Automotive Products Corp. v. Wolverine Bumper & Specialty Co.

15 F.2d 745, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2989
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 4, 1926
Docket4400
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 15 F.2d 745 (Automotive Products Corp. v. Wolverine Bumper & Specialty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Automotive Products Corp. v. Wolverine Bumper & Specialty Co., 15 F.2d 745, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2989 (6th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit Judge.

Pageol, a citizen of California, as patentee, gave an exclusive license .to the Automotive Company, a California corporation. It did not contain any express power of revocation. After a period of inaction by the licensee, Pageol insisted that he was no longer bound. Later he transferred rights under the same patent to the American Chain Company, a corporation of New York. Later he and this company began a suit in a California state court of general equity jurisdiction, making the Automotive Company defendant, and seeking both a decree that the first license be rescinded by the court for reasons alleged and a decretal declaration that it was already ineffective.

Before filing its answer, the Automotive Company brought this suit in the court below against the Wolverine Company, alleging infringement of the specified patent, setting up that it was the exclusive licensee, and making Pageol a party complainant, upon the theory that, as exclusive licensee, it must and could join him as plaintiff, without or even against his consent. The defendant, the Wolverine Company, answered with the usual defenses in infringement eases, and also denied that the Automotive Company had any existing license, and alleged that the Wolverine Company was manufacturing under a license from Pageol, through the American Chain Company. Pageol also appeared by petition (later adopted as an answer by him), alleging that the license to the plaintiff had been invalid and completely revoked, that the plaintiff had no rights in the subject-matter, and that he had later executed a license to the American Chain Company, which, under authority of its contract, had licensed the Wolverine Company. The American Chain Company also filed an intervening petition setting up substantially the same things.

Upon the hearing, and before any order had been made, the plaintiff moved to discontinue and dismiss the case. This motion was overruled, and a decree was entered dismissing the original bill, and adjudging upon the merits of the controversy that Pageol’s license to the plaintiff had been effectively revoked, and that Pageol and the American Chain Company were the owners of all rights in arid under the patent. Plaintiff appealed from this decree. Its contentions are:

(1) That the California court had exclusive jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the license.
(2) That the substantial matter involved was the existing validity of plaintiff’s license, and that this was not a controversy arising under federal laws and of which the court had jurisdiction.
(3) That plaintiff had the right to dismiss • its case before decree, or, at least, that to refuse to allow it to do so was an abuse of discretion.
(4) That upon the merits of the title controversy plaintiff was right, as well as upon the merits of the more strictly patent questions.

1. We cannot regard the decision of the California state court as a proceeding in rem. Though in a broad sense rights are property,' yet, in defining suits in rem, we *747 must distinguish those involving specific property or status and those involving mere rights. The latter are in personam; the former are or may he in rem. The exclusive right or monopoly granted by patents normally attends the person of the patentee, like other intangibles, and there was nothing in the present situation to take the ease out of the normal rule. Our most recent discussion of this question is found in Brown v. Puffin (C. C. A.) 13 F.(2d) 708. Applying the test there suggested, it will hardly be claimed that, in a- suit brought in a federal court against a nonresident defendant by the patentee to declare revoked, or by a licensee to declare in force, a patent license, a valid decree could be based solely upon substituted service under section 57 of the Judicial Code (Comp. St. § 1039). Grable v. Killits (C. C. A. 8) 282 F. 185.

It is true, as was said in Denison Co. v. Chicago Co. (C. C. A.) 286 F. 818, there are exceptions to the rule that tangible property must be involved in order to find that a suit is in rem. A status, like marriage, was referred to as an example of exceptions; but the existence of a mere contract right under a patent, and the issue, whether revoked or not, cannot be one of them.

2. The jurisdiction of the court below as a federal court was initially completely made out by the citizenship of the Automotive Company and Fageol in California and of defendant in Michigan. However, it has now appeared that, if the parties were aligned according to the real controversy existing on the title subject, Fageol was a defendant, and hence diverse citizenship becomes at least an unsatisfactory basis upon which to rest federal jurisdiction. However, such jurisdiction was otherwise complete, as involving a federal question. The plaintiff alleged a valid patent, sufficient title thereto, and infringement. If plaintiff’s claim of title was correct, defendant had the right to deny, as it did, both validity and infringement. Under such conditions, jurisdiction over a patent controversy is not ousted by the disclosure of a dispute about the title, even when such disclosure is made by the bill, much less when interjected by defendants. In Lowry v. Hert (C. C. A.) 290 F. 876, 878, we cpnsidered the leading cases up to that time, and doubts are now foreclosed by the Supreme Court opiion in Luckett v. Delpark (April 12, 1926), 270 U. S. 496, 46 S. Ct. 397, 70 L. Ed. 703. Where the federal jurisdiction conferred by the original bill is extended to an ancillary controversy not originally there cognizable, it is not controlling that the collateral dispute turns out to be more important and takes the center of the stage. Vogue Hat Co. v. Vogue (C. C. A. 6) 12 F.(2d) 991, 992.

If the intervening petition-of the American Chain Company had interjected a substantially new issue, the propriety of that intervention, and of any relief granted thereon, would call for examination (Wenborne v. Port [C. C. A. 6, July 10, 1926] 14 F.[2d] 378); but Fageol had been a party by plaintiff’s selection, and the American Chain Company merely stood in his shoes. Since he could be heard upon the complete issue presented by the bill and his answer, and, since the American Chain Company was an interested party under him, it was quite fittingly brought upon the record, in order that it might be bound by the decree. The plaintiff would be content with this intervention, if the result had been the other way.

3. The general right of a plaintiff to dismiss his action without prejudice was broadly upheld in Ex parte Skinner, 265 U. S. 93, 44 S. Ct. 446, 68 L. Ed. 912; but the same decision points out that the right does not extend to an equity ease where the defendant has, by cross-petition, claimed affirmative relief. By equity rule 30, cross-bills have become unnecessary and appropriate allegations and prayers in the answers are substituted. In the present ease the answer of the Wolverine Company and the intervening petitions of Fageol and the American Chain Company concluded in each ease with a prayer that the bill of complaint be dismissed “and that this defendant may be granted [may have] such other and further relief as to the court may seem meet and proper in the premises.” This concluding prayer had no place in a defensive answer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 F.2d 745, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2989, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/automotive-products-corp-v-wolverine-bumper-specialty-co-ca6-1926.