HERLANDS, District Judge.
This is an action for a declaratory judgment of invalidity of a patent or non-infringement or both. Defendant is the licensee under an agreement with the patentees, his licensors, giving defendant the right to manufacture and vend a sash balancing mechanism in the United States. Plaintiff is the owner of another patent dealing with the same subject. In this action, plaintiff has not joined defendant’s licensors as parties defendant.
This suit was commenced by the filing of a complaint on the morning of June 8, 1955. Later that same day, defendant herein, joined by his licensors-patentees, instituted an injunction action for patent infringement in the Western District of New York. The defendant in the West-em District action is the plaintiff in the Southern District action.
The motions before this Court are those of the defendant-licensee seeking, in the alternative: (1) dismissal of the Southern District action; (2) transfer of the Southern District proceedings to the Western District; or (3) a stay of the Southern District proceedings pending final- determination of the patent infringement action in the Western District. Disposition of the first two motions will render unnecessary any discussion of the motion to stay the Southern District proceedings.
The Motion to Dismiss.
Defendant moves to dismiss this action under Fed.Rules Civ.Proc. Rule 12(b) (7), 28 U.S.C.A.,1 for plaintiff’s failure to join as co-defendants the defendant’s licensors-patentees. D ef endant-licensee claims that his licensors are indispensable parties.
Resolution of this motion involves a consideration of: the test of indis■pensability under F.R.C.P., Rule 19(a) ;2 the test of indispensability with reference to a licensor of patent rights; and the construction of the license agreement between the absent licensors-patentees and the defendant-licensee to ascertain whether the parties to that agreement [261]*261have, by its terms, resolved the indispensability issue.
The enactment of Rule 19(a) was not intended to change the rules governing compulsory joinder as laid down by existing case law.3 Shields v. Barrow 4 still furnishes the fundamental definition of an indispensable party. Unless the absence of an indispensable party is subsequently cured by his joinder, dismissal must result.5 Such defect is jurisdictional.6
The comparatively easy statement of the rule belies the difficulty in applying it to specific situations where the question of indispensability has been raised. This is especially so where patent rights are involved. The complexity of the problem is, perhaps, best illustrated by the plethora of judicial commentary.
The transfer of interest in a patent necessarily deals with a monopoly; and this monopoly may not be divided into segments except as authorized by the laws conferring the monopoly.7 ' Moreover, where someone other than the patentee has been permitted to sue for infringement of the patent, this right has been predicated not upon the real party in interest concept8 but upon the statutes governing patents. In the application of the patent laws to successors in interest, distinctions have been made.by the courts between the types of interest the licensor-patentee purported to create.9
In determining the issue of the parties before the Court, the type of license involved must be carefully examined. For example, the license may be so limited that, by its very terms, the licensee obtains no rights against infringers of the patent. Thus, a “bare” licensee10 may neither sue alone11 nor join with the licensor-patentee12 in an infringement action, for he has been held not to be a necessary party to a suit brought by the licensor-patentee to pro[262]*262tect his monopoly.13 A problem arises as to who should redress the licensee’s injuries when the licensor-patentee promises that the license shall be exclusive. Under such a license it may be assumed that the licensee has a definite interest in the prevention of the patent’s use by others, despite the fact that the exclusive license does not constitute an assignment of the interests in the patent within the classic definition of Waterman v. MacKenzie.14 In general, the earlier cases tended to categorize a claimant as either an “assignee” or a “licensee.” The apparent distinction was that, in an infringement suit brought by a licensee, the licensor-patentee was an indispensable party because legal title remained with the licensor-patentee.15
The question of indispensability vis-á-vis the licensor-patentee becomes all the more acute when we consider the very nature and purpose of the declaratory judgment procedure.16 Is there a “case or controversy”17 in the absence of the licensor-patentee?
In Contracting Division, A. C. Horn Corp. v. New York Life Ins. Co.,18 the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held that a dispute between a "bare” licensee and an alleged infringer with respect to the validity or infringement of the licensed patent did not present an actual “controversy” such as is required by the Federal Declaratory Judgment Act.
