Brennan v. Hawley Products Co.

182 F.2d 945
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 11, 1950
Docket9901
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 182 F.2d 945 (Brennan v. Hawley Products Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brennan v. Hawley Products Co., 182 F.2d 945 (7th Cir. 1950).

Opinion

FINNEGAN, Circuit Judge.

The District Court dismissed the original and supplemental complaints of the plaintiff-appellant because of his laches. On this appeal, therefore, the question is whether or not the facts and circumstances disclosed by this record justify the order of the trial court.

The original complaint was filed on June 6, 1947. It charged infringement of United States patent No. 1923965, issued to plaintiff on August 22, 1933, and referred to throughout this record as the “diaphragm patent.” The supplemental complaint was filed on March 31, 1948, and charged infringements on United States patent No. 1923966, issued to plaintiff on August 22, 1933, and referred to as the “method patent,” and also patent No. 2090025, issued to plaintiff on August 17, 1937, and referred to as the “spider patent.”

Defendant-appellee answered both complaints asserting as to all patents involved the affirmative defense of laches. Defenses of non-infringement and invalidity of each of the patents were also pleaded.

At a pre-trial conference, held on December 20, 1948, the parties agreed that a trial be had limited to the question of laches, the court retaining jurisdiction of the remaining issues for further consideration.

On the hearing before the court, the evidence disclosed that the plaintiff, Joseph B. Brennan is the owner of United States patents numbered 1923965, the diaphragm patent; 1923966, the method patent; and 2090025, the spider patent.

It appears that patent No. 1923965 was applied for on September 6, 1930, and was *946 issued on August 22, 1933. Patent No. 1923966 was applied for on September 6, 1930, and issued on August 22, 1933, while patent No. 2090025 was applied for on March 27, 1933, and was issued on August 17, 1937.

In 1933, the plaintiff was an employee of the Magnavox Company, and gave that company a non-exclusive, royalty free license under patents numbers 1923965 and 1923966.

In 1939, the plaintiff was the factory manager of the Weatherhead Company, in Cleveland, Ohio, and in May of that year became manager of the Romee Pump Company, which position he retained for about a year and a half. Thereafter the plaintiff became manager and executive vice president of the Bender Body Company, which was engaged in the manufacture of aircraft parts. In 1941, he had. an interest in Fiber Form Company, of which he was one of the organizers, and that company received its first war contract in 1942. Plaintiff remained as manager of the Fiber Company until June 1946.

It further appears that in June 1946, plaintiff suffered a heart ailment which confined him to his bed for the remainder of that year. In December 1944, and continuing throughout the plaintiff’s period of illness in 1946, the title to the patents here involved was placed in E. D. McCurdy, of Cleveland, who, as trustee, was handling plaintiff’s affairs pertaining to these patents all during the period of plaintiff’s illness.

Defendant was first charged with the infringement of patent No. 1923965 in 1934. The charge was made orally in a conversation which plaintiff had with Jesse B. Hawley, who was then president of the defendant company.

The plaintiff first charged defendant with infringement of patent No. 1923966 in 1937, and also in the same year made a second oral charge of infringement as to patent No. 1923965. When defendant was charged with these infringements it caused a search to be made to determine the validity of plaintiff’s patents. As a result of that search the defendant’s patent attorneys, Parkinson and Lane, forwarded to the plaintiff a letter dated June 11, 1937, which stated that both patents were invalid for lack of invention over the prior art.

On April 6, 1939, defendant received a letter from an attorney who then represented plaintiff, in which it was again charged with infringements of numbers 1923965 and 1923966.

The first written notice of infringement relative to patent No. 2090025 was sent to the defendant on June 26, 1946 by E. D. McCurdy, as trustee, owner of the patent at that time. In a letter dated September 16, 1946, the defendant’s patent attorney wrote E. D. McCurdy denying the infringement of patent No. 2090025.

It further appears that McCurdy also gave written notice of infringement relating to patents numbers 1923965 and 1923966. This notice was given by letter from McCurdy and addressed to defendant’s patent attorney.

It appears that in 1939, one Harold O. Clayton, a patent lawyer, was approached by plaintiff for the purpose of procuring him to represent plaintiff in matters pertaining to the patents here involved. Mr. Clayton had a conference with the patent attorney representing defendant in which he proposed to negotiate a non-exclusive license to defendant. This conversation was held on April 5, 1939, and defendant’s patent attorney again denied the validity of the Brennan patents.

Plaintiff claimed to have had many meetings with Jesse B. Hawley, formerly president of the defendant company from 1937 until his death, but he was unable to set any specific date on which he discussed any of the patents in suit with Mr. Hawley. It further appears that plaintiff had known ever since 1939 that his controversy with the defendant company, relative to the patents here in suit, could never be settled without a law suit. On March 28, 1939, he states in a letter to an attorney, with whom he was consulting in reference to his patents: “It is my opinion that we shall not be able to effect a settlement without a suit being entered but I believe that-after a suit has -been entered Mr. Hawley *947 will settle as it goes to trial, because he knows the background of my work on this subject.”

The record further discloses that from time to time since 1934, down to and including 1945, the plaintiff has conferred and corresponded with many attorneys, for the purpose of bringing suit, on a contingent basis, against the defendant for infringement of the patents here involved.

Jesse B. Hawley, former president of the defendant company, and Wallace R. Lane, former patent attorney for the company, appear to have been the only persons connected with the company with whom plaintiff ever discussed the patents here in suit. Both of these gentlemen are now deceased. Jesse B. Hawley died in March 1946, and Wallace R. Lane in May 1946, more than a year prior to the filing of the original complaint.

The record shows that the defendant company invested and expended large sums of money for the purchase of property in expanding its business in manufacturing diaphragms and spiders from 1937 until the date of the institution of this suit. It has continued in the manufacture of diaphragms and spiders ever since the first charge of infringement was made by plaintiff in 1934, and plaintiff knew all this and did nothing about it until his original complaint was filed in June 1947.

It further appears that the defendant company, through its patent attorneys, has consistently maintained that the Brennan patents are invalid.

Thus, it will be seen, a period of thirteen years elapsed from the time plaintiff first claimed infringement of the “diaphragm patent” until he instituted his original complaint.

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182 F.2d 945, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brennan-v-hawley-products-co-ca7-1950.