MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This is a patent case which is before us on the motion for summary judgment of defendant American Telephone & Telegraph Company (AT&T). AT&T’s motion is based upon its contention that a prior adjudication in another lawsuit operates as a matter of law to preclude plaintiffs Edward Molinaro and Anthony Catanzaro from asserting their claims in this action. We agree with AT&T’s view of the legal effect of the prior judgment, and because of certain admissions of fact made by Molinaro on the record we grant AT&T’s motion with respect to Molinaro’s claims. However, there may remain one area of material factual dispute between Catanzaro and AT&T, so we have concluded that only a partial summary judgment on Catanzaro’s claims is appropriate at this time.
Plaintiffs commenced this action in March of 1975, charging that AT&T’s Improved Mobile Telephone System (IMTS) infringed their now-expired U.S. Patent No. 2,906,875, entitled “Station Sampling Radio.” 1 It is undisputed that all of the allegedly infringing equipment used by AT&T is obtained from other sources. The record shows that Motorola, Inc. and General Electric Company (GE) are two such sources, and Molinaro concedes that they are the only two sources. 2 Catanzaro suggests that there may be other sources of supply, but there is nothing in the record to support this contention.
The instant suit is one of a number of infringement actions brought by plaintiffs involving Patent No. 2,906,875,
3
but for present purposes only the litigation involving AT&T’s two established sources of supply of the allegedly infringing equipment, GE and Motorola, is pertinent. Plaintiffs’ suit against GE, filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, was settled in April of 1975 with the grant of a license by plaintiffs to GE. Under the terms of that settlement AT&T
In this motion for summary judgment AT&T contends that in light of: (1) the settlement with GE; (2) the judgment of dismissal with prejudice in the Delaware suit; and (3) plaintiffs’ failure to identify any source of supply of AT&T’s IMTS equipment other than GE and Motorola, plaintiffs are precluded from asserting their infringement claims against AT&T. Particular significance is attached by AT&T to the fact, appearing of record and undisputed, that Motorola, as supplier of the allegedly infringing equipment, is paying for and controlling the defense of this suit and has agreed to indemnify AT&T against any liability arising therefrom.
In their papers in opposition to AT&T’s motion, plaintiffs concede that their settlement with GE immunizes AT&T from liability resulting from its use of GE-supplied equipment, but they dispute AT&T’s interpretation of the legal effect of the dismissal of their Delaware suit against Motorola, and of the AT&T-Motorola customer-supplier relationship. Catanzaro further submits that he has not had an adequate opportunity to discover whether AT&T has any other sources of supply of the allegedly infringing equipment. 6
We agree with AT&T that under both substantive patent law and modern theories of res
judicata
the dismissal with prejudice of the Delaware suit precludes plaintiffs from asserting any infringement claims against AT&T by reason of its use of equipment supplied by Motorola. The rule of substantive patent law set forth in
Kessler v. Eldred,
Leaving entirely out of view any rights which Kessler’s customers have or may have, it is Kessler’s right that those customers should, in respect of the articles before the court in the previous judgment, be let alone by Eldred, and it is Eldred’s duty to let them alone.
Courts soon recognized that the rationale underlying the
Kessler
doctrine would support the assertion not only by a manufacturer, but also by a customer, of the preclu
Our analysis of the applicability of the
Kessler
doctrine is not altered by the fact that the infringement question in the instant case was not actually litigated in the Delaware suit.
Larson v. General Motors Corp.,
[A] judgment dismissing the first cause of action upon the merits put an end to any controversy as to those [articles] which the plaintiffs had alleged to infringe . . . . It was unlike the judgment which we held not to bar a declaratory action in Leach v. Ross Heater & Mfg. Co. [104 F.2d 88 (2d Cir. 1939)], for that was not upon the merits and did not bar a second action. Moreover, the bar of the judgment [is] available to the defendant’s customers, as well as to the defendant, for they are regarded as privies to such a judgment.
In the case at bar it is clear that the judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ complaint “with prejudice” has the same effect as the Larson dismissal “on the merits.” In other words, the judgment of dismissal in plaintiffs’ first suit bars a second action by plaintiffs (the patentees) against both Motorola (the manufacturer) and AT&T (its customer), even though the merits of plaintiffs’ infringement claim were never actually litigated.