In A. L. Smith Iron Co. v. Dickson19 the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit reversed the trial court which had dismissed the complaint (in so far as it sought a declaratory judgment concerning the patent’s validity) on the ground that the licensor-patentee was not a party thereto. The Circuit Court of Appeals, carefully delineating the application of its decision, pointed out: (1) The licensee could not have sued upon the patent in his own name because, having only a license to make and vend, he was not an assignee within the MaeKenzie rule and, lacking that status, he did not have a sufficient proprietary interest to prosecute the merits of the patent. The Court found, however, that the licensee had represented to plaintiff that he did possess the power to sue in his own name. Hence, a species of estoppel was invoked against the licensee. [263]*263(2) The judgment would not bind the licensor-patentee because it could sue plaintiff’s customers at any time thereafter. (3) The potential “stain” of a judgment of invalidity of the patent could be obviated by according the licensor-patentee an opportunity to intervene. The Court concluded, therefore, that the licensor-patentee’s sole remaining interest in a dismissal of the complaint concerned, at most, the choice of forum in which to vindicate his rights.
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HERLANDS, District Judge.
This is an action for a declaratory judgment of invalidity of a patent or non-infringement or both. Defendant is the licensee under an agreement with the patentees, his licensors, giving defendant the right to manufacture and vend a sash balancing mechanism in the United States. Plaintiff is the owner of another patent dealing with the same subject. In this action, plaintiff has not joined defendant’s licensors as parties defendant.
This suit was commenced by the filing of a complaint on the morning of June 8, 1955. Later that same day, defendant herein, joined by his licensors-patentees, instituted an injunction action for patent infringement in the Western District of New York. The defendant in the West-em District action is the plaintiff in the Southern District action.
The motions before this Court are those of the defendant-licensee seeking, in the alternative: (1) dismissal of the Southern District action; (2) transfer of the Southern District proceedings to the Western District; or (3) a stay of the Southern District proceedings pending final- determination of the patent infringement action in the Western District. Disposition of the first two motions will render unnecessary any discussion of the motion to stay the Southern District proceedings.
The Motion to Dismiss.
Defendant moves to dismiss this action under Fed.Rules Civ.Proc. Rule 12(b) (7), 28 U.S.C.A.,1 for plaintiff’s failure to join as co-defendants the defendant’s licensors-patentees. D ef endant-licensee claims that his licensors are indispensable parties.
Resolution of this motion involves a consideration of: the test of indis■pensability under F.R.C.P., Rule 19(a) ;2 the test of indispensability with reference to a licensor of patent rights; and the construction of the license agreement between the absent licensors-patentees and the defendant-licensee to ascertain whether the parties to that agreement [261]*261have, by its terms, resolved the indispensability issue.
The enactment of Rule 19(a) was not intended to change the rules governing compulsory joinder as laid down by existing case law.3 Shields v. Barrow 4 still furnishes the fundamental definition of an indispensable party. Unless the absence of an indispensable party is subsequently cured by his joinder, dismissal must result.5 Such defect is jurisdictional.6
The comparatively easy statement of the rule belies the difficulty in applying it to specific situations where the question of indispensability has been raised. This is especially so where patent rights are involved. The complexity of the problem is, perhaps, best illustrated by the plethora of judicial commentary.
The transfer of interest in a patent necessarily deals with a monopoly; and this monopoly may not be divided into segments except as authorized by the laws conferring the monopoly.7 ' Moreover, where someone other than the patentee has been permitted to sue for infringement of the patent, this right has been predicated not upon the real party in interest concept8 but upon the statutes governing patents. In the application of the patent laws to successors in interest, distinctions have been made.by the courts between the types of interest the licensor-patentee purported to create.9
In determining the issue of the parties before the Court, the type of license involved must be carefully examined. For example, the license may be so limited that, by its very terms, the licensee obtains no rights against infringers of the patent. Thus, a “bare” licensee10 may neither sue alone11 nor join with the licensor-patentee12 in an infringement action, for he has been held not to be a necessary party to a suit brought by the licensor-patentee to pro[262]*262tect his monopoly.13 A problem arises as to who should redress the licensee’s injuries when the licensor-patentee promises that the license shall be exclusive. Under such a license it may be assumed that the licensee has a definite interest in the prevention of the patent’s use by others, despite the fact that the exclusive license does not constitute an assignment of the interests in the patent within the classic definition of Waterman v. MacKenzie.14 In general, the earlier cases tended to categorize a claimant as either an “assignee” or a “licensee.” The apparent distinction was that, in an infringement suit brought by a licensee, the licensor-patentee was an indispensable party because legal title remained with the licensor-patentee.15
The question of indispensability vis-á-vis the licensor-patentee becomes all the more acute when we consider the very nature and purpose of the declaratory judgment procedure.16 Is there a “case or controversy”17 in the absence of the licensor-patentee?
