HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.
The suit was against two defendants, appellant and one Corbett, for infringing use of a “new and useful improvement in a moving target adapted for use in shooting galleries and similar places where target practice is carried on”, and for the damages and profits resulting therefrom. Appellant, through some oversight not explained in the record, defaulted, and there was an interlocutory decree and injunction and a reference to a special master to ascertain gains and profits and damages. Appellant, learning of the reference, appeared by counsel in the proceedings before the master.
The master found that the damages and profits could only be estimated from a fair preponderance of the testimony, that the damages in their nature were not as susceptible of proof as the profits were, and that the profits were not susceptible of exact mathematical calculation or determination with reasonable certainty. He awarded nominal damages of $1 only. On the issue of profits (though, on his findings,1 appellant and Corbett were not partners but mere co-infringers, and of the income from the shooting gallery where the infringed device was being used, appellant received only 40 percent of 60 percent), he [695]*695found the defendants were in the position of joint tort-feasors and were, therefore, jointly liable to plaintiffs for all the profits attributable to the use of the infringed device in the aggregate sum of $12,390.54. Of the opinion that plaintiff was entitled under the statute, 35 U.S.C.A. § 70, to have the profits trebled, he so found and recommended. The district judge rejected the master’s recommendation for trebling profits but accepted his findings and recommendations on actual damages and profits, and entered a decree accordingly.
Appellant is here insisting (1) that the profits were wrongfully found, and (2) that it may not be charged with more of the profits than it actually received. Appellee by his cross-appeal assigns error on the refusal to treble the profits. There is no dispute about what the infringed de[696]*696vice used was or that it was a mere improvement over other devices of the same general nature. It was for a moving target for use in target practice, the utility and advantage of which as claimed by plaintiff in his patent, consisted “in providing a mechanism whereby the moving targets travel about vertical axes so that the depth of the tank may be considerably reduced, and in practice this depth has been reduced to six inches. Such a change in structure makes the arrangement more practicable and adaptable for use in places where a deeper tank could not be used”. All claims of the patent are definitely limited to the target conveyor traveling in a horizontal plane as distinguished from the target conveyor traveling in a vertical plane as in the admittedly old duck-moving-over-the-water-in-a-tank target discussed in the introduction to the patent specification. What plaintiff invented, and all that he got his patent for in 1937, was an improvement in a moving target having as a novel feature thereof a conveyor which operates in a horizontal instead of a vertical plane and all of the claims of his patent contain limitations to that specifically new duck-moving mechanism. Plaintiff does not claim to have invented moving targets for target practice; they were and have long been well known. In the second sentence of his patent, he very correctly says: “The use of moving targets for target practice is well known, and moving targets customarily are moved on an endless conveyor chain or belt which travels about horizontal axes”. The patent drawings show a tank of water and depict target moving mechanisms so arranged that the ducks appear to be swimming over the water and are capable of being knocked over into it when struck by bullets. Mattson did not invent these things. Indeed, in describing his invention, he says: “An innovation recently introduced is the use of a tank of water with the moving mechanism so arranged that the targets, which are generally formed to simulate ducks or other water fowls, appear to be swimming over the water and when the target is struck, the plate simulating the fowl will be knocked over into the water.”
Thus the only elements and features of the patented apparatus that shooting gallery marksmen would be interested in, the tank of water and ducks appearing to swim over it and dropping into it when struck by bullets are old in the art. In order to charge defendants with profits received from the use of his device, it was plaintiff’s burden to show “the advantage, that is the saving, which the defendant derived from using the plaintiff’s invention over what he could derive from using any other process or thing which was known prior to that invention.” “The other process or thing mentioned in the rule is called the standard of comparison in the case.”2 Plaintiff wholly failed to sustain that burden. Indeed, he offered no proof from which the profits derived from the use of the invention could be determined. His proof was limited to proof of receipts from the shooting gallery, aided by proof which the -master thought sufficient, of the amount of those receipts which were derived from customers who shot at the moving duck pond targets alone. In awarding profits on the basis of that proof, and wholly ignoring the standard of comparison, the master, under a complete misapprehension as to the rule, thought and said that the case was like, and to that extent ruled by, Westinghouse Electric Mfg. Co. v. Wagner, 225 U. S. 604, 32 S.Ct. 691, 56 L.Ed. 1222, 41 L. R.A.,N.S., 653, and Decker v. Smith, D. C., 225 F. 776. In the first place those cases had to do with profits from sales and not from use, and were governed by a wholly different rule. In the second place, the facts of those cases were wholly different from the facts of this. The theory upon which profits from infringing uses are recovered is the equitable one that no person should unjustly .enrich himself from his wrong of practicing infringement, and that he will be held as trustee of the profits which he derived from such wrongful use. The one who invokes this principle should be prepared to prove the unjust enrichment. It was plaintiff’s duty to show that by using his device, defendant made profits which it would not have made if it had used other devices open to it. There is no evidence in the record that any more [697]*697customers were drawn to the duck gallery by the use of plaintiff’s device than would have come if older devices had been used. Neither is there any proof that because of the convenience of its form defendant saved costs and expenses in moving the equipment about or otherwise profited therefrom. In short, the case is entirely devoid of proof upon which a just estimate of profits could be made, and the judgment must be reversed for want of such proof, and the cause remanded for trial anew.
