240 F. 745 | D. Conn. | 1916
This is a suit in eqxiity for infringement of letters patent of the United States granted October 4, 1904, to Peter C. Nielsen for phonograph horns, No. 771,441, owned by the plaintiff.
The case now arises on a rule to show cause why the plaintiff should not be enjoined from impleading or attempting to implead the defendant in this action as a joint defendant in an equity suit charging infringement of said letters patent now pending in the District Court of the United States for the Northern District of California in which the plaintiff here is the plaintiff there and the Columbia Graphophone Company is the defendant, or from in any wise attempting to bring the defendant, the American Graphophone Company into said California suit or within the jurisdiction of the California court, or from in any wise interfering with the orderly conduct of this cause now pending in this court.. The facts upon which this rule arises are as follows:
The plaintiff is a New York corporation. Some time in 1911 the plaintiff commenced litigation in the northern district of California against infringers of said patent. There were several of these suits, some of which were taken to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and in all of the cases the validity of the patent was sustained, and the respective defendants adjudged to he infringers. In 1913 the plaintiff filed a bill in equity in the Northern district of California on the patent in suit against the Columbia Graphophone Company, a West Virginia corporation formerly known as the Columbia Phonograph Company' General, praying for an injunction against the further manufacture, use, and sale by said Columbia Graphophone Company of phonograph horns embodying the invention of the Nielsen patent, and an accounting of profits and damages, and for costs. A preliminary injunction was granted, and after final hearing on pleadings and proofs an interlocutory decree was entered in favor of the plaintiff, deciding all the issues in favor of the plaintiff, and adjudging said patent to be valid and infringed by the phonograph horns made, used, and sold by the defendant therein, and a permanent injunction was granted against the further manufacture, use, and sale of such horns by the defendant. An accounting was also directed, together with the customary reference to a master. A motion by the plaintiff is now pending in the California case for leave to file a supplementary bill of complaint making the American Graphophone Company, a party defendant, and for a decree to the effect that the American Grapho-phone Company committed the acts of infringement therein complained of and proved, and for a judgment for profits and damages against •the American Graphophone Company for the six years prior to the commencement of the California action. The purpose of the present motion and rule is to restrain the plaintiff from prosecuting this motion in California.
All of the infringing articles had been supplied by the American Graphophone Company to the Columbia Graphophone Company for the purposes of sale, the latter corporation being the sales agent of the American Graphophone Company. All of the capital stock of the Columbia Graphophone Company is under the full and complete control and management of the American Graphophone Company, and
An instructive case on this point is National Conduit Mfg. Co. v. Connecticut Pipe Mfg. Co. (C. C.) 73 Fed. 491, arising in the Circuit Court for this district and decided by Judge Townsend, in which it was held that the estoppel as against the assignor of a patent- operates, against a corporation subsequently formed by him, and which is entirely owned and controlled by him, and that the corporation will be estopped, even if another company has a substantial interest therein, if it appears that at the time of acquiring his interest he had knowledge of the patent, its assignment, and had been associated with the assignor in the line of business to which the patent relates.
In Simmons Co. v. Doran, 142 U. S. 417, 12 Sup. Ct. 239, 35 L. Ed. 1063, it was held that where each and all of the individuals who organize a corporation under a state law had knowledge, or actual notice of a defect in the title to lands acquired by the corporation through them, their knowledge or actual notice was knowledge or actual notice to the company.
The rule is nowhere more clearly or forcibly stated than by Mr. Justice McKenna in delivering the judgment of the Supreme Court in McCaskill Co. v. United States, 216 U. S. 504, 30 Sup. Ct. 386, 54 L. Ed. 590, as follows:
“Undoubtedly a corporation is, in law, a person or entity entirely distinct from its stockholders and officers. It may have interest distinct from theirs. Their interests, it may be conceived, may be adverse to its interest, and h^nce has arisen against the presumption that their knowledge is its knowledge, the counter presumption that in transactions with it, when their interest is adverse, their knowledge will not be attributed to it. But while this presumption should be enforced to protect the corporation, it should not be carried so far as to enable the corporation to become a means of fraud or a means to evade its responsibilities. A growing tendency is therefore exhibited in the courts to look beyond the corporate form to the purpose of it and to the officers who are identified with that purpose. Illustrations are given of this in Cook on Corporations, §§ 663, 664, and 727. The principle was enforced in this court in Simmons Creek Coal Co. v. Doran, 142 U. S. 417 [12 Sup. Ct. 239, 35 L. Ed. 1063], In that case a corporation claimed title to land through a deed of its corporators, one of whom became its president. Of the effect of this the court said: ‘Associated together to carry forward a common enterprise, the knowledge or actual notice of all these corporators, and the president, was the knowledge or notice of the company, and if constructive notice bound them it bound the.company.’ The case at bar is within the principle. The bill alleges that J. J. McCaskill and Robert E. L. McCaskill were copartners and engaged in the manufacture of lumber at Freeport, Flá. They incorporated this business, it is alleged, under the laws of Florida, ‘by the corporate name of J. J. McCaskill Company, with the said J. 3. McCaskill as president and th,e said Robert E. L. McCaskill as secretary, owning a large majority of the stock of said corporation, with the entire management and control of the business and affairs of said corporation.’ There is no denial of this allegation. The interest of the corporators and the corporation thus shown to be identical, not adverse, we think the ruling in Simmons Creek Coal Company v. Doran is applicable.”
Other cases directly in point are Riverdale Mills Co. v. Mfg. Co., 198 U. S. 188, 25 Sup. Ct. 629, 49 L. Ed. 1008; United States v. Lehigh Valley R. R. Co., 220 U. S. 257, 31 Sup. Ct. 387, 55 L. Ed. 458; Anthony v. American Glucose Co., 146 N. Y. 407, 41 N. E. 23; In re Muncie Pulp Co., 139 Fed. 546, 71 C. C. A. 530; In re Rieger, Kapner & Altmark (D. C.) 157 Fed. 609.
Moreover, the present suit was commenced in June, 1916, and can include the recovery of profits and damages only from June, 1910. The California suit was commenced in 1913, and if the American Graphqphone Company can be deemed a party to that suit, so that a judgment for damages may be rendered against it, a recovery can be had against it in that suit for all profits and damages for six years prior to the commencement of that suit, viz., from July, 1907. In other words, the two suits involve different periods of time and different recoveries of profits and damages, and in view of the claim of fact which is strongly urged, and which is not controverted, that the Columbia Graphophone Company has no assets, a Question is presented which should not be adjudicated upon this rule and motion.
Should any accounting be ordered at any time in the California suit against the American Graphophone Company, the plaintiff agrees that such accounting may be had here, where the books of the American Graphophone Company are kept. This agreement disposes of the claim made by the defendant that the attempt of the plaintiff to im-plead the American Graphophone Company in the California suit, if successful, would work a severe hardship and expense, necessitating, as is tirged, the removal of all books and records as well as some of the employés of the American Graphophone Company to California, to be detained there as long as the accounting lasts.
Under the circumstances I fail to see how the prosecution of the motion in the California case in any way interferes with the orderly conduct of this case. For the reasons above indicated, the rule should be discharged and the motion denied. Let an order to that effect be entered.
So ordered.