks for is in consequence of the decree of the Court sanctioning the forfeiture. He alleges no ground for an injunction unless the contract is set aside. And if the case made in the bill was a fit one for relief in equity, it is very clear that whether the contract ought to be declared forfeited or not, in a court of chancery, depended altogether upon rules and principles of equity, and in no degree whatever upon any act of Congress concerning patent rights;”
The bill in the present case can not in any respéct be distinguished from that in
Wilson
v.
Sandford,
as this
In the common feature of
Wilson
v.
Sandford
and the case before us, jurisdiction fails because the. complainant in his bill seeks forfeiture of licensed rights in equity before he can rely on the patent laws to enjoin infringement of his patent rights and obtain damages therefor. There has been no variation from the authority and effect of the case cited on this point.
New Marshall Co.
v.
Marshall Engine Co.,
The cases cited as qualifying
Wilson
v.
Sandford
are
White
v.
Rankin,
In
White
v.
Rankin, supra,
it was held that a bill in equity for the infringement of letters patent for an invention,' in the usual form, which did not mention or refer to any contract with the defendants for the use of the patent, could not be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, because the defendants in a plea set up an agreement in writing between the plaintiffs and one of the defendants to assign to him an interest in the patent on certain conditions which he alleged he had performed, and certain other
In
Excelsior Wooden Pipe Company
v.
Pacific Bridge Company, supra,
an exclusive licensee filed a bill against the patentee and another party to whom the patentee, had granted a conflicting license. This Court, held that the patent jurisdiction of the court was not ousted by reason of allegations in the answer that the plaintiff had forfeited all his rights under the license through his failure to comply with its terms and conditions, by reason of which the license had been revoked by the patentee. Complainant was an exclusive licensee which sought damages for infringement of its license and the patent against the patentee and one to whom he had granted a subsequent and conflicting license. In such a case the licensee had the right to sue the patentee on the patent.
Littlefield
v.
Perry,
In
Henry
v.
Dick Company, supra,
the patentee for a kind of ink filed a bill for infringement against the users of his patent, whom the bill showed to be using the ink in connection with unpatented supplies not made by the
In
The Fair
v.
Kohler Die & Specialty Company, supra,
the Kohler Company brought a bill in equity to enjoin The Fair from making and vending certain devices and selling them at less than $1.50 each, and asked an account and triple damages.' The bill alleged that plaintiff had the sole and exclusive right to make and sell devices; and that the defendant had full notice thereof and was selling the same without license from the plaintiff. It alleged that the plaintiff, when it sold, imposed the condition that the goods should not be sold at less than $1.50, and attached to the goods a notice to that effect, and that any sale in violation of that condition would be an infringement. It further averred that the defendant obtained a stock of the devices with notice of the conditions and sold them at $1.25 each, in infringement of the plaintiff’s right under the patent. The defendant pleaded specially that it had purchased these devices from a jobber who had paid full price to the plaintiff, and that there was no question arising under the patent or other laws of the United States, and that the court had no jurisdiction of the case. The case came on for hearing on the plea. This Court held that on the bill the plaintiff made a case under the patent laws in that it set up the patent, charged
In Healy v. Sea Gull Specialty Company, supra, the bill alleged ownership of the exclusive right to make and use box-making machines and sell boxes containing the patented improvements. It further alleged that the defendant was infringing the patents and would continue to do so unless restrained. Anticipating a defense, the plaintiff set out a license to the defendant, a breach of its conditions and a termination of the same. It added that the license contained astipulation that, in casé of any suit for infringement, the measure of recovery should be the same as the royalty agreed upon for the use of the inventions, and another for the return of the machines let to the defendant while the license was in force. The bill prayed for an injunction against making, using or selling the boxes or machines, for an account of profits received by reason of the infringement, for triple the damages measured as above stated, and for the surrender of the machines. In sustaining the jurisdiction as arising under the patent laws, the Court used these words:
“ It may be that the reasoning of The Fair v. Kohler Die & Specialty Company, 228. U. S. 22, is more consistent with that of Mr. Justice Bradley’s dissent in Kartell v. Tilghman,99 U. S. 547 , 556 (a decision since explained and limited, White v. Rankin,144 U. S. 628 ), than with that of the majority, but it is the deliberate judgment of the court and governs this case. As stated there, the plaintiff is absolute master of what jurisdiction he will appeal to; and if he goes to the District Court forinfringement of a patent, unless the claim is frivolous or a pretence, the District Court will have jurisdiction on that ground, even though the course of the subsequent pleadings reveals other more serious disputes. Excelsior Wooden Pipe Co. v. Pacific Bridge Co., 185 U. S. 282 . Jurisdiction generally depends upon the case made and relief demanded by the plaintiff, and as it can not be helped, so it can not be defeated by the replication to an actual or anticipated defence contained in what used to be the charging part of the bill. For the same reason it does not matter whether the validity of the patent is' admitted or denied.
