Plaintiff, a patent assignee, a New York corporation with its principal place of business, office, and factory in Rochester, New York, sues for infringement. Defendant is a Delaware corporation, with its principal place of business, office, and factory in Chicago, Illinois, where the alleged acts of infringement occurred. Motion to transfer the action to the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, where it might have been brought, under 28 U.S. C. § 1404(a) was made by defendant. Weighing of the three statutory factors, “convenience of parties and witnesses, in the interest of justice”, must decide the motion. Some consideration must also be accorded plaintiff’s choice of forum, either as a constituent element of the obtuse “interest of justice” factor or as a separate factor inherent in our adversary system. In Dairy Industries Supply Ass’n v. La Buy, 7 Cir.,
Whatevеr be required of defendant here to swing the balance to transfer, the score must first be tabulated as to convenience of both pаrties, of witnesses and the dictates of justice.
1. In the case at bar the forum is neither the residence nor a place of business of either party. Both corporate parties, through counsel, officers and employees, will have to come here from foreign jurisdictions with all the documentary and physical evidence • — in the form of cumbersome physical machinery — they deem necessary for trial. Plaintiff must trаvel from Rochester and defendant from Chicago. This legal ball game cannot be played in both home parks, and cannot be scheduled for Rochester because the suit could not have been brought there originally. One home field, Chicago, and neutral Wilmington remain two pоssibilities. As between them, I conclude conveniences favor Chicago. That is defendant’s executive and manufacturing situs and will eliminate onе party’s travel, for plaintiff will have to travel in any event, either to Chicago or Wilmington. About 150 more miles lie between Chicago and Rochester than between the latter city and Wilmington, and plaintiff concedes the difference in travel time is negligible. Plaintiff urges, as its main convenience of the Delaware forum, the coupling of an expert’s court appearance with a sales and engineering trip in this areа. Such is not the type of convenience envisaged by § 1404(a). The expert’s business trip has no connection with the trial or with defendant and is personal to plaintiff’s operations. This is an obviously irrelevant factor.
This, then, is the situation: Wilmington is convenient to neither party. Chicago is just as сonvenient as Wilmington to plaintiff and of complete convenience to defendant. This balance cannot help but favor transfer.
2. Indications are this is the ordinary patent infringement suit and a duel of expert witnesses will be the feature attraction. Travel is an omnipresеnt aspect of their trial appearances and is thus somewhat minimized in weighing their convenience. Other anticipated witnesses are located much the same as the parties for whom they will testify. This particular balance resembles that of the parties, and favors transfer to Chicago.
*491 3. Consideration of the effect of the “interest of justice” factor on the forum results in a stand-off. As said before by this court, 3 suсh a factor may be a “reason separate and distinct from the convenience of parties and witnesses as well as a necessary resultant factor from such conveniences”. Applied as a separate entity, justice to the parties is neither better sеrved nor more unduly restricted in the Chicago forum than in Wilmington. This suit arises under the federal patent statutes which will be similarly applied in both possible fоrums. As a total effect stemming from the convenience, the justice factor, if not quite in equipoise, slightly as I see it inclines toward transfer.
The sole string of corporate domicile tying the suit to the Delaware District breaks at the pull of the instant facts framed under § 1404(a) 4 as does plaintiff’s choice of forum.
Motion to transfer will be granted.
Notes
. All States Freight, Inc. v. Modarelli, 3 Cir.,
. Id.,
. Webster-Chicago Corp. v. Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Co., D.C.Del.,
. This is not a prejudgment of all cases in which the only nexus to this forum is. Delaware incorporation.
