This is an application by the plaintiff in a patent infringement suit, after interlocutory decree, to add a new party 'defendant and to have the pleadings and decree amended nunc pro tune so as to bind such new party. The suit is for patent infringement, and was cpmmenced in 1927. The only defendant named in the bill and the only defendant served with process was Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company, Inc. The bill alleged that the defendant was a Delaware corporation, with a principal place of business in Akron, Ohio, and a regular place of business in this district, and that it had committed acts of infringement within the district. In particular the bill charged the defendant with having within the district manufactured, sold and used tires which infringed the plaintiff’s inventions. These allegations, except as to the defendant being a Delaware corporation and having its principal place of business in Akron, were controverted in the answer. The case came on for trial in March, 1929. At that time it was stipulated that the defendant had “sold” in
The plaintiff thereupon made this application to have the parent company added as a party defendant, to have the pleadings and proceedings amended nunc pro tunc, and to have the interlocutory decree amended so as to grant an injunction and award an accounting against the parent company, Goodyear of Ohio. In the affidavits supporting the application, it is shown that both on the trial and in the briefs on appeal there are references by the defendant’s solicitor to the “manufacture” of tires by the defendant, and it is argued that, since the parent company was the manufacturing unit,' 'these references must have been to the parent company. It is also shown that the entire capital stoek of the selling company is owned by the parent company; that the same persons fill corresponding offices in both companies; that the place of business in New York City conducted by the selling company is listed in the parent company’s annual report to stockholders as a distributing branch and bears on a sign the parent company’s name — “The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. Building,” without the suffix, “Inc.” It is also shown that a salesman in the employ of the subsidiary used a card bearing the name of the parent company —“The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.”
The application is opposed by the present defendant. It is- also opposed by attorneys appearing specially for .the parent company, who have made a .counter motion to have set aside the service of the plaintiff’s motion papers-upon the person in charge of the Goodyear local office, in so far as such service is an attempt to serve the parent company. It is shown that the two companies are distinct corporate entities, and that the course of dealing between them is for the parent company to sell goods to the selling subsidiary.
Where a plaintiff in an equity suit desires to have a new party added as a defendant, the course nsually pursued is to ask leave to file an amended or supplemental bill stating a cause of action against the new party. Findlay Mfg. Co. v. Hygrade Lighting Fixture Co. (D. C.)
In my opinion, it cannot be said that the parent company, Goodyear of Ohio, was before the court as a party defendant. It was not named as a defendant in the bill. Process has never been served upon it. The only remaining way in which it could have acquired a status in the suit was by its voluntary appearance. Now it is settled that the fact that a stranger to a suit is conducting the defense in behalf of the nominal defendant does not amount to an appearance by the stranger. A ■motion by the plaintiff to have such a party joined as a defendant will fail. Parsons Non-Skid Co. v. Willis Co. (C. C.)
If these views are sound, it is unnecessary to consider in detail the relationship between the two Goodyear companies. That they are distinct corporate entities is clear. Cannon Mfg. Co. v. Cudahy Packing Co.,
The point whether the parent company, Goodyear of Ohio, will be bound by the result in the suit against the subsidiary, Goodyear of Delaware, is not before me. Probably the final decree, when entered, will be binding upon it so far as infringement is concerned. Hart Steel Co. v. Railroad Supply Co.,
I am not impressed with the defendant’s argument based upon the pendency in the District Court for the Northern District of Ohio of a suit by the parent company against the plaintiff. It seems that, since the affirmance of the interlocutory decree,' the parent company has dropped the manufacture of the infringing tire, and is making a tire of another type, and that the plaintiff has told the trade that tires of this new type are inferior. In the Ohio suit, the parent company charges' the plaintiff with circulating false statements about its new tires. Rule 30 of the Equity Rules (28 USCA § 723) provides that the answer must state any counterclaim “arising out of the transaction which is the subject-matter of the suit,” and the parent company urges that consequently the plaintiff’s sole remedy against it is to file a counterclaim in the Ohio suit. Suffice it to say that the parent company’s infringement of the plaintiff’s patent does not arise out of the transaction which the former is complaining of in that suit. The situation is too plain to require the citation of authorities.
The plaintiff’s motion will be denied, without prejudice to a motion for leave to file an amended or supplemental bill. In view of this result, it is unnecessary to pass upon the motion made in behalf of the parent company to set aside service.
