Brill v. Peckham Motor Truck & Wheel Co.

189 U.S. 57, 23 S. Ct. 562, 47 L. Ed. 706, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1324
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 6, 1903
Docket181
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 189 U.S. 57 (Brill v. Peckham Motor Truck & Wheel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brill v. Peckham Motor Truck & Wheel Co., 189 U.S. 57, 23 S. Ct. 562, 47 L. Ed. 706, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1324 (1903).

Opinion

Me. Chief Justice Fullee,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The Circuit Court for the Southern District of New York, Shipman, J., presiding, in July, 1900, entered a decree in the case of Brill v. Third Avenue Railroad Company, adjudging the letters patent to George M. Brill of July 5,1892, No. 478,218, for improvements in car trucks, as to claims 1, 2, 9,10,11, 12, 14 and 27 thereof* to be good and valid, and that defendant, as the purchaser of one hundred and eighty-one trucks of the P.firm's Car Box' Company, had infringed the exclusive rights of complainant thereunder; and for injunction, accounting, and *59 recovery of damages. And a final decree was entered in the cause October 1, 1900. This bill was filed October 15, 1900, in the same court, against another truck building company, and a motion, for preliminary.injunction was heard in that court before Lacombe, J., and sustained on the strength of the previous adjudication. The patent related to the construction of non-pivotal electric street railway trucks, and the invention was intended to remedy oscillation. •

Judge Lacombe, in ordering the preliminary injunction, said:

“ The only question presented is whether defendant’s structure infringes. That involves the construction of the claims declared on, and, for the purposes of this motion, the construction already. adopted by this court on final hearing in the Third Avenue case, 103 Fed. Rep. 289, should be .followed; for there is no prior patent, no prior use, proved here, which was not. before Judge Shipman. It is true that in that case the defendant’s device was a much closer copy than the one now under consideration, containing, as it did, the feature that the spiral springs.came first into play, and the further feature of depending caps, in which the leaves of the elliptical springs play vertically, but the court most carefully indicates that the leading feature of the invention lies outside of these details; that the ‘ gist of the invention consists in combining with the frames of the truck and the spiral springs other springs, viz., elliptical springs, between the car body and the extensions of the independent frame,’ the object being to break the rhythm of the springs, and thus do away with the galloping or rocking motion. The defendant here insists that there, is no rhythm broken, indeed, that there is no rhythm to break, and that the combination of the quotation does not do away with the galloping motion. On .those points, however, this court should follow the earlier decision. There are additional rods, and also spirals, below the frame, which apparently in defendant’s structure do their share in eliminating galloping; but the combination which Judge Shipman described as the gist of the invention is undoubtedly in defendant’s structure, and, under well settled rules of practice, complainant is entitled to a restraining order until final hearing.”

*60 The rule of practice for one member of a court to regard the prior decision of another, in cases of this kind, as to be followed until otherwise authoritatively adjudicated, seems to be justified in the orderly conduct of proceedings, and the Circuit Court of Appeals did not hold that the Circuit Court hadimprovidently exercised its discretion in granting the preliminary injunction in accordance with its own prior decision and decree, which, decree was not the subject of the appeal. But the court proceeded to dispose of the case upon its merits as one in which it was apparent complainant could not ultimately prevail, and relied on Mast, Foos and Company v. Stover Manufacturing Company, 177 U. S. 485, as authorizing the pursuit of that course.

It was contended there that the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit erred in refusing to follow the opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in respect of the validity and scope of a patent, and in reversing the order of the Circuit Court, which, on the ground of comity, had done so, and we held that the obligation was not imperative, but that the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit was at liberty to exercise its own judgment.

In doing so the Court of Appeals directed the dismissal of the bill, before answer filed or proofs taken, on an appeal from an order granting a temporary injunction, and its action in that regard was a principal question discussed in this court.

It should be observed that in that case complainant was served with defendant’s affidavits before the argument below, and was permitted to put in rebuttal affidavits. The merits of the case were fully before the court, and the patent in suit related to the use in a windmill of ,an old and simple mechanical device for the purpose of converting a rotary into a reciprocating motion. It was held that the case fell within the rule sometimes applied where there is no dispute upon the facts, and there appears to be no reasonable possibility that complainant may succeed. But this court took care to define the class of cases in which that might be done, and speaking through .Mr. Justice Brown said:

• “ Does this doctrine apply to a case where a temporary injunction is granted pendente lite upon affidavits and immediately *61 upon the filing of a bill ? "We are of opinion that this must be determined from the circumstances of the particular case. If the showing made by the plaintiff be incomplete ; if the. order for the injunction be reversed, because injunction was not the proper remedy, or because under the particular circumstances of the case, it should not have been granted ; or if other relief be possible, notwithstanding the injunction be refused, then, clearly, the case should be remanded for a full hearing upon pleadings and proofs. But if the bill be obviously devoid of equity upon its face, and such invalidity be incapable of remedy by amendment; or if the patent manifestly fail to disclose a patentable novelty in the invention, we know of no reason why,, to save a protracted litigation, the court may not order the bill to be dismissed. Ordinarily, if the case involve a question of fact, as of anticipation or infringement, we think the parties are entitled to put in their evidence in the manner prescribed by the rules of this court for taking testimony in equity causes. But if there be nothing in the affidavits tending to throw a doubt upon the existence or date of the anticipating devices, and giving them their proper effect, they establish the invalidity of the patent; or if no question be made regarding the identity of the alleged infringing device, and it appear clear that such device is not an infringement, and no suggestion be made of further proofs upon the subject, we think the court should not only overrule the order for the injunction, but dismiss the bill.”

In the present case the notice of the motion for preliminary injunction was returnable October 19, and due service of complainants’ affidavits was made; the hearing was adjourned to October 26 on defendants’ application; and on that day defendants’ affidavits were presented and the hearing proceeded, complainants not having been afforded previous opportunity to inspect these affidavits, and not being granted leave to rebut them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 U.S. 57, 23 S. Ct. 562, 47 L. Ed. 706, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brill-v-peckham-motor-truck-wheel-co-scotus-1903.