13 Blatchf. 151 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut | 1875
The parties in this case are corporations. The complainants were created under the laws of the state of New York, and the defendants were incorporated under the laws of the state of Connecticut, and are established at New Haven, in this district. The bill alleges, that the complainants are and have been since September 18th, 1860, the owners of letters patent number 28.244, granted to George B. Arnold, on May 8th, 1860, for a new and useful “improvement in ruffles.” and were also, in the month of February. 1863, the owners of three other patents, theretofore issued to George B. Arnold and Alfred Arnold, for other improvements in machinery for mak
The answer denies that the defendants have made and sold any ruffles in violation of letters patent No. 28.244, alleges that the raffles which they have made were made by the aid of machinery which was invented by and patented unto Crosby and Kellogg, and that, at and prior to said agreement, they were manufacturing, by the use of said machinery, as they lawfully might, double ruffles of a peculiar kind, which were after-wards divided so as to form single ruffles of a form and arrangement some of which somewhat resembled the ruffles manufactured by the complainants, and, to avoid any possible controversy with said complainants, the said defendants agreed not so to manufacture single raffles thereafter, but that said agreement was intended only to prevent the manufacture of that particular kind of single raffle; and that the defendants have not, since the date of said agreement, made or sold a gathered ruffle having a single series of stitches, which is the only kind of ruffle claimed in patent No. 28,244. The answer denies the novelty of the alleged improvement descrioed in said patent, and alleges that the defendants have, ever since the execution of said agreement, been engaged, to the knowledge of the complainants, in the sale of raffles which were not claimed by them, until about the time of the commencement of this suit, to be in violation of said patent, and that this action is brought upon a stale claim, and one which is unfounded in equity.
(1.) The first question in this case is — are the defendants estopped, by their covenants in the agreement, from denying the validity of the complainants’ patent? The defendants contend, that the suit is against them simply as infringers, for a violation of the complainants’ patent rights, and that the covenant which is claimed to be an estoppel, being contained in an instrument collateral to the patent, cannot operate as an estoppel in a suit which is not founded upon the agreement but upon the patent, and that no bill in equity can be sustained upon the agreement, inasmuch as for a breach of that contract the complainants have a full and adequate remedy at law.
The contract is not merely an agreement for a license, but is an executed license. Such was the intention of the parties, as it is to be collected from the whole of the instrument. Buell v. Cook, 4 Conn. 242. By the agreement. the defendants were licensed to manufacture and sell the double ruffle only. If they manufactured and sold any other ruffle
But the defendants insist that a bill in equity, based upon the contract, cannot be sustained, because, for a breach of the contract, there is a complete and adequate remedy at law. There is, undoubtedly, a remedy at law for the alleged injury. The only question is, whether it is complete and adequate. If the complainants were seeking to recover royalties which the defendants had agreed to pay, inasmuch as the account is particularly within the knowledge of the defendants, or, if the patent was still in existence, and the preventive remedy by injunction against future injuries could be administered, there would be no question that a bill in equity would be a proper remedy. Eureka Co. v. Bailey Co., 11 Wall. [78 U. S.] 488; Goodyear v. Congress Rubber Co. [supra]; Rich v. Hotchkiss, 16 Conn. 409. In this case, the defendants had not agreed to pay royalties, and an injunction cannot be granted, inasmuch as-the patent has expired. It is alleged that the defendants have violated the contract of license By manufacturing and selling a ruffle which they were not authorized to make, and which they had agreed not to make. By this violation the complainants say that they have been injured, and the redress which they ultimately seek is the payment of damages. Although the suit is upon the contract, the damage to the complainants, if any, is the damage which they have sustained from the injury to their patent rights. The ascertainment of the facts from which such damages can be estimated, is, in cases of injury to property in letters patent, peculiarly within the province of a court of equity, because, the facts from which damages are to be computed can only be ascertained by an account and a discovery of the number and amount of articles which have been sold by the defendants — facts which are exclusively within their knowledge. They alone have the evidence which can enable the complainants to recover, either at law or in equity. It is true, that damages are not ordinarily assessed by a court of equity (Livingston v. Woodworth, 15 How. [56 U. S.] 546); and, prior to the act of 1870 [16 Stat. 198], authorizing the circuit court, as a court of equity, to decree the payment of damages in patent cases, damages were not recoverable in equity suits. A bill in equity proceeded, prior to that act, upon the theory tha't the in-fringer was equitably bound, as a trustee, to pay to the patentee the profits which had been made by an unlawful use of the invention. Cowing v. Rumsey [Case No. 3,296]. But, this bill is a bill for an account and a discovery. It avers that the complainants do not know, and cannot set forth, the number of yards of ruffle which have been made in violation of the patent and of the agreement, and prays for a disclosure of the quantity which has been made and sold. Whether, having obtained jurisdiction of the case, the court will proceed to grant further and complete relief, and to exercise a power which courts of equity have, in certain cases, heretofore exercised (Russell v. Clark’s Ex’rs. 7 Cranch [11 U. S.] 69; Pratt v. Law, 9 Cranch [13 U. S.] 456; Insurance Co. v. Colt, 20 Wall. [87 U. S.] 560). and what relief will be granted, are questions which can be determined more properly after the report of the master shall have been received.
