4 F. 455 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1880
The bill in this case is filed for the infringement of a patent. It charges that the defendant has infringed by making, using, and selling the invention patented, which is an “improvement in show-cards for embroidery.” The infringement is alleged to have been committed in this district and elsewhere in the United States. The bill prays for the payment of the profits made by the defendant from the infringement, and of the damages sustained by the plaintiff therefrom, and for an injunction against the defendant restraining him from making, using, or vending any show-cards containing said improvement.
The defendant has interposed a plea to the bill, and it has been set down for argument and argued. It sets forth that the defendant has been and is employed by the persons composing the firm of Loeb & Schoenfeld, which firm is engaged in business in Philadelphia, within the jurisdiction of the circuit court of the United States for the eastern district of Pennsylvania, such persons being resident at Philadelphia; that his business is to visit divers places and exhibit to buyers samples of the goods made by said firm, and solicit offers or orders for the purchase of such goods; that such orders or offers, when received by him, are transmitted by him to the said firm in Philadelphia; that said firm, in case the offers or orders are satisfactory to it as respects price, the solvency or pecuniary ability of the proposed buyers, the terms and condition's of the proposed purchase, and other particulars, accepts the same, makes the sale, supplies the goods, charges them to the proposed buyer, and renders to him directly a bill for the same; that the defendant in such case receives a commission on the amount of the sale; that if the order or offer is not satisfactory, it is declined by the firm and no sale is made, and the defendant receives no commissions; and that he has not in any other way made or sold show-cards for embroidery containing the patented invention.
The plea also sets forth (2) that before the bill in this suit
As to the first branch of the plea, or the first plea, whichever it may be, (no point being made or decided as to whether there are two pleas or only one, or, if two, as to the propriety of pleading two pleas without leave,) the plea must be overruled. The substance of it is that the defendant is not liable in this suit for what the plea sets forth as having been done by him. This is not so. The plea shows that the defendant has made a separate and independent profit to himself out of the sale of such goods as he has been Instrumental in selling, by receiving a commission thereon, in which commission Loeb
As to the second branch oi the plea, or the second plea, it follows, from the foregoing observations, that the pendency of the suit in Pennsylvania against Loeb & Sehoenfeld is no bar to this suit. This defendant is not a defendant in that suit, and no injunction therein could be issued against him by name; and, although an injunction therein against the defendants therein might reach them for the acts of this defendant as an employe of theirs, yet,, although he is an employe of theirs, in one sense, in what he does, he is independent of them in the profit he makes by his commission on sales, although he may receive his commission through them out of the sale price, and it is proper that the plaintiff should have an independant injunction against him in this suit. Again, as before said, the bill in Pensylvania would not make the defendants therein account for the commission received by this defendant. This, therefore, is not the case of another suit pending between the same parties in another jurisdiction for the same subject-matter.
The plea is overruled, with costs, and the defendant will be assigned to answer the bill.