272 F. 520 | E.D.N.Y | 1921
This application is brought on behalf of the plaintiff in the above-entitled action to have the individual defendants, Marcus and Bergen, adjudged in contempt of the injunction issued out of this court against the said two individual defendants and the American Perfect Binder Company, Incorporated, its officers, and the associates, agents, etc., of the several defendants, restraining them from making, using or vending, etc., any article containing the invention described in letters patent No. 1,012,776, issued December 26, 1911, to John P. Weis, and assigned to the plaintiff.
It appears from the record that the above injunction was issued in accordance with a decree entered by consent and covering each of the 12 claims of said patent. The record shows that during the month of July, 1919, the plaintiff’s agents purchased from one of the two individual defendants, at their place of business in Brooklyn, a device (marked Exhibit B on this motion), and thereafter the plaintiff and defendants entered into a stipulation by which the consent decree was entered upon the complaint, which charged infringement through the manufacture and sale of a device introduced in evidence upon the present application and marked Exhibit A.
Subsequent to the 18th day of July, 1919, the business of the American Perfect Binder Company, Incorporated, and presumably the business of the individual defendants Marcus and Bergen, had been transferred to 22 West Nineteenth street, borough of Manhattan, and on June 16, 1920, another binder identical with the binder marked Exhibit B was purchased from the servants of the defendants at their New York place of business. It appears from the record that the defendants’ charge for the device marked Exhibits B and C was some $2 less than the plaintiff’s charge for the device which they put upon the market, and that the defendants are thus making $9 profit on an article costing $1 to manufacture, while the plaintiff’s licensees, paying a royalty of SI, make $10 profit gross, but are undersold in the market by the defendants.
The defendants allege upon the present motion that the device marked Exhibits B and C was being manufactured by them prior to the entry of the decree and injunction on consent. In fact, they allege that the reason for the consent injunction was because they no longer desired to manufacture Exhibit A, and they suggest that the plaintiff did not at that time have any reason to consider that the Exhibits B and
The individual defendants allege, further, that they should not be dealt with in a contempt proceeding, inasmuch as their acts, and the acts of' the corporate defendant, for 'which they may or may not be personally liable, have been for some time committed in another district, and they therefore contest the jurisdiction of this court in adjudicating or passing upon the charge of infringement based upon those acts.
The plaintiff was in possession of Exhibit B at the time of the entry of the consent decree. It could have brought this device into the prior action, and the conduct of the plaintiff and its solicitors in that action goes far to substantiate the defendants’ proposition that the plaintiff acquiesced (until business competition caused it to take further action) in the claim of the defendants that it had the right to put the device, Exhibit B, upon the market. It would be extremely difficult to determine upon a motion whether the change from Exhibit A to Exhibit B is a mere colorable variation, and the proposition is far from being so obvious as to. justify determination of this issue upon a motion to punish for contempt.
It is considered still to be the practice in this district not to proceed to the determination of such issues on an application for punishment for contempt. Crown Cork & Seal Co. v. American Cork Specialty Co., 211 Fed. 650, 128 C. C. A. 154; Individual Drinking Cup Co. v. Public Service Cup Co. (D. C.) 234 Fed. 653; California Paving Co. v. Molitor, 113 U. S. 609, 5 Sup. Ct. 618, 28 L. Ed. 1106. The present application is not one where the infringement is continuing under some colorable and clearly apparent evasion, such as was discussed in General Electric Co. (C. C.) v. McLaren, 140 Fed. 876, and in many cases in other districts, where the court has been satisfied that its decree is not being respected.
On the present application, we have the further proposition that the individual defendants, while still living in this district, are doing business in another district, and that the bringing of a contempt proceeding is evidently an effort to avoid the instituting of a new action in a different district. While the court in this district should not avoid dis
hast of all, they have suggested to the court that, unless the court is of the opinion that the decision should be in their favor, they would urge upon the court the proposition that it should not inquire into the merits of the issue in a contempt proceeding. In other words, the defendants have asked the court to go to the trouble of trying, on affidavits, the suit which they claim should be brought, and to pass upon the defenses which they would interpose in that action, and to decide this action in their favor, but reserving to themselves the privilege of objecting to the court’s jurisdiction, unless the court sees fit to decide in their favor.
Much time has been lost because the court has been compelled to await an opportunity to look into the propositions upon the merits, in order to find out if the apparent situation was what it seemed to be upon the argument. But this does not lead the court to be used in such a manner. The application to punish for contempt will be denied, without prejudice to the bringing of any proper action to test the alleged infringement claimed from the making and selling of Exhibits B and C, in whatever district that action may properly be brought.