Accumulator Co. v. Consolidated Electric Storage Co.

53 F. 796, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2428
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 17, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 53 F. 796 (Accumulator Co. v. Consolidated Electric Storage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Accumulator Co. v. Consolidated Electric Storage Co., 53 F. 796, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2428 (circtdnj 1893).

Opinion

GREEN, District Judge.

The bill of complaint in this case was filed to enjoin an infringement of certain letters patent now owned by the complainant, dated January 8, 1882, and numbered 252,002, and granted to G. A. Paure, for secondary storage batteries. The first claim of this patent has been upheld and sustained as a valid claim hy the United States circuit court for (he southern district of Yew York in several contested cases. Electrical Accumulator Co. v. Julien Electric Co., 38 Fed. Rep. 117, and Electrical Accumulator Co. v. New York & H. R. Co., 40 Fed. Rep. 328. The defendant company in the first-named case, — the Julien Electric Company,- — and who was practically the defendant in the second case also, has been absorbed bv the Consolidated Electric Storage Company, the present defendant. Mr. Bracken, the president of the defendant company, was the president of the Julien Electrical Company, and it is not denied that the defendant company has taken over all the plant n,nd business of the Julien Electrical Company to itself, and is practically its successor. The letters patent having been declared valid by a judgment of a circuit court of the United States, this court will adopt sncli adjudication on well-established principles, and accept the conclusions there arrived at, especially as the parties 'are the same, or practically so, and the. infringing acts are substantially identical in character.

The complainant now comes into this court to' ask for a preliminary injunction against the defendant, and as it appears that the acts which the complainant alleges to he infringing acts have been ad[798]*798judged so to be in a court of competent jurisdiction in another circuit, and that the predecessors of the defendant have been enjoined and prohibited by the decree of such circuit court from the commission of such infringing acts, ordinarily the motion would be granted. The comity which exists between the federal courts would justify such action on the part of this court without further investigation into the merits of the case.

But the defendants allege that they have a new and valid defense to the charges made against them by the complainant. Admitting, they say, that the letters patent now owned by the complainant were valid when granted, and that the claim alleged to be infringed has been sustained by the circuit court in the jurisdiction mentioned, yet that since that adjudication it has been made known to them that Faure obtained a patent in Spain for the same invention covered by the letters patent in the United States; that the patent in Spain, being limited to a term of 10 years, and having been issued in 1881, ipso facto expired in 1891, which date was previous to the alleged infringing acts committed by the defendant corporation; that, the expiration of the Spanish patent necessarily ending by force of the statute the life of the American patent, the monopoly which had been secured to Faure by the American letters patent has ceased and determined, and that there is no longer any hindrance to the manufacture of storage batteries as invented by Faure in this country. They further declare that this defense has never been raised and determined by any court, and is now made for the first time, on this present occasion, and hence they contend that no preliminary injunction should be granted.

The rule .is well settled that where a patent has been declared valid by a decision of a circuit court of the United States in one circuit, such decision will be followed by the federal courts in other circuits, unless it shall be made to appear that new evidence has been discovered, or a novel defense is to be presented, of such a character and of such significance that, if it had been introduced at the hearing in the other circuit, it would have led the court there to a different conclusion. Does this case fall within the exception? The complainant here is entitled to all the .protection that can be justly claimed from the result in New York. The patent in question has been sustained there after an unusually long, arduous, and expensive litigation; not only once, but twice, and thrice. To deny to the complainant the fruits of its legal victory, except for causes which necessarily compel such a result, would be to make judicial proceedings a travesty of justice. Nor is it true that alleged new defenses will always work a suspension of the granting of an injunction based upon the adjudication in another circuit. Such statement of the rule is too broad. The defense, to be effective, must be so potent in its character as to carry conviction almost to the'degree of being beyond a reasonable doubt, that, if it had been made in the original cause, and upon the first hearing, the court would have arrived at a totally different result. Now, in this case it appears that after the granting of the injunction upon final hearing in New York application was made by these defendants to the court there to dissolve that injunction upon the very ground [799]*799that the granting of the Spanish patent had been discovered, and that such Spanish patent had determined by lapse of time, and so had determined tbe American patent. The matter was vigorously argued, but the court in New York declined to suspend the injunction, or vacate the decree which it had made. Judge Coxe in delivering the opinion of the court says:

“This is a motion to dissolve an injunction issued pursuant to an interlocutory decree on the ground that the complainant’s patent is invalidated by the expiration of a Spanish patent for the same invention. At the oral argument it was decided that the questions presented were too important to be determined upon affidavits, but that the defendants should he permitted to amend their answer, and set up the expiraton of the Spanish patent as a defense, and that the proof pro and con upon the issue thus raised should he taken in the usual way. The only question reserved for further consideration was whether, pending the taking of the proofs, the injunction should he sustained. It must he remembered that the complainant obtained a decree after an unusually long, arduous, and expensive litigation. This decree was upon one claim only, and the claim was restricted within narrow limits. A judgment so obtained should not he lightly set aside. To suspend the injunction is tantamount to vacating the decree. It would seem unjust to the complainant to overthrow, even temporarily, a judgment reached after years of toil upon ex parte, and possibly incorrect, statements. In a matter of such importance the complainant should retain its rights until deprived of them by testimony presented in the usual course of equity proceeding. With ordinary diligence the question can he determined in the course of a few months. The defendants cannot be seriously injured by Hie short delay, especially in view of the fact that they have at all times contended that there is noihing novel or desirable in the complainant’s patent as limited by the decree, and a Fauré electrode has no advantages over electrodes mechanically coated.” 47 Fed. Rep. 892.

The motion to dissolve the injunction was denied.

From an examination of the papers it is apparent that the facts concerning the Spanish patent now opened to this court were fairly laid before the court in New York, yet that court was nob persuaded to change its opinion as originally pronounced. Judge Coxe distinctly held that, notwithstanding the evidence touching die new matters of defense, the complainant was entitled to retain all the rights that had been accorded to it, until deprived of them by testimony presented in tbe usual course of equity proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
53 F. 796, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/accumulator-co-v-consolidated-electric-storage-co-circtdnj-1893.