In Contracting Division, A. C. Horn Corp. v. New York Life Ins. Co.,18 the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held that a dispute between a "bare” licensee and an alleged infringer with respect to the validity or infringement of the licensed patent did not present an actual “controversy” such as is required by the Federal Declaratory Judgment Act.
In A. L. Smith Iron Co. v. Dickson19 the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit reversed the trial court which had dismissed the complaint (in so far as it sought a declaratory judgment concerning the patent’s validity) on the ground that the licensor-patentee was not a party thereto. The Circuit Court of Appeals, carefully delineating the application of its decision, pointed out: (1) The licensee could not have sued upon the patent in his own name because, having only a license to make and vend, he was not an assignee within the MaeKenzie rule and, lacking that status, he did not have a sufficient proprietary interest to prosecute the merits of the patent. The Court found, however, that the licensee had represented to plaintiff that he did possess the power to sue in his own name. Hence, a species of estoppel was invoked against the licensee. [263]*263(2) The judgment would not bind the licensor-patentee because it could sue plaintiff’s customers at any time thereafter. (3) The potential “stain” of a judgment of invalidity of the patent could be obviated by according the licensor-patentee an opportunity to intervene. The Court concluded, therefore, that the licensor-patentee’s sole remaining interest in a dismissal of the complaint concerned, at most, the choice of forum in which to vindicate his rights. (4) The interest of the licensor-patentee in the selection of a forum was deemed “an interest proper to be weighed against the plaintiff’s interest in settling its present controversy with” the licensee; but this interest was nullified, “for it would be obviously unfair to leave its [plaintiff’s] business exposed to continuous indirect attack, merely to preserve the company’s [the licensor-patentee’s] choice of forum — at least when, as here, the forum open to it is a court having jurisdiction over patents.” (5) The licensor-patentee “went further tham merely to license Dickson [the licensee] ; it not only exacted a promise from him not to ‘permit’ its interests to be ‘prejudiced,’ but it now authorized him to issue such licenses under its patent. It has plainly used him to enforce its patent, and if it has not surrendered its choice of forum, at least its interest in that choice has dwindled too much to stand against the plaintiff’s.”
Recent case law has tended to articulate the implicit denominator in the Dickson case. The emphasis today is upon the ability to bring suit to protect the patent against infringement; and, as a manifestation of that power, to be free to select the forum in which the question of infringement should be tried. Instead of predicating the right to sue upon the semantic categorization of litigants as “licensees” or “assignees,” the more recent cases have tended to place reliance upon the right to bring suit in affirmance of the patent.20 Then, assuming that [264]*264right exists in the licensee, the licensee may be sued to test the validity of the licensed patent without the licensor-patentee’s being joined as a party defendant.
Where a licensee has been denied the right to sue, such denial was predicated upon two policy considerations: (1) the interest of the alleged infringer to be immune from a subsequent suit by the licensor-patentee; and (2) the interest of the licensor-patentee to be free to select his own forum. These considerations are obviated when the licensor-patentee is deemed to have surrendered the right to sue to his licensee because (1) res judicata attends the success or failure of the licensee so designated to bring suit; and (2) the licensee so designated to bring suit is deemed to be “owner” of the patent for the purpose of selecting his own forum.
Although it purports to grant exclusive rights, the agreement in the case at bar is circumscribed sufficiently to warrant a finding that the ultimate power of litigation is retained by the licensor-patentee. The license is limited to one field. The license is terminable for failure to pay specified royalties to the licensor-patentee. The licensor-patentee agrees “to maintain and enforce the exclusive character of the rights granted * * * and to bring action for patent infringement against any and all persons that may, from time to time, infringe said patent rights, * * In the absence of an independent right to bring an action for patent infringement, defendant-licensee herein has no independent right to defend a suit seeking a declaration as to the validity of the licensed patent. •
Estoppel may not be employed against defendant-licensee herein, as it was invoked in the Dickson case. Defendant’s affidavit categorically denies having made any representation to plaintiff that it has the sole right to enforce the patent against alleged infringers. Defendant may bring an action only when the licensor-patentee himself fails to sue for patent infringement.21 Since the licensor-patentee has satisfied that condition in the Western District action, instituted the same day as was this action in the Southern District, the condition precedent to an independent action by defendant-licensee has been foreclosed. This same foreclosure precludes its being sued alone in the Southern District as if it were the owner of the patent.
