Beatty Safway Scaffold Co. v. Up-Right, Inc., a Corporation

306 F.2d 626
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 24, 1962
Docket16490_1
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 306 F.2d 626 (Beatty Safway Scaffold Co. v. Up-Right, Inc., a Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beatty Safway Scaffold Co. v. Up-Right, Inc., a Corporation, 306 F.2d 626 (9th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is a patent infringement ease in which a jury returned a verdict in favor of the appellee and against appellant, respectively plaintiff and defendant in the Trial Court, for infringement of appel-lee’s patented device by appellant’s accused device, and for damages incident to the infringement. Appellant timely moved for a directed verdict and for judgment n. o. v. or for a new trial and to alter or amend the judgment entered on the verdict, which motions were denied, and this appeal followed. The Trial Court had and this Court has jurisdiction. 28 U.S. C. §§ 1338 and 1291.

Appellee’s device in question is a portable and collapsible scaffold patented under letters patent 2,438,173 on March 23, 1948. Appellee’s basic structure under the patent is a stand made of an aluminum alloy. It is supported on either end by two sets of poles upon which a platform rests. A ladder which is also a support runs diagonally from a position on the bottom frame bar between the bottom ends of one set of poles to the top of the other set. Due to permanent and detachable hinges, the ladder and two sets of poles may be rotated in such a way as to collapse or erect the scaffold with relative ease, and allowing its transportation or storage in its collapsed condition without taking up much room.

The accused scaffold is almost identical with appellee’s scaffold. The only difference is in the location of the hinges, which results in collapsing and folding the accused scaffold in a somewhat different way. It has not been alleged or shown that the appellant’s accused scaffold is in any way an improvement over appellee’s, but merely that it operates somewhat differently.

The appeal presents several questions.

JURISDICTION. At the trial the Court became convinced that the interest of Wallace J. S. Johnson had been transferred, and dismissed the original patentee Johnson as a party plaintiff. On this appeal now for the first time appellant contends that after Johnson’s dismissal, the Trial Court did not have and this Court does not have jurisdiction of the action because, appellant says, appellee did not prove its title and Johnson was and is a necessary party. Such jurisdictional objection, as to timeliness, can as appellant asserts be made at any stage of the proceedings in either Court, provided the objection is based upon sufficient grounds.

That jurisdictional objection includes the more specific contention that the Trial Court did not by specific order expressly admit in evidence as an exhibit the assignment (Ex. 1-B) from Johnson to ap-pellee, and that without that exhibit the Court was deprived of necessary evidence of appellee’s title. Attached to appellee’s brief is an affidavit by the District Court deputy clerk containing an unofficial list of documents received in evidence including this Exhibit 1-B. But, as appellant says, the record does not show any specific order by the Trial Judge expressly admitting in evidence that Exhibit 1-B. We do not decide whether or not that affidavit and its stated facts are alone sufficient to reflect the proper admission of such assignment in evidence because our decision if favorable to appellant would not dispose of the matter. There yet remains to be considered important additional evidence supporting appellee’s right to sue.

Of interest here is the landmark case of Waterman v. Mackenzie, 138 U.S. 252, 11 S.Ct. 334. 34 L.Ed. 923, holding that any “assignment” or transfer which is short of granting the “exclusive right to make, use and vend” the invention in the United States is merely a license which does not permit the licensee to sue in his own name. Thus, the exact nature of the transfer and the rights which it conveys must be closely scrutinized.

*628 In connection with its consideration of the deletion of Johnson as a party plaintiff, the Trial Court asked appellant’s counsel if he had any objection, and stated “he (Johnson) claims he has transferred all of Ms interest to the corporation” (parentheses and emphasis added). Counsel for appellant in part replied “My only objection, your Honor, is that it comes at a very late time * * * I am only interested in the right thing to do, and I have no objection”. This would clearly indicate that appellant then recognized the existence of the assignment from Johnson to appellee, and that appellant waived its right to object for lack of such jurisdiction. Thereupon the Court ordered deletion of Johnson’s name as party plaintiff, without objection from either party.

The information contained in Johnson’s own claim above mentioned is that Johnson personally claimed that as a fact he had transferred all of his interest in the patent to appellee. Appellee’s attorney stated at the trial that “We labeled that patent as 1, and 1-A and 1-B are the two assignments we located Sunday, and they are before your Honor, showing title in the plaintiff” (emphasis added). To those statements at the trial appellant’s attorney made no objection.

After discussing appellee’s exhibits near the close of plaintiff’s case in chief, appellant’s counsel informed the Court that he did not wish to exercise his reserved right to cross-examine Mr. Johnson further regarding exhibits, and returned the exhibits including the assignment from Johnson to the appellee corporation after appellant's counsel had had those exhibits in his possession for study overnight.

Respecting appellant’s waiver during the trial of objection to appellee’s title and right to sue, and not as proof of untimeliness of appellant’s jurisdictional objection, the circumstances referred to in the next two paragraphs are very significant and important.

In its motions for directed verdict at the close of appellee’s case in chief and again upon the close of all the evidence, appellant based those motions only upon alleged invalidity and noninfringement of appellee’s patent and lack of proof of damages. Appellant did not at those times, nor at any time during the trial nor until this appeal, object to the Trial Court’s jurisdiction, nor object that ap-pellee did not establish its right to sue, nor did appellant during the trial dispute the fact that all of Johnson’s interest had been assigned to appellee.

Finally, standing above and controlling all other related evidence is the agreed fact of the pre-trial order which states that appellee is the “exclusive licensee” of the patent.

From all of the foregoing it must be concluded that appellee received from Johnson the excusive right “to make, use and vend” the appellee’s patented scaffold in the United States, and that appellee may sue in its own name for enforcement of its rights under that patent. These facts amply meet the test laid down in Waterman, supra. We accordingly hold that appellant’s objection to jurisdiction is not well taken.

VALIDITY OF PATENT. Appellant contends that the normal presumption of patent validity, with the burden of proving invalidity resting upon the one asserting it, as provided in 35 U.S.C.A.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
306 F.2d 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beatty-safway-scaffold-co-v-up-right-inc-a-corporation-ca9-1962.