Plаintiffs appeal from the dismissal, for want of venue in the court below, of their action for patent infringement brought against a West Virginia corporation. In granting the defendant’s motion to dismiss, Judge Dawson ruled that plaintiffs had shown no aсts of infringement committed by the defendant in the Southern District of New York, although he did point out that it maintains a sales office in the district and by the regular and continuous course of activity there may be said to have a regular and еstablished place of business therein. D.C.S.D.N.Y.,
The governing statutes here, found in Chapter 87 of Title 28 U.S.Code entitled, “District Courts; Venue,” are the ones dealing with “Venue generally” *886 and with “Patents and copyrights.” From the first we have the provision:
“A corporation may be sued in any judicial district in which it is incorporated or licensed to do business or is doing business, and such judicial district shall be regarded as the residence of such corporation fоr venue purposes.” 28 U.S.C. § 1391(c).
And from the second we have the following :
“Any civil action for patent infringement may be brought in the judicial district where the defendant resides, or where the defendant has committed acts of infringement and has a regular and established place of business.” 28 U.S.C. § 1400(b).
As was held with respect to earlier legislation, the second provision should control here. Stonite Products Co. v. Melvin Lloyd Co.,
Such, we think, is the proper interpretation of the legislative mandate, fortified, indeed, upon consideration of the background and general purpose of the 1948 statutory revision. But therе has arisen a serious difference of opinion, many eminent judges reading the statutes as intending no change in the former law, wherein the corporation was an “inhabitant” only of its state of incorporation. Able exponents of this view are Chief Judge Phillips in Ruth v. Eagle-Picher Co., 10 Cir.,
The stated reason chiefly relied on for the judicial conservatism thus displayed, namely, that the revision of Title 28 was often declared by those participаting to be in the main declaratory only, without change of substance, can properly apply only where there was not change of substance ; correctly understood in the light of the background of the revision, it here actually cuts the other way. For, as is well understood, an editorial staff from two law publishing firms did the initial task of revision for the legislative committee and naturally limited its work to revision proper. But, as also well understood, various suggestions coming from the staff or special consultants or scholars were adopted and, where occurring, made sharp breaks with the past. This is developed with extraordinarily complete documentation by Chief Justice Vinson in a case so analogous as to be authoritative here. Ex parte Collett,
The rationale of this sharp break with ancient formulae is quite obviously a response to a general conviction that it was “intolerable if the traditional concepts of ‘residence’ and ‘presence’ kept a corporation from being sued wherever it was crеating liabilities.” See the Note cited supra, 56 Col.L.Rev. 394, at 395 (1956). As this authority points out, the particular attack on the problem here is in terms of venue, with which is allied the issue of personal jurisdiction over corporations.
5
But, as we know, the ramifications are yet more general; for there have long been debated proposals to substitute for the famous fiction making a corporation a citizen or inhabitant of the perhaps remotе state of its incorporation the more realistic test for substantive jurisdiction itself of the place or places of corporate activity or doing business. See Frankfurter, J., in Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Co. v. Elbert,
Moreover, recognition of such exceptions is unreasonable, since all the grounds supporting the general rule appear fully as applicable to all the special cases, including patent infringement. 7 And it presents a really acute problem as to how far such special exceptions should themselves be extended. It does seem odd drafting, tо say the least, to add after a general and unlimited defining statute a series of eight or ten exceptions—all unexpressed as such, but each destroying the generality of the first provision. For precisely the same problеm can be raised—even though this does not seem to have been generally perceived—as to the series of special venue statutes in this chapter, as well as those elsewhere stated, such as seamen’s suits under the Jones Act. 8 It hardly seems possible—and the cases do not support the view—that Congress intended any such inroad on its general principle as to take out all these situations; nor is there any ground for distinguishing between, e. g., clаims for patent infringement, for unfair competition, or for violation of the antitrust laws, which might properly come up in a single suit and be conveniently disposed of together. We conclude with the text writers that the-general definition of corporate residence applies here also.
We should notice a final argument occasionally made, that the construction supported by plaintiifs will render the second alternative of § 1400(b) of no practical utility. Having in mind the-manner in which the new Code was prepared, as stated above, it seems doubtful if any deduction of importance is to be drawn from the mere circumstance of continuance of provisions useful in the earlier legislation, 28 U.S.C. former § 109; and no such deduction has been made with reference to the provision for venue of cases under the Jones Act, as. we have seen. 9 But it is quite clear that this alternative provisiоn does have a sphere of decided usefulness in litigation against noncorporate defendants, and some provision of this nature was imperative. 56 Col.L.Rev. 394, 415 (1956). 10
Because its literal wording thus coincides with the legislative purpose, viewed in historical perspective, to support a patent infringement suit where the venue is laid in the federal district in which the corporate defendant is doing business, the judgment below must be reversed and the action remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. As the Reviser’s Note to § 1400(b) indeed suggests, in pointing out the identity of “resident” with “inhabitant” of the former law and making a specific cross-reference to the like explanation in the Note to § 1391.
. See discussion in the Note cited in the text infra, 56 Col.L.Rev. 394, 412, 413 (1956), also analyzing acutely other special venue provisions, including that of the Jones Act, 46 U.S.C. § 688, permitting suits in the district in which the defendant employer resides or in whiсh his principal office is located. “Since the doing business test of section 1391(c) defines residence, can it be applied here when to do so would make superfluous the last clause of the special provision? The decisions are uniform in holding that it can.” 56 Col.L.Rev. 394, 413 (1956), citing cases.
The cases cited do not exhaust the judicial precedents, for there are several district court decisions, also divided. Compare, e. g., Farr Co. v. Gratiot, D.C.S.D.Cal.,
. Cited and quoted in Ruth v. Eagle-Picher Co., 10 Cir.,
. The suggestion found, as in Ruth v. Eagle-Picher Co., 10 Cir.,
. Note that in the earlier subdivisions of § 1391, viz., (a) and (b), specific exceptions are made for other provisions of the law.
. However exclusive it may be, the patent jurisdiction statute itself, § 1400(b), did bring in a new concept making the place of the wrong important. See Stonite Products Co. v. Melvin Lloyd Co.,
. As explained in footnote 2 supra.
. See footnotes 2 and 8 accompanying text supra.
. Even for corporate defendants, the two provisions are not identical; and “having a regular and established place of business” may not always be synonymous or coextensive with “doing business.” ,