Both the language and the policy underpinnings of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure also support this conclusion. Although plaintiffs’ first suit was dismissed pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 37, Rule 41(b) clearly governs the effect of all involuntary dismissals. The rule provides in pertinent part:
Involuntary Dismissal: Effect Thereof. . Unless the court in its order for dismissal otherwise specifies, a dismissal under this subdivision, and any dismissal not provided for in this rule, other than a dismissal for lack of jurisdiction, for improper venue, or for failure to join a party under Rule 19, operates as an adjudication upon the merits, (emphasis added). 9
Plaintiffs make much of the fact that the dismissal of their Delaware suit was under Rule 37 for failure to comply with discovery and that the infringement issues raised therein were never resolved, but in doing so they ignore the strong policy reasons that a Rule 37 dismissal must be given the effect just described. In
National Hockey League v. Metropolitan Hockey Club, Inc.,
[T]he most severe in the spectrum of sanctions provided by statute or rule must be available to the district court in appropriate cases, not merely to penalize those whose conduct may be deemed to warrant such a sanction, but to deter those who might be tempted to such conduct in the absence of such a deterrent.
Our disposition of this motion is mandated by established principles of
res judicata
as well as by the
Kessler
doctrine of substantive patent law. The applicable principles were first set forth in this Circuit in
Bruszewski v. United States,
It was our view in Bruszewski . that ... a party who as plaintiff had asserted a claim and had lost should not be heard again on the merits of that claim even in a second suit which he thereafter has instituted against a stranger to the original claim.
Clearly the identity of plaintiffs’ claims in this action with those in the Delaware suit, together with the manufacturer-supplier relationship between the successive de
Under the doctrines of both Kessler and Bruszewski, and because of the terms of plaintiffs’ settlement with GE, AT&T is entitled to summary judgment on those of plaintiffs’ claims that allege infringement by reason of AT&T’s use of equipment supplied by Motorola or GE. Molinaro has conceded on the record that these are AT&T’s only sources of supply of the allegedly infringing equipment, so we grant AT&T’s motion for summary judgment against Molinaro on all of Molinaro’s claims. Catanzaro has not conceded that Motorola and GE are AT&T’s only sources of supply, so we grant AT&T’s motion in part and deny it in part on Catanzaro’s claims. We grant summary judgment on Catanzaro’s claims that GE- and Motorola-supplied equipment infringe plaintiffs’ patent. However, because Catanzaro claims that he has not had an opportunity to complete discovery on the question whether AT&T had another source of supply, we will, for now, deny summary judgment on Catanzaro’s claims that equipment supplied by other manufacturers infringes plaintiffs’ patent. 12 Catanzaro will be accorded sixty days within which to conduct discovery for the limited purpose of determining whether any supplier other than GE and Motorola furnished AT&T with its IMTS equipment. Absent some such showing on Catanzaro’s part, summary judgment will be entered for AT&T and against Catanzaro on all of Catanzaro’s claims.
Notes
. Plaintiffs’ infringement allegations, a detailed analysis of which is unnecessary for the purposes of this motion, focus on a particular type of radio receiver. In the most general terms plaintiffs allege that any station sampling radio receiver which automatically scans the radio frequency spectrum and “seeks signals”, and stops and stays at a particular signal for either a predetermined period of time or until the signal terminates, infringes plaintiffs’ patent. This reading of plaintiffs’ patent may be undermined by the holding in
Catanzaro
v.
Masco Corp.,
. See correspondence dated October 21, 1978, from E. Leigh Hunt, counsel for Molinaro, to this effect.
. All of plaintiffs’ actions have been brought pro se, as was the instant action. However, E. Leigh Hunt, Esquire, recently entered an appearance on behalf of Molinaro. Catanzaro is still proceeding pro se.
. A copy of the pertinent portions of plaintiffs’ agreement with GE is part of the record in this case.
. In his April 26, 1977, unpublished opinion Judge Stapleton noted that plaintiffs had been warned of the possible consequences of their unexcused failure to provide discovery as ordered by the court, and characterized plaintiffs’ noncompliance with the court’s orders as “willful.” The Third Circuit affirmed the judgment of dismissal at
. Except as to Catanzaro’s claim that via further discovery he may be able to establish that AT&T has some other source of supply of the allegedly infringing equipment, the case presents no genuine issue of material fact. Instead it poses only the question of the legal effect of the prior proceedings in the case.
.
See Larson v. General Motors Corp.,
. The Larson plaintiffs’ second cause of action, not relevant for our purposes, was for damages for defendant’s alleged appropriation of an idea imparted to it in confidence.
. Plaintiffs cite
Papilsky v. Berndt,
. See affidavit of John L. Cline, attorney for defendant AT&T, and Exhibit A, the AT&T-Motoroia agreement, attached thereto.
. See discussion at pp. 675-676 of text, supra.
. Substantial discovery has already been taken on this point, revealing no other suppliers.