While, because of the complete reversal on this ground, it is not necessary from the standpoint of the disposition of this appeal to decide the second question presented or the cross-appeal, we think it proper, in view of another trial, to do so. For the reasons above stated, that an award of profits does not proceed upon the theory of reparation or punishment but upon the equitable principle that one who has received an unjust enrichment should be made to disgorge that which he received, the judgment against appellant for profits, admittedly not received by it, was wrong.
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HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.
The suit was against two defendants, appellant and one Corbett, for infringing use of a “new and useful improvement in a moving target adapted for use in shooting galleries and similar places where target practice is carried on”, and for the damages and profits resulting therefrom. Appellant, through some oversight not explained in the record, defaulted, and there was an interlocutory decree and injunction and a reference to a special master to ascertain gains and profits and damages. Appellant, learning of the reference, appeared by counsel in the proceedings before the master.
The master found that the damages and profits could only be estimated from a fair preponderance of the testimony, that the damages in their nature were not as susceptible of proof as the profits were, and that the profits were not susceptible of exact mathematical calculation or determination with reasonable certainty. He awarded nominal damages of $1 only. On the issue of profits (though, on his findings,1 appellant and Corbett were not partners but mere co-infringers, and of the income from the shooting gallery where the infringed device was being used, appellant received only 40 percent of 60 percent), he [695]*695found the defendants were in the position of joint tort-feasors and were, therefore, jointly liable to plaintiffs for all the profits attributable to the use of the infringed device in the aggregate sum of $12,390.54. Of the opinion that plaintiff was entitled under the statute, 35 U.S.C.A. § 70, to have the profits trebled, he so found and recommended. The district judge rejected the master’s recommendation for trebling profits but accepted his findings and recommendations on actual damages and profits, and entered a decree accordingly.
Appellant is here insisting (1) that the profits were wrongfully found, and (2) that it may not be charged with more of the profits than it actually received. Appellee by his cross-appeal assigns error on the refusal to treble the profits. There is no dispute about what the infringed de[696]*696vice used was or that it was a mere improvement over other devices of the same general nature. It was for a moving target for use in target practice, the utility and advantage of which as claimed by plaintiff in his patent, consisted “in providing a mechanism whereby the moving targets travel about vertical axes so that the depth of the tank may be considerably reduced, and in practice this depth has been reduced to six inches. Such a change in structure makes the arrangement more practicable and adaptable for use in places where a deeper tank could not be used”. All claims of the patent are definitely limited to the target conveyor traveling in a horizontal plane as distinguished from the target conveyor traveling in a vertical plane as in the admittedly old duck-moving-over-the-water-in-a-tank target discussed in the introduction to the patent specification. What plaintiff invented, and all that he got his patent for in 1937, was an improvement in a moving target having as a novel feature thereof a conveyor which operates in a horizontal instead of a vertical plane and all of the claims of his patent contain limitations to that specifically new duck-moving mechanism. Plaintiff does not claim to have invented moving targets for target practice; they were and have long been well known. In the second sentence of his patent, he very correctly says: “The use of moving targets for target practice is well known, and moving targets customarily are moved on an endless conveyor chain or belt which travels about horizontal axes”. The patent drawings show a tank of water and depict target moving mechanisms so arranged that the ducks appear to be swimming over the water and are capable of being knocked over into it when struck by bullets. Mattson did not invent these things. Indeed, in describing his invention, he says: “An innovation recently introduced is the use of a tank of water with the moving mechanism so arranged that the targets, which are generally formed to simulate ducks or other water fowls, appear to be swimming over the water and when the target is struck, the plate simulating the fowl will be knocked over into the water.”
