This suit wаs to enjoin the further infringement of certain claims of patent No. 1,076,418, and to recover damages for past infringement. Plaintiff prevailed, and the decree in its favor, finding claim 1 valid and infringed, and directing an accounting, was affirmed by this court on appeal.
It is insisted that the court erred in vacating the deсree entered pursuant to the mandate of this court, and in entering one at variance with the previous ruling of this court; reliance being bad for this position' on tbe law of tbe ease. Tbe “law of tbe, ease” is too well understood to require exposition or elucidatiоn. It bas been invoked and applied times without number.
2
Tbe. latest ease from this court,
recognizing
and-
*579
applying the law of the ease, is Lackner v. Starr,
The rule is expressed in Re Sanford Fork
&
Tool Co.,
Turning to the record to ascertain what was decided on the former appeal, and what fact or facts, if any, supposedly new, were brought to the attention of thе District Court which occasioned the change in the decree, we find that subsequent to the entry of the original decree in the District Court, appellant, the holder and owner of the patent herein involved, filed “a petition and application to surrender said Guth patent, No. 1,076,418, and to grant a reissue patent on said application and said surrender of said original patent,” and pursuant to “said petition and application there was granted and issued a reissue patent, No. 14,680.” Such fact, however, was brought to the attention of the Circuit Court of Appeals on the previous appeal, where appellee (then appellant), in addition to attacking the validity of the patent in suit and disputing its infringement, asked that the cause, he dismissed because; “subsequent to the entry of the decree in the District Court, pаtentee had surrendered its patent and sought to secure a reissue patent.”
Disposing of that issue, this eourt said: “Appellant’s motion for a dismissal of the entire cause because, since the submission of the ease on this appeal, the original patent was surrenderеd and a reissue patent granted, must be denied. It is unnecessary for us to consider what the effect of a surrender and a reissue, not modifying in any manner the claims in suit, but adding another claim, would be, if the suit on the original patent were undetermined, or a decree therein were interlоcutory in the true sense as to the merits of the patent controversy; in the case before us, the surrender and reissue were effective only after the entry of ’ the decree determining validity and infringement and granting a permanent injunction; and in National Brake & Electric Co. v. Christensen et al.,
To determine whether there should he a reversal of the order now appealed from, we are first confronted with the existence of error in onr previous decision, and, if sneh exists, the application of the law -of the ease to the facts of this ease. The degree of finality accorded the decree upon the fоrmer hearing, based upon the authority of the Christensen Case,
Thеre is no room for controversy as to the effect of the surrender of the patent sued upon and the issuance of a reissue patent. The surrender of this patent, followed by the issuance of a reissue patent, not only , nullified the original patent, but took from the pаtentee his right to recover damages for infringements committed prior to the cancellation of the old patent. McCormick
*580
Company v. Aultman Company,
The rule of the “law of the ease” dif-' fers, to a certain extent, both in thе reasons back of it and in its eonelusiveness, from the rule of res adjudicata, and also from the doctrine of stare decisis. As to its eonelusiveness, it lies somewhere between the 'two. It is doubtless more 'persuasive upon the court that pronounced it than the doctrine of stare decisis; but it is, except in the lower court, not entitled to the eonelusiveness and finality that is accorded the plea of res adjudicata. It is conclusive with the lower court, and though eases may be found making it also conclusive with the appellate court рronouncing it (Standard Sewing Machine Co. v. Leslie,
I appreciаte this court has expressed' itself as favoring unqualified adherence to the law as pronounced, whether erroneous or not. Standard Sewing Mach. Co. v. Leslie,
The present ease is, we think, clearly distinguishable from the case of Lackner v. Starr, supra. In fact, a study of the two cases may serve to emphasize the distinction which justified the application of the law of the ease in Lackner v. Starr, and in rejecting it in the instant case. In the Lackner v. Starr Case we found no pronouncement of the law by the Supreme Cоurt between the dates of the first and second decision. If error was committed in the rendition of the first opinion by this court, it was due to a misunderstanding or a misapplication of the holdings of certain Supreme Court decisions. The same decisions, and no others, were cited on the second appeal.
