delivered the opinion of the Court.
In an earlier phase of this patent infringement suit a patent owned by respondent Kammerer was held valid and infringed by the petitioner. An accounting for profits and damages was ordered.
On remand, the Circuit Court of Appeals did not disturb its original affirmance of the District Court’s holding that the patent was valid and infringed. But on motion of the petitioner, the court amended its judgment of affirmance so as to authorize the District Court to “entertain a motion or motions ... to modify or set aside its order or orders for . . . damages and accountings thereof, and take such action thereon as it may determine” concerning petitioner’s contention that respondents’ unlawful use of the patent should bar all recovery for infringement.
The Act of February 28, 1927, 44 Stat. 1261, 28 U. S. C. § 227a, provides that “when in any suit in equity for the infringement of letters patent for inventions, a decree is rendered which is final except for the ordering of an accounting, an appeal may be taken from such decree to the circuit court of appeals . . . .” The object of this 1927 amendment to § 129 of the Judicial Code was to make sure that parties could take appeals in patent equity infringement suits without being compelled to await a final accounting. The reports of the Congressional committees on the measure called attention to the large expenses frequently involved in such accountings and the losses incurred where recoveries were ultimately denied by reversal of decrees on the merits.
1
And see
Brick
v.
*99
A. I. Namm
&
Sons, Inc.,
Nor do the unusual circumstances under which this order was rendered make it any the less appealable. Whether or not the District Court would have had authority on its own motion to reopen the proceedings to consider the alleged misuse of the patent, see
Marconi Wireless Telegraph Co.
v.
United States,
Reversed.
Notes
The House Committee on Patents expressed the belief that the legislation “is needed to prevent a great burden of expense to litigants in actions to determine the validity of patents, where an accounting is involved. Under present procedure appeals may be taken from the interlocutory decree upholding the patent but not until a full accounting has been made to the court. Under this bill such appeal can be taken from such interlocutory decree . . . so as to obviate the cost of an accounting in the event the case is reversed on appeal.” H. R. Rep. No. 1890, 69th Cong., 2d Sess. 1 (1927).
The Senate Committee emphasized the same expense incident to conducting an accounting before the merits had been determined on appeal. It apparently went on the assumption that § 129 already authorized appeals prior to accounting from an injunction against *99 infringement. It wanted to permit an appeal prior to accounting whether there was an effective injunction outstanding or not, even though a patent had expired making inappropriate an injunction against its continued violation. Sen. Rep. No. 1319, 69th Cong., 2d Sess. 1 (1927).
This case presents the precise situation which the Senate Committee thought the Act was designed to avoid in that it happens here that the patent has expired. But both reports indicate that the purpose of the Act was to permit appeals whenever everything but an accounting had been accomplished.
“ ‘Judgment’ as used in these rules includes a decree and any order from which an appeal lies.” Rule 54, F. R. C. P.
