21 F. Cas. 511 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin | 1873
The complainant moves for a preliminary injunction on the bill and affidavits in support thereof. The defendant Woodruff has answered, and presented and read with his answer, in opposition to the motion, divers affidavits of parties skilled in the business, to the effect that the buckle manufactured and sold by him is not an infringement of the complain-smt’s patents above mentioned or either of 1hem. The defendant also sets up in his answer that on the 9th day of .January, 1S72. he obtained letters-patent for an improved buckle, under which he is manufacturing and selling the buckles complained of. His buckle is known in the trade as the “Champion” buckle, and has met with very general approval and is extensively used. On the argument the complainant's counsel based the right to an injunction principally upon the < 'ole patent, which buckle is known commonly by the trade as the “Cole Wedge*’ buckle. The complainant sets out in his bill that in a case pending and tried in the circuit court for the Northern district of New York, before Judge Woodruff, brought by one William L. Starr, deceased, against Frazer and Burns, the validity of the complainant’s pat•ents was established, and an injunction was therein granted restraining those defendants from manufacturing and selling a buckle known as the “Eureka” buckle, which was the invention alleged in that case to infringe upon the Cole Wedge patent buckle, and that a decree was entered therein perpetually enjoining those defendants from the manufacture and sale of the Eureka buckle; that the defendants in that suit then refrained from manufacturing the Eureka, but continued to manufacture the Champion under an agreement with this defendant; that after-wards an application was made to that court. Judge Woodruff presiding, for an attachment against the defendants therein for violating the injunction in manufacturing and selling the Champion buckle, and that after hearing the parties on that motion the court adjudged the defendants guilty, holding that the Champion infringed upon the Cole Wedge patent. It does not appear, nor is it alleged, that the question of infringement involved in this suit has ever been tried in any other manner than on that motion. The papers in this case show that at the trial of that case the defendants therein were manufacturing the Champion as well as the Eureka, notwithstanding which, however, there was no charge or claim then made, that this defendant’s invention, the Champion buckle, was an infringement of the Cole Wedge buckle. If that court had tried the question of infringement involved in this suit, in the usual and formal mode of trying such questions. I should regard the decree as sufficient, prima facie, to authorize the granting of the preliminary injunction prayed for herein. For after one fair trial off the question on its merits in one court, other courts should presume the decision to be right, and follow it. so far, at least, as to restrain all parties preliminarily from manufacturing or selling the illegal or piratical article in another suit, founded upon the same right and involving the same question. But I do not think the decision of the learned judge on that motion sufficient to warrant another court, in a suit where the infringement is positively denied, in granting a preliminary injunction without reference to the facts proven in the case before it.
The defendant's counsel contended, with a good deal of force and reason, that the plaintiff therein, the assignee of the Cole Wedge patent, did not then consider the Champion as an infringement of the Cole patent, for if he had he would have raised the question on the trial, as the defendants therein were manufacturing the Champion at that time, as well as the Eureka. This position of the defendants is not easily answered. It, at least, tends to show that the infringement is not so manifest as '-the complainant’s counsel now pronounce it. I cannot, therefore, regard the decision of his honor, Judge Wood-ruff. as conclusive, or as sufficient authority upon the question .of infringement, without reference to the facts appearing on this motion. to grant the injunction asked for, but must look into the motion papers and see
The motion is- therefore denied.