It is well settled, that, where the suit is upon a license, or upon a contract, which license or contract contains covenants on the part of the defendants, by which they admit the validity of the plaintiffs’ patent, and agree to maintain it by suits or legal proceedings, and there has been an enjoyment of the licence by the defendants, they are estopped from denying the truth of their admissions, unless it shall be averred, by cross-bill, or answer, that such agreement was obtained by fraud, surprise or imposition. Eureka Co. v. Bailey
(2.) Is the ruffle which has been manufactured and sold by the defendants, and which is styled the “Princess ruffle,” an infringement of patent No. 28,244? The specification of the patent states, that the nature of the invention “consists in confining the tucks or gathers in place, and securing them to a binding or ungathered piece of cloth, by one and the same series of stitches; or, in other words, causing one series of stitches to perform the double duty of confining the plaits and attaching them to the binding or other material.” The claim is for the ruffle “as a new article of manufacture, the gathered cloth A (the ruffled strip), being secured to the binding B (the band), by the single series of stitches C, which perform the double duty of confining the gathers and of securing the gathered cloth to the binding, substantially as herein set forth.” The article is a plaited or gathered piece of cloth, the gathers of which are confined in their place by a row of stitches, which, also, at the same time, secures the gathered cloth to a band, and this band is an un-hemmed strip of cloth, which is to be attached by the purchaser to whatever garment the ruffle is to ornament. “The distinguishing features of this article, by which it is materially different from all ruffles known before,” have been declared to be, in the case of Magic Ruffle Co. v. Douglas [Case No. 8,948], “the single series of stitches, and the unvarying regularity of the plaits or gathers, thus dispensing with the gathering thread, avoiding the injurious process of whipping or scratching the fabric with a sharp needle, and the perforations in the ruffled piece which the needle and thread make in gathering.” The defendants’ ruffle is a plaited strip, combined with a band, a single row of stitches performing the office of securing the gathers, and uniting the gathered cloth to the band, but it has, in addition, a second row of stitches in the band, not securing the band to the gathered cloth. The ruffle can be cut in two, between the two rows of stiches. One part would be a ruffle, and the other a strip of stitched cloth. The Magic ruffle of the plaintiffs is an unfinished article, to be attached by the band to ladies’ or children’s undergarments. The Princess ruffle is a finished article, having a band with an even and finished edge, and is designed to be worn as a neck ruffle. Still, the distinguishing characteristic of the Magic ruffle is found in the Princess ruffle, which contains the row of stitches performing the double office of confining the gathers and attaching the ruffled doth to the band; and, although the Princess ruffle has a second series of stitches, and is a completed article, different in appearance, and used for a different purpose, from the Magic ruffle, yet, in its patentable characteristics, it contains the single feature which had been previously patented by the plaintiffs’ grantor. It has other and additional features which render it a different article from the Magic ruffle in the eye of the trade and of the purchaser, but these additional features do not vary the one peculiarity in which it resembles the Magic ruffle. If that peculiarity is a patentable one, it follows that the defendants’ ruffle is an infringement of the plaintiffs’ patent.
