4 F. 916 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts | 1880
In this case I decided that the bill, upon its face, was wanting in equity, because it undertook to treat a licensee as an infringer, without showing a renunciation of the license. White v. Lee, 3 Fed. Rep. 222. The complainants have now amended their bill, and charge that the defendant has not furnished the statements and made the payments agreed upon between them, and praying that the defendant may be required to account for all shoes which he has made containing the patented improvements, or any material part thereof. Only one of the two patents mentioned in the lease, or license, is in controversy in this suit.
The defendant pleads in bar, admitting that he took a license, or “lease,” under the original patent, No. 190,655, but alleging that the re-issue, No. 8,536, now sued on, was issued without his knowledge or consent; that by the terms
The question intended to be raised by this plea is whether the defendant is bound to account and pay for any shoes which would be an infringement of the claims of the re-issue, blit would not infringe the single claim of the original patent. The language of the license is accurately set out in the plea, as far as it goes, but some other clauses may be useful in construing the instrument. The granting part, after referring to the two patents, gives the right to manufacture at the defendant’s factory, in Athol, in the state of Massachusetts, and in no other place, during the term of said letters patent, and during any renewal or extension thereof, shoes containing the said patented improvements, or either of them, or any material or substantial part thereof. Then follow the stipulations for royalties, keeping accounts, etc. In the fifth stipulation, on the part of the defendant, he agrees not to contest the validity of the patents, or of any re-issue or renewal thereof, nor the sufficiency of the specifications, “or the validity of the licensor’s title, nor the fact of his infringement in the manufacture and sale of said shoes.” Thus far it seems to be the natural construction of the lease that if the defendant should be sued for royalties, after a re-issue, he must admit its valid
The defendant contends that, although he is liable to pay royalties under the re-issue, it is only to the same extent and in the sanie cases, in all respects, as if the single claim of the original patent were the only claim of the re-issued patent. My impression is that the fifth mutual agreement means that the parties are to remain bound under the re-issue substantially as if that had been the original patent. The idea, if that be it, is awkwardly expressed. Instead of saying, as if the re-issue had never been obtained, it should be, as if it had never been necessary to obtain it. But it seems very improbable that the parties should import into a re-issue a claim which is cancelled and of no effect, and, indeed, which has no existence except by their stipulation. The re-issue is presumed to be for the same invention. If not, it is void. Perhaps the defendant may be estopped to say it is void; but, as he is bound only for “said shoes,” he may, perhaps, be permitted to show that the shoes he is asked to account for do not embody the invention, though he cannot say that the re-issue does not. This will depend upon the construction of his fifth agreement. If the re-issue should turn out to be for the same invention, I doubt very much whether the defendant will escape payment if he has used that invention, though it may have been imperfectly claimed at first. In other words, I doubt if the stipulation refers to the claim of the patent as necessarily and without possible amendment embodying the
Case to stand for answer^