delivered the opinion of the court.
Wilson sued the Union Tool Company in the federal court for the Southern District of California, Southern Division, for infringement of a patent for underreamers. He obtained a decree for an injunction and an accounting,
*109 Wilson claimed that there had been deliberate violation of the injunction both by the sale of infringing machines and by the sale of spare parts; and he moved in the District Court that the company and certain of its officers be punished for contempt or otherwise deált with for violating it. The District Court found that, since the service of the injunction, the company had sold infringing machines; held it guilty of contempt in so doing; ordered that,the company pay to the clerk of the court $5,000 as a fine, and that out of this sum $2,500 be paid to Wilson “ as a reasonable portion of the expenses incurred ” by him in the contempt proceeding; and further ordered that if the fine were not paid within twenty days, Double, the company’s president, be committed to jail, to be there confined until it should be paid. The District Court also found that the company had sold, after the service of the injunction, spare parts to be used with mar chines or devices sold by the company prior thereto, and that these were of such a nature that when used in combination they would effect an infringement. But the court concluded, for reasons to be stated, that thé salé, of such spare parts should not subject the company to a fine, and purged it of contempt in that respect, without prejudice to the right of Wilson to renew his application.
To have this judgment entered in the contempt proceeding reviewed by the Court of Appeals, the company and Double sued out a writ of error; and thereafter Wilson sued out a cross writ of error. The two writs were considered and. disposed of separately. On the original writ the judgment was modified by striking out all that related to Double; and it was reversed in so far as it “ directed that $2,500 be paid to the clerk of the court as a punishment of the corporation.” But in so far as the judgment directed payment to Wilson as compensation, it was affirmed.
The contention that the Court of Appeals was without jurisdiction of the cross writ of error is renewed here. It is argued that the judgment for contempt, so far as now sought to be reviewed, is remedial, not punitive; that being remedial it can be reviewed only on appeal and not ón writ of error; that an appeal will not lie until after the final decree; and that no final decree had been entered, as the accounting was still in process. It is true that the part of the judgment for contempt now under review is remedial. But it does not follow that the Court of Appeals lacked jurisdiction to review it on the cross writ of error. The District Court entered a single order, part remedial, part punitive. Where a fine is imposed partly-as compensation to the complainant and partly as punishment, the criminal feature of the order is dominant and fixes its character for purposes of review.
In re Merchants’ Stock & Grain Co.,
The company contends also that the judgment of the District Court, being favorable to it in so far as it related to spare parts, was not subject to review by any appellate court, at any time, by any proceeding — although remedial
*112
in its nature. The argument is that where the court of whose authority contempt is charged either finds that there was no contempt or purges the offender, a judicial power has been exercised which is discretionary and is not subject to review. But the fact that a remedial order was entered in a contempt proceeding is not in itself a reason why it should not be subject to correction by an appellate court. In
Worden
v.
Searls,
Minor objections of a procedural nature are also urged. It is said that while the infringement by sale of spare parts was a civil contempt, the Court of Appeals directed the District Court “ to impose such punishment as may seem proper ” and thus ordered criminal punishment. In view of the opinion and other proceedings, the direction must be understood as referring to compensation. Compare
Gompers
v.
Bucks Stove & Range Co.,
On the merits the contention is this: The interlocutory decree awards to Wilson, amon^ other things, compensation by way of damages _and-profits,for employing the invention in any machine sold prior to the service of the injunction. A patentee, in demanding and receiving full compensation for the wrongful use of his invention in devices made and sold by a manufacturer adopts the sales as though made by-himself, and therefore, necessarily licenses the use of the devices, and frees them from the monopoly of the patent. This license continues during the life of the machine; it does not end when repairs become necessary. Spare parts are needed for repairs. Those here in question were sold for use in, and repair of, machines marketed by the company before the service of the injunction. Therefore, it is argued, the sale of these parts is licensed and thus not a violation of the injunction. But to this argument which prevailed in the District Court, there are several answers; and, among them, this: It does not appear that Wilson has received any compensation whatever for the infringement by use of these maiphines. Compare Birdsell v. Shaliol, 112 U. S. *114 485, 487-489. There was, consequently, no implied license to use the spare parts in these machines: As such use, unless licensed, clearly constituted an infringement, the sale of the spare parts to be so used violated the injunction. And the sale having been made with full knowledge of all relevant facts, the Court of Appeals properly held that, so far as Wilson had Sought remedial, as distinguished from punitive action, the District Court was not justified in purging the petitioner of contempt arising from the sale of spare parts.
Affirmed.