In the absence of the licensorpatentee as a party defendant in the Southern District action, this declaratory judgment proceeding must fail, since the “case or controversy” requirement is unsatisfied. Without the owner of the patent before this Court, the validity of the patent may not be adjudicated. Under such circumstances, the allegations of non-infringement and invalidity of the patent present moot issues because no substantial controversy exists pursuant to the mandate of the Declaratory Judgment Act.22
[265]*265Assuming arguendo that the justiciability requirement were here satisfied, the declaratory judgment procedure imparts sufficient discretion to permit this Court to refuse to proceed with such action.23 If, therefore, judicial discretion exists to refuse to exercise jurisdiction where it is unchallenged,24 a fortiori this Court is empowered to refuse to exercise jurisdiction where it is challenged by the movant who has substantiated his contention that an indispensable party has not been joined.
This Court has the power to dismiss this action on either of two grounds. It may dismiss under Rule 12(b) because the failure to join an indispensable party is a full and complete defense. It may dismiss under the Declaratory Judgment Act, because the Court has the discretion to refuse to exercise jurisdiction where substantial doubt exists whether the declaratory judgment proceeding would settle the controversy and whether the proceeding would terminate the uncertainty or controversy giving rise to the proceeding.25
However, this Court will not dismiss this proceeding. Dismissal is unnecessary because the Court is of the opinion that the proceeding should be transferred to the Western District. The non-joinder of an indispensable party in this Southern District action is one of the factors impelling the Court to grant the application for a transfer. Since a question has been raised with respect to the licensor-patentee’s indispensable status in this Southern District action, the Court is disinclined to retain jurisdiction when it may be challenged at any stage of the proceeding.26 In view of the fact that all of the issues raised herein may be litigated in the Western District action, where jurisdiction is unquestioned, sound judicial policy strongly suggests that this action be transferred to the Western District.
The Motion to Transfer to the Western District
We now consider 28 U.S.C., § 1404 (a) 27 to determine whether there is any merit to defendant’s claim that the Western District is the proper forum.
The enactment in 1948 of § 1404(a) treats the doctrine of forum non conveniens as one of the indicia of proper venue. In contrast to the procedure prior to 1948, § 1404(a) does not require dismissal for improper venue, but permits transfer to a district where there is a more convenient forum.
Section 1404(a) calls for the exercise of the Court’s discretion. In Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert,28 decided immediately [266]*266prior to the enactment of § 1404(a), the Supreme Court made the following listing of some of the criteria applicable to forum non convemens:
“private interest of the litigant * * * relative ease of access to sources of proof; availability of compulsory process for attendance of unwilling, and the cost of obtaining attendance of willing, witnesses; possibility of view of premises, if view would be appropriate to the action; and all other practical problems that make trial of a case easy, expeditious and inexpensive.” 29
The foregoing statement cannot be treated as an all-inclusive blueprint of the myriad situations requiring the exercise of judicial discretion. Moreover, the Gulf Oil Corp. case reflects a conservative view of forum non conveniens because, at the time of its decision, the application of that doctrine would have resulted in a dismissal of the action. Furthermore, by the subsequent enactment of § 1404(a), the doctrine of forum non conveniens was more than codified; it was revised.30
[267]*267In the recent Norwood case, the Supreme Court declared:
“As a consequence, we believe that Congress, by the term 'for the convenience of parties and witnesses, in the interest of justice,’ intended to permit courts to grant transfers upon a lesser showing of inconvenience. This is not to say that the relevant factors have changed or that the plaintiff’s choice of forum is not to be considered, but only that the discretion to be exercised is broader.”31
Thus, the Norwood case settles the question whether § 1404(a) represented a mere statutory codification of forum non conveniens or whether it expanded the scope of the discretion of district courts to transfer a case to a more convenient forum “in the interest of justice”.
While the case at bar should be transferred in accordance with the broader discretion now accorded by § 1404(a), it is appropriate to point out that the case would have merited dismissal under the former and stricter application of forum non conveniens.
The bisecting of what is essentially a single controversy will be obviated by remitting the parties to the Western District. There, the validity of the patent and the issue of infringement will be litigated in one lawsuit; all of the interested parties will be before the court; its judgment will be res judicata; and its jurisdiction is unquestioned. Moreover, a speedier trial will be had in the Western District.32 Finally, it is undisputed that plaintiff has its principal office in the City of Rochester, within the Western District.
Motion to dismiss is denied. Motion to transfer is granted. Settle order on notice.