45 F. 893 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana | 1891
The complainant has brought suit against the Louisiana Electric light Company for infringement of patent 219,208, which was granted to Charles F. Brush, September 2, 1879, for certain new and useful improvements in electric lamps; the improvements consisting in a device for burning two pairs of carbons successively in one lamp by automatically transferring the luminous arc from the pair first lighted when burned out to a second and fresh pair. The lamp, with the improvement, is known as the “Double Carbon Lamp,” and is in nearly -universal use for all-night lighting of streets and public places. A single pair of carbons will last only about seven hours. By the use of the patented improvement light is maintained throughout the night without renewing the carbons, as would otherwise bo necessary. The case now comes before the court in a motion for preliminary injunction, and shows
1. It is urged that the necessary parties are not before the court to authorize the granting of an injunction. It is contended (a) that the complainant-is a mere licensee, and cannot maintain a suit for infringement unless the owner of the patent is joined as complainant, or at least is before the court; and (6) that the license given by the Brush Electric Company to the complainant has been revoked and annulled, according to the terms thereof, by the parent company, and the complainant no longer has any rights whatever in the patent.
2. It is urged that the injunction should not be issued because of the inconvenience to the public necessarily resulting, and the hardship thereby unnecessarily imposed upon the defendant company, the patented improvement being but a trifling part of the costly machinery composing a large and extensive plant.
3. It is said that the injunction should not issue because the complainant has been guilty of laches in asserting its rights.
These questions have been elaborately argued both orally and by brief, and have been given careful attention. We find it necessary at this stage’of the case to decide only as to whether the preliminary injunction should issue on account of the public and private inconvenience necessarily resulting. It appears by the affidavits and exhibits that the Southwestern Brush Electric Light & Power Company was organized in the year 1881, with a capital stock of $300,000, for the purpose, among other things, of supplying the “cities, towns, and parishes or counties in the states of Louisiana and Mississippi, or either of them, and the streets, public buildings, hotels, mills, factories, stores, and houses therein with light under the various inventions or letters patent known as the ‘Brush-Electric Light; ’ ” that it thereafter entered into a very onerous contract with the Brush Electric Company of Cleveland, Ohio, by which for the various patents, including the one herein sued on, it assigned and conveyed to the said Brush Electric Company 48 per cent, of its capital
“Reasons for withholding an injunction may also be found in its probable effect, if granted, either upon the interests of the plaintiff or those of the defendant or the public;” citing Hat-Sweat Manuf’g Co. v. Davis Sewing-Mach. Co., 32 Fed. Rep. 401; Covert v. Curtis, 25 Fed. Rep. 43; Irwin v. Dane, 4 Fish. Pat. Cas. 359.
“Where the injury to the defendant would be out of all proportion to the benefit accruing to the plaintiff, or where the invention is a part only of some wider process or device whose use is essential to the business of the defendant, and whose abandonment must prove the ruin of his enterprise, the court may, if he is responsible, or tenders compensation to the plaintiff, refuse to interrupt his operations until the necessity therefor is made apparent on the final hearing;” citing Hockholzer v. Eager, 2 Sawy. 361; McCrary v. Canal Co., 5 Fed. Rep. 367; Potter v. Whitney, 1 Low. 87; Morris v. Manufacturing Co., 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 67; North v. Kershaw, 4 Blatchf. 70; Day v. Candee, 3 Fish. Pat. Cas. 9; Swift v. Jenks, 19 Fed. Rep. 641; Guidet v. Palmer, 10 Blatchf. 217.
“If the cessation of the alleged infringing acts would prove injurious to the public, whose safety or convenience depend upon the use of the invention by the defendant, this likewise constitutes a sufficient reason for the denial of the application;” citing Bliss v. City of Brooklyn, 4 Fish. Pat. Cas. 596; Blake v. Greenwood Cemetery, 14 Blatchf. 342; Ballard v. Pittsburgh, 12 Fed. Rep. 783.
In Grape Sugar Co. Case, 10 Fed. Rep. 837, Judge Wallace, after recognizing the complainant’s rights under the patent, and the fact of defendants’ infringement, said:
“On the other hand, the defendants have gradually created and developed an extensive market for glucose and grape sugar, so large that, if their works were stopped, the demand could not well be supplied, and serious inconvenience would result. They have not only invested a large capital in their manufacturing business, but they employ a great number of workmen, many of whom would be temporarily cut adrift if an injunction should be granted. It is difficult to see how the defendants could remove the patented apparatus without substantially dismantling and reorganizing their works. Under such circumstances, the equitable considerations which appeal to the discretion of the court, and, within well-recognized rules, should lead to the refusal of a preliminary injunction, cannot be ignored.”
The complainant company having introduced these double-carbon lamps into public use, and the public having found them necessary to public safety, as well as convenient for business purposes, a court of equity should not deprive the public of such use, at least on a preliminary nearing, and at the suit of a complainant who is in no condition to supply the public demand at any cost or expense, and who is destitute of pecuniary means and all apparatus to such a degree as to make it rea
There was read on the hearing affidavits of Messrs. Thos. L. Airey, Isidore Newman, and others, capitalists and stockholders in the complainant company, to the general purport that tho interest in the patent, as set forth in tho bill, is tlie sole remaining asset of the company; that it is valuable, if it can be protected; and that, if tho complainant was assured of protection, and could receive the revenues to which it is entitled under the said patent, and could be assured of protection therein, it would place the complainant company in good credit and active operation as a dividend-paying corporation; and that it would enable it to re-establish its lighting plant, enter again on the business of electric lighting, make good the investments of its stockholders, discharge its indebtedness, and afford the public the benefit which arises from a fair and open competition. In granting injunctions prior to tho hearing on the merifs the court deals only with existing facts, and the extent of tho relief proper to grant is the protection of tho complainant from irreparable injury pending the litigation. We are clear that the injunction pendente Hie should be denied, and it is so ordered.