In the present case, the court on the former appeal relied upon a decision which at that time expressed the law in this circuit. Between the hearings on the two appeals the Supreme Court announced a decision at variance with £he opinion expressed in the ease relied upon (the Christensen Case,
Appellant, when it surrendered its patent No. 1,076,418, and secured in lieu thereof reissue patent No. 14,680, lost its right to prosecute its pending suit to final decreе. Such facts being brought to the attention of the court wherein the suit is pending, it became the duty of the court to dismiss the suit. While the decree before us contained some provisions other than dismissal, appellant is not complaining thereof.
The decree is affirmed.
Notes
Pursuant to the mandate of the United Stаtes Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, and in harmony - with the facts brought to the attention of this court that, on July 1, 1919, the original Guth patent in suit, No. 1,076,418, was surrendered, canceled, and “a new patent” (reissue patent No. 14,680) granted, said surrender and- cancellation of said Guth patеnt, No. 1,076,418, .having taken effect on July 1, 1919, the decree of this court of May 14, 1918, is changed and modified as follows:
This cause came on to be heard and was argued by counsel for the respective parties, and thereupon, upon consideration thereof, it was ordered, аdjudged, and decreed as follows:
1. That in so far as the said decree of this court of May 14, 1918, made .the Reflectolyte Company, a Missouri corporation, a party defendant herein, and found that the Reflectolyte Company had infringed claim 1 of the said Guth original patеnt, No. 1,076,418, and ordered an injunction and accounting, or any other relief, against said the Reflectolyte Company, its clerks, agents, servants, or attorneys,- that said decree be, and the same is hereby, reversed, this court not having, - and never -having had, any jurisdiction in this cause against said the Reflectolyte Company.
2. That any and all statements or reports sent to Hon. A. L. .Sanborn, at Madison, Wis., by said the Reflectolyte Company, in pursuance of said decree of May. 14, 1918, and since said last-named decree, be forthwith returned- to-said the Reflectolyte Comрany at its office at 914 Pine street, St. Louis, Mo.
3. That the said Guth original patent, No. 1,076,418, before the surrender and cancellation thereof on July 1, 1919, by the action of said Guth and by the assent and co-operation of the Luminous Unit Company, was the property of the Luminous Unit Company, the рlaintiff herein, and was good and valid in law.
4. That the lighting fixture identified in these proceedings by the blueprint attached to the defendant’s answer in this case, being a lighting fixture manufactured 'by the Reflecto-lyte Company, of St. Louis, Mo., under certain claims of the Adam United States letters patеnt, No. 1,121,577, is a- lighting fixture which was sold by the defendant herein, the Freeman-Sweet Company, after the date (October 21, 1913) of said Guth original patent, No. 1,076,-. 418, and before the filing of the bill of complaint herein, and that by the sale of such lighting fixture, identified by the blueprint attached to the defendant’s answer herein, the Freeman-Sweet Company had infringed claim 1 of said Guth patent, No. 1,076,418.
5. That as to the other patent named in the bill of complaint herein, being United States letters patent to Guth, No. 1,082,322, the bill herein is dismissed on the ground that the defendant herein, Freeman-Sweet Company, has nоt infringed said letters patent or any claim or claims thereof.
6. That no injunction issue against said Freeman-Sweet Company in respect to claim 1 of said Guth patent, No. 1,076,418, said patent having been surrendered, canceled, and extinguished by the voluntary act of said Guth and the plaintiff herein after the entry of said decree of May 14, 1918, said surrender, cancel-, lation, and extinguishment of said Guth patent,' No. 1,076,418, having taken effect on July 1, 1919.
7. That in view of said surrender, cancella-, tion, and extinguishment of said Guth patent, No. 1,076,418, no accounting shall be had in' respect to the infringеment by said Freeman-Sweet Company of said claim 1 of said Guth-patent, No. 1,076,418, as provided for. in said, decree of May 14, 1918, and that the appointment of the special master (Mr. Charles B. Morrison) made by said decree is hereby va-' cated and set aside.
8. That the $20,000 supersedeas bond given by the Reflectolyte Company, in accordance! with the provisions of said decree of May 14)| 1918, be, and the same is hereby, canceled,1 annulled, and set aside; the principal and surety therein named being released from all liability under said bond.
9. That all cоsts in this case in the District Court and in the Circuit Court of Appeals are: awarded against the Freeman-Sweet Company, and judgment therefor ordered against said Freeman-Sweet Company: Provided, however, that no expenses, disbursements, or costs taxed against the Luminous Unit Compаny by the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit by the opinion and order of the said Circuit Court of Appeals of October 15, 1918, reported in
In re Sanford Fork & Tool Co.,
