This is an appeal from an order of the District Court for the Eastern District of New York, Jacob Mishler, Judge, denying a motion to adjudge the defendant guilty of contempt for violation of an injunction entered in a consent decree. The consent decree provided that the plaintiff’s patent, No. 2,812,600, on a price tag display assembly, was valid between the parties, and that the defendant had infringed the patent by making and selling price tags nearly identical with the plaintiff’s price tags. The consent decree enjoined the defendant from directly or contributorily infringing the plaintiff’s patent. It also enjoined the defendant from copying, making, using, or selling any of the plaintiff’s tags.
After the entry of the consent decree, the defendant continued to make and sell its price tags, which were modified only by the use of an “opaque” instead of a translucent ink and by a change of the type face of the numerals. The plaintiff contends that the changes were merely “colorable” and that the district court should have found the defendant guilty of contempt.
The validity of the patent is not before the court, for the consent decree made that question
res judicata
for the purposes of this appeal. Desagnat et al. v. Dratler,
Since the evidence in this case is entirely in the form of documents and-' physical exhibits, we have before us
all
the evidence the trial court considered to-determine whether there has been a violation of the consent decree. The entire
*638
evidence in this case leaves us with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed. See United States v. United States Gypsum Co.,
Even if the defendant were correct in his contention that there has actually been no infringement because he sold only a single component of a combination patent, and that the component was adapted to a variety of uses quite apart from insertion in the special display assembly of the plaintiff, a finding of contempt would still be in order. The plaintiff and defendant stipulated in the consent decree that the defendant had been guilty of contributory infringement ; to this extent, the question of contributory infringement is foreclosed from our consideration. A defendant may be guilty of contempt for violation of the injunctive provisions of a consent decree even though it eventually is determined that the patent was not infringed. See Cassidy v. Puett Electrical Starting Gate Corp.,
Reversed and remandedrto the district court for a finding of contempt and imposition of whatever-sanctions are deemed appropriate.
