Barber-Colman Co. v. National Tool Co.

136 F.2d 339, 58 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 2, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3029
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 3, 1943
Docket9321
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 136 F.2d 339 (Barber-Colman Co. v. National Tool 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
Barber-Colman Co. v. National Tool Co., 136 F.2d 339, 58 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 2, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3029 (6th Cir. 1943).

Opinion

MARTIN, Circuit Judge.

The contestants agree that the decisive question to be answered on this appeal is whether the owner of a process patent who also owns a patent for a machine designed for operation in conjunction with the patented process may, by license agreement, control the selling price of the article produced by use of the patented machine and process, where no patent covers the article sold.

The appeal is from the judgment of the District Court dismissing, on motion for summary judgment, the bill of complaint of the appellant licensor for equitable relief against the violation by the appellee licensee of the price control clause of the license agreement.

The process patent (Edgar, Reissue No. 18,246), owned by the appellant, BarberColman Company, covered a method of grinding hobs, and its machine patent (Edgar, Reissue No. 18,247) described a “hob-grinding machine.” Appellant concedes that “hobs, ground and unground, have been long known to the trade and are not covered by patents,” and that its process patent covers only a particular method of grinding hobs.

A hob is a hardened steel tool used to cut gears, splined shafts, sprockets, ratchets and other toothed elements for use in automobiles and in many kinds of precision machinery. Accuracy in the form, surface smoothness and dimensions of hobs is essential. In the hardening process, hobs *341 suffer slight deformations, which might not prevent their use for cutting gears employed for ordinary purposes, but would be destructive of the higher degree of accuracy of contour required for precision work. Perfection of contour can be attained only by grinding, which, for a long time, has been practiced in the art.

The appellant’s patents cover only a particular method of grinding hobs and a machine for the performance of that method. In his affidavit, attached to the bill of complaint, appellant’s Works Manager admitted that “ground hobs are made and sold today, and have been for many years, that are not ground on the machine or according to the method” of the appellant’s patents. The affiant stated, moreover: “The defendant in this case [the appellee, National Tool Company] claims to have and to use a method for grinding hobs, the use of which admittedly does not infringe the plaintiff’s patent.”

The appellant has based its business of manufacturing and grinding hobs on its Edgar Patents. Its own operations account for about one-lhird of all hobs ground in the United States, exclusive of the hobs manufactured and ground by its licensees, all of whom covenanted that they would not sell in the United States ground hobs manufactured by the use of appellant’s patented method at prices lower than those maintained by the appellant in selling ground hobs of its own manufacture.

The license agreement between the appellant licensor and the appellee granted the right to manufacture, but not to sell, the patented machine and to use the patented process for the commercial production of ground hobs. Neither the machine nor the method were designed to produce hobs, but only to perform the single function of grinding.

A number of similar agreements had been made with other tool companies at the time of the execution of the license agreement in controversy, it being recited in that document that the appellant was willing to open further its monopoly “to the use of other manufacturers for the grinding of hobs and the building of hob-grinding machines for their own respective uses therefor upon payment of a reasonable royalty, provided it be assured that in so doing the ground-hob business of itself and its Licensees be not ruined or injured by the cutting of prices.” To that end, the seventh paragraph of the license agreement provided that the appellee licensee would not sell, for use in the United States, ground hobs produced by any machine or in accordance with any method covered by the two Letters Patent owned by appellant for less than the prices established from time to time for the sale by appellant “of the same or equivalent items.”

Appellant insists that this price maintenance clause in the license agreement is lawful. Its argument is that, inasmuch as the owner of a product patent has the right to fix the price at which his licensee shall sell the patented product, the owner of a process patent has a corresponding right to fix the price at which his licensee to use the process may sell the product manufactured through its use.

The doctrine of Bement & Sons v. National Harrow Company, 186 U.S. 70, 91, 22 S.Ct. 747, 755, 46 L.Ed. 1058, is appellant’s chief dependence. In the Bement case, sweeping pronouncement was made that “the general rule is absolute freedom in the use or sale of rights under the patent laws of the United States.” The Supreme Court elucidated: “The very object of these laws is monopoly, and the rule is, with few exceptions, that any conditions which are not in their very nature illegal with regard to this kind of property, imposed by the patentee and agreed to by the licensee for the right to manufacture or use or sell the article, will be upheld by the courts. The fact that the conditions in the contracts keep up the monopoly or fix prices does not render them illegal.” The holding in the case, however, merely sustained the right of the patentee of an article to license the manufacture and sale of the patented article upon condition that the licensee should charge a fixed minimum sales price for it.

In another decision emphasized by appellant, United States v. General Electric Company, 272 U.S. 476, 485, 493, 47 S.Ct. 192, 198, 71 L.Ed. 362, the Supreme Court said that “price fixing is usually the essence of that which secures proper reward to the patentee”; that it is immaterial how widespread his monopoly may become, so long as “he makes no effort to fasten upon ownership of the articles he sells control of the prices at which his purchaser shall sell”; and that only when in com- ‘ bination with others the patentee “steps out of the scope of his patent rights and seeks to control anil restrain those to whom he has sold his patented articles in their sub *342 sequent disposition of what is theirs” does he come within the operation of the AntiTrust Act, 15 U.S.CA. §$ 1-7, 15 note. The authority of Bement & Sons v. National Harrow Company, supra, was said not to have been shaken by intervening decisions of the court. But, for their relevancy upon the instant issue, these two opinions of the Supreme Court may be evaluated only by thoughtful study of numerous other decisions of the court in the field of constant conflict between the principle that a patentee has, by statute, 35 U.S.C.A. § 40 “the exclusive right to make, use, and vend” his invention or discovery, and the inhibition by the AntiTrust laws of the United States, and to a degree by the common law as well, of restraint of trade or commerce and of unlawful combination in restraint or monopoly of trade or commerce.

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Bluebook (online)
136 F.2d 339, 58 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 2, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-colman-co-v-national-tool-co-ca6-1943.