“As appears from the statement of it, the plaintiffs’ case arose under the patent law. It was not affected by the fact that the plaintiffs relied upon a contract as fixing the mode of estimating damages or that they sought a return of patented machines to which if there was no license they were entitled. These were incidents. The essential features were the allegation of an infringement and prayers for an injunction, an account of profits and triple damages — the characteristic forms of relief granted by the patent law. The damages were grounded on the infringement, and the contract was relied upon only as furnishing the mode, in which they should be ascertained.”
In
Geneva Furniture Co.
v.
Karpen, supra,
the patentee charged the defendants in his bill in equity with contributing to the infringement by wrongfully persuading the licensees of the complainant to use the patent in circumstances not authorized by the license, second, with wrongfully procuring such licensees to violate their licenses in particular’s not bearing on the charge of infringement, and third, with refusing to perform stipulations by which defendants agreed to assign other patents to plaintiff. • Jurisdiction of the court under the patent laws which was the sole basis of jurisdiction was sustained for the first branch of the suit, because the claim of infringement
The result of these cases is, that a federal district court is held to have jurisdiction of a suit by a patentee for an injunction against infringement and for profits and damages, even though, in anticipation of a defense of a license or authority to use the patent, the complainant includes in his bill averments intended to defeat such a defense. If these averments do not defeat such defense, the patentee will lose his case on the merits, but the court’s jurisdiction under the patent laws is not ousted. The error in
Hartell v
.
Tilghman, supra,
was in denying jurisdiction under the patent laws when the patentee based his action broadly on his patent and averment of infringement seeking injunction and damages. His averments intended to constitute a reply to the anticipated defense that the defendant was a licensee did not change the nature of his declared choice of a suit under the patent laws. This, under the principle now established by the later cases, and especially
The Fair
v.
Kohler Die & Specialty Company,
and
Hedy
v.
Sea Grull Specialty Company,
is clear. But the present qualification of the
Hartell Case
does not affect the principle laid down in
Wilson
v.
Sandford,
that where a patentee complainant makes his suit one for recovery of royalties under a contract of license or assignment, or for damages for a breach of its covenants, or for a specific performance thereof, or asks the aid of the Court in declaring a forfeiture of the license or in restoring an unclouded title to the patent, he does not give the federal district court jurisdiction of the cause as one arising under the patent laws. Nor may he confer it in such-a case by
It is true that, in Mr. Justice Bradley’s dissenting opinion in Hartell v. Tilghman, supra, p. 559, he says, in reference to Wilson v. Sanford, that if the question were a new one he would think that it would not oust the jurisdiction under the patent laws for the complainant to join in a bill for infringement as ancillary to the relief sought an application to avoid an inequitable license. But no subsequent case has gone so far, and we are not- disposed to depart from the rule of Wilson v. Sandford, whatever might be our conclusion if it were a new question. Moreover, the bill in this case, as we have already fully pointed-out, is really not based on threatened infringement but on the contracts; and its reference to infringements is inadequate even to present a bill in the form suggested by Mr. Justice Bradley.
The judgment of the District Court is'
Affirmed.
