Barber v. Otis Motor Sales Co.

245 F. 945, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1022
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedNovember 1, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 245 F. 945 (Barber v. Otis Motor Sales Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barber v. Otis Motor Sales Co., 245 F. 945, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1022 (N.D.N.Y. 1917).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). This application is based on alleged newly discovered evidence bearing on the question of the validity of the claims in issue of the patent in suit and on the question of infringement as well, and which alleged newly discovered evidence consists of a large number of patents, the most of which constitute what is commonly known in patent litigation as the prior art. The application is also based upon the decision of Judge Hazel (245 Fed. 938) in a suit upon the same patent, and one of the claims in issue, wherein William Barber was plaintiff and Reo Motor Car Company of New York, Incorporated, was defendant, and in which suit, pending and tried in the Southern district of New York, Judge Hazel decided that conceding validity to the claim in issue before him there was no infringement. As I read Judge Hazel’s opinion he in fact holds that the claim, in view of the prior art, is invalid. Judge Hazel’s decision rests upon the patents referred to alleged to constitute newly discovered evidence, and which patents were not before this court when it decided this case against the Otis Motor Sales Company, and were not before the Circuit Court of Appeals when it affirmed the interlocutory judgment and decree of this court, and later on motion of the defendant denied a reargument.

This suit was instituted in May, 1915, and was brought to a final hearing in November or December of that year, and was decided by this court March 31, 1916, and a decree for the complainant to the effect above stated was duly entered April 8, 1916 (D. C.) 231 Fed. 755. It was referred to Charles W. Higgison, of Utica, N. Y., as special master, to fix the gains, profits, etc., and it was after or at about the time that the complainant had completed its proofs on such [947]*947reference that application was made to stay further proceedings in such accounting, to the end that appropriate application might be made to the court to reopen the proofs on the ground of such newly discovered or newly produced prior patents. In the meantime the appeal referred to, to the Circuit Court of Appeals, had been taken, and the decision of affirmance rendered. The decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals was rendered in December, 1916 (240 Fed. 723, 153 C. C. A. 521), and a rehearing was denied by that court in January, 1917, whereupon the accounting referred to proceeded.

There is a Reo Motor Car Company, which is a Michigan corporation having its principal place of business at Lansing, Mich., and this corporation manufactures the alleged infringing devices. That corporation is the real defendant in all these litigations, and in this suit on the trial it openly avowed in court that it was back of the defense, and in fact defending the suit. It is probable, from the condition of the record, that the Michigan corporation would be bound by any final decree in this suit. At least, this is the contention of the complainant here. The Reo Motor Car Company of New York, Incorporated, is a dealer in or sales agent in New York for the motor cars carrying the alleged infringing device manufactured by the Reo Motor Car Company of Michigan. The case referred to before Judge Hazel was at issue early in 1917, or before, and the trial and argument was had in March, 1917. In that suit the alleged newly discovered patents were set up and had been discovered before issue was joined in that case. In April, 1917, the defendant in this suit moved this court for an order staying further proceedings before the special master on the accounting; the avowed object on the hearing being to obtain a reopening of this suit in case Judge Hazel should decide on such patents that the claims in suit in that case, as well as in this case, were invalid, one or both, or that, if found valid, there was no infringement. No application was then made to this court, gr to the Circuit Court of Appeals, looking to a'reopening of the decrees in this suit and the introduction in evidence of such alleged prior patents, which were before Judge Hazel, but which had not been put in evidence in this case. By common consent further proceedings on the accounting were suspended without the entry of any formal order to that effect.

Following the handing down of the decision by Judge Hazel in the suit against Reo Motor Car Company of New York, Incorporated, and following the argument of the application for a stay of the accounting made to this court the attention of the present counsel for Otis Motor Sales Company was called to the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals in Sundh Electric Co. v. Cutler Hammer Mfg. Co. (Same v. General Electric Co.) 244 Fed. 163-170, where the proper procedure in a case like this is indicated. Notwithstanding that decision, the present counsel for the defendant in this suit in July or August, 1917, applied to the Circuit Court of Appeals for an order recalling its mandate and permitting the defendant to move in the District Court for the Northern District of New York to reopen this cause. August 16, 1917, that motion was denied on the ground “that [948]*948'such a request should come from the district judge and not from the party.” Thereupon this motion was formally made.

As I understand, when the District Court has decided an equity cause and entered a decree in accordance with its decision, and an appeal therefrom is taken to the Circuit Court of Appeals, and the record is made up and transmitted to that court and filed therein, the District Court loses jurisdiction in the case for the time being, as jurisdicion of the cause has then been transferred to the Circuit Court of Appeals. After the Circuit Court of Appeals has heard the appeal and decided the case, and sent down its mandate to the District Court in accordance with its decision, it becomes the duty of the District Court to enter a decree or judgment as the case may be in accordance with the direction of the Circuit Court of Appeals and in compliance therewith. It then resumes jurisdiction of the case for that purpose. To that end, on the coming in of the report of the special -master on the accounting, its jurisdiction, not to change its decision affirmed, as in this case, by the Circuit Court of Appeals, but to enter a final decree is reinstated. In this cause this court has obeyed the instructions and mandate of the Circuit Court of Appeals and has made the judgment of that court the judgment of this the District Court. The District Court has the right in its discretion, I assume, to request the Circuit Court of Appeals to make an order permitting it to open and vacate its judgment or decree made in obedience to and in compliance with the mandate of the Circuit Court of Appeals, and also requesting the Circuit Court of Appeals to recall its mandate and vacate it and return the record to the District Court, if that be necessary, and it seems to me that it is necessary, to the end that the District Court may be at liberty to reopen the trial and hearing of the case, and receive newly discovered or additional evidence, and make a new and a different decision, if such new evidence warrants such action. All that this court can now do is to address such a request to the Circuit Court of Appeals, on being satisfied that such course will bring about a full consideration of the case and a «more just decision.

The defendant in this case sells the cars containing the alleged infringing device made by the Reo Company of Michigan. This is the alleged infringement complained of. The Reo Company of New York sells the same device, and that was the infringement complained of in that suit.

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Bluebook (online)
245 F. 945, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1022, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-v-otis-motor-sales-co-nynd-1917.