Appellees brought in the court below against appellant the usual suit for patent infringement. Appellant answered denying validity and infringement; and continued its answer with several paragraphs stating a counterclaim based on unfair competition by the plaintiff against the defendant. This answer concluded with a paragraph praying that the bill be dismissed, that an injunction be issued against plaintiffs to restrain this unfair competition, and that plaintiffs account to defendant for the damages caused thereby. Plaintiffs moved to strike out the paragraphs alleging this counterclaim and the concluding paragraph praying cross-relief ; the motion being founded upon the contention that the subject-matter stated was not a proper subject for counterclaim. The District Court granted this motion. Defendant brought this appeal.
It is conceded that the order striking out the counterclaim was not final, but was interlocutory, and that the appeal therefore can rest only upon section 129 of the Judicial Code,' being section 227 of title 28, USCA. The question is whether, in effect, an interlocutory injunction was refused. No motion for such injunction had been made by defendant; but, as the greater includes the less, striking out the counterclaim amounted to the advance denial of any such motion. Whether such action should be considered as a refusal to grant an interlocutory injunction, is not entirely clear, upon the language of the section. In a somewhat similar ease in the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Second Circuit (Radio Corp. v. Bunnell & Co.,
In Kelsey Wheel Co. v. Universal Rim Co.,
So in the present ease, the only relief which defendant could have had under its counterclaim, upon any hearing whieh could have been had at that stage of the case, would have been an interlocutory injunction.
In Emery v. Central Trust & Safe Deposit Co. (C. C. A.)
, Upon the authority of the Kelsey Case and such support as is given by the Emery Case, the present motion to dismiss is denied.