An attempt was made to claim that the Princess ruffle was a double ruffle, and so within the license to the defendants, but it is obvious that, if the Princess ruffle is divided, the narrow strip which remains after the ruffle proper has been cut off, is a useless strip of stitched cloth, and is not, in any proper sense of cue word, a ruffle.
The answer further alleges, that, after the execution of the agreement, the defendants discovered the existence of letters patent to Isaac M. Singer, dated on or about March 18th, 1856, and that the complainants, believing that this invention substantially contained that described in patent 28,244, desired to join with the defendant in purchasing the same; that it vras purchased by both parties about April 2d, 1863, and, since that time, the complainants have made no attempt to enforce their patent, but have regarded the same as substantially inoperative and worthless; and that, by reason of said Singer patent, the patent numbered 28,244 is void. Whether the Singer patent does or does not anticipate the patent of the complainants is not material, inasmuch as the validity of the latter patent is not here in issue. This part of the answer is material only upon the question of the laches of the complainants in the vindication of their alleged rights. The only evidence in regard to the reasons for the purchase of Mr. Singer’s patent, or the opinions of the complainants in regard to the effect of the Singer invention upon the validity of their own patent, is contained in the testimony of the defendants’ treasurer, who says, that “the defendants discovered the existence of the Singer patent, and, thinking that, if left in the hands of other parties, it might possibly be used for purposes of litigation and annoyance. causing expense and trouble, they thought best to secure it, and the Magic Ruffle Company, regarding it in anticipation of their patent, wished to unite with us in securing it, and. as that would save one-half
The most important point of the defendants is, that they have been manufacturing the Princess ruffle ever since the date of the agreement, with the knowledge and acquiescence of the complainants, and were not notified that such manufacture and sale were regarded by the complainants as a violation •of the agreement, or of the patent, until after it had expired, and about the time of the commencement of this suit, and that this claim, if it ever had any validity, had become stale, and should not be favored by courts of equity, by reason of the laches of the complainants in the vindication of their rights, and their acquiescence in the assertion of adverse rights. If I was satisfied, from the evidence, that the defendants had manufactured and sold the Princess ruffle since 1862, in such quantities that the attention of the plaintiffs must have been early called to the infringement, or that they actually knew of the violation of the agreement ever since the year 1862, I should be of. opinion that their delay in making known their claims was such as to prevent them from now receiving the aid of a court of equity to the extent of its powers. The testimony of the treasurer of the defendant corporation upon this part of the ease is guard-' ed, as will be seen by the following quotation: “Question. Subsequent to the date of that agreement, and up to the time of the commencement of this suit, have the defendants manufactured and sold ruffles like exhibit Barney, No. 3? Answer. Yes; more or less. Question. Has the same been sold in New York. If so, name a few of the houses to whom it has been sold? Answer. Yes; Calhoun & Robbins, J. B. Spelman & Son, L. H. Mandelbaum & Co., and a number of others, whom I could not positively swear to know by name. Question. It has been in the market to a considerable extent, has it not, and under what name? Answer. It has, under the name of Princess.” The testimony in the case, as it now stands, does not show that the Princess ruffle has been in the market to any large extent, and that the complainants must necessarily have known that the defendants were manufacturing and selling this ruffle, and thus show that the complainants were negligent in the enforcement of their rights, or were wilfully permitting the defendants to continue the manufacture, under the supposition that their conduct was not open to criticism.
As I have said, I am not now called upon to decide as to the measure of damages. The only decree which can now be made is, to order an accounting and a disclosure, and a reference to a master to ascertain the number of yards of Princess ruffle which have been manufactured and sold, and the amount of such sales during each year, and to ascertain the profits which have accrued to the defendants from such manufacture, for the purpose of ascertaining the amount of the complainants’ damages. Other questions in regard to damages will be determined upon the hearing after the accounting shall have taken place.
Let a decree be entered for a reference and an account.