Thus the only elements and features of the patented apparatus that shooting gallery marksmen would be interested in, the tank of water and ducks appearing to swim over it and dropping into it when struck by bullets are old in the art. In order to charge defendants with profits received from the use of his device, it was plaintiff’s burden to show “the advantage, that is the saving, which the defendant derived from using the plaintiff’s invention over what he could derive from using any other process or thing which was known prior to that invention.” “The other process or thing mentioned in the rule is called the standard of comparison in the case.”2 Plaintiff wholly failed to sustain that burden. Indeed, he offered no proof from which the profits derived from the use of the invention could be determined. His proof was limited to proof of receipts from the shooting gallery, aided by proof which the -master thought sufficient, of the amount of those receipts which were derived from customers who shot at the moving duck pond targets alone. In awarding profits on the basis of that proof, and wholly ignoring the standard of comparison, the master, under a complete misapprehension as to the rule, thought and said that the case was like, and to that extent ruled by, Westinghouse Electric Mfg. Co. v. Wagner, 225 U. S. 604, 32 S.Ct. 691, 56 L.Ed. 1222, 41 L. R.A.,N.S., 653, and Decker v. Smith, D. C., 225 F. 776. In the first place those cases had to do with profits from sales and not from use, and were governed by a wholly different rule. In the second place, the facts of those cases were wholly different from the facts of this. The theory upon which profits from infringing uses are recovered is the equitable one that no person should unjustly .enrich himself from his wrong of practicing infringement, and that he will be held as trustee of the profits which he derived from such wrongful use. The one who invokes this principle should be prepared to prove the unjust enrichment. It was plaintiff’s duty to show that by using his device, defendant made profits which it would not have made if it had used other devices open to it. There is no evidence in the record that any more [697]*697customers were drawn to the duck gallery by the use of plaintiff’s device than would have come if older devices had been used. Neither is there any proof that because of the convenience of its form defendant saved costs and expenses in moving the equipment about or otherwise profited therefrom. In short, the case is entirely devoid of proof upon which a just estimate of profits could be made, and the judgment must be reversed for want of such proof, and the cause remanded for trial anew.
While, because of the complete reversal on this ground, it is not necessary from the standpoint of the disposition of this appeal to decide the second question presented or the cross-appeal, we think it proper, in view of another trial, to do so. For the reasons above stated, that an award of profits does not proceed upon the theory of reparation or punishment but upon the equitable principle that one who has received an unjust enrichment should be made to disgorge that which he received, the judgment against appellant for profits, admittedly not received by it, was wrong. Nothing more was proven or found than that the defendants were joint tort-feasors, that is, co-infringers that each was a party to, and derived benefits from, the infringement. In patent cases it is well settled that co-infringers, unless they are partners, are severally accountable only for the profits each has received.3 Here there was no proof or finding that appellant and his coinfringer were partners. Indeed, the proof negatived this relation. There was no sharing of expenses, none of the losses. There was only a payment by Corbett to appellant of a percentage of the gross profits received not from the use of the infringing device as such but from the concessions as a whole.
As to the cross-appeal for treble profits, it is sufficient to say that their dis-allowance was not error. The statute invoked does not require it, merely allows, increase of damages in the discretion of the court, and nothing is presented to show that that discretion has been abused. But a second and more fundamental reason is that the basis for such an allowance must be found, if at all, in the statute. 35 U.S. C.A. § 70. An examination of it shows that, throughout, it draws a clear distinction between profits and damages and that the provision relied on for trebling 4 the recovery is precisely limited to recoveries for damages, New England Fibre Blanket Co. v. Portland Telegram, 9 Cir., 61 F.2d 648; Yesbera v. Hardesty Mfg. Co., 6 Cir., 166 F. 120; Overman Cushion Tire Co. v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 2 Cir., 66 F. 2d 361. The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further and not inconsistent proceedings.