Coleman Company, Inc., a Corporation v. Holly Manufacturing Company, a Corporation

269 F.2d 660, 122 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 559, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5412
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 25, 1959
Docket16141
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 269 F.2d 660 (Coleman Company, Inc., a Corporation v. Holly Manufacturing Company, 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
Coleman Company, Inc., a Corporation v. Holly Manufacturing Company, a Corporation, 269 F.2d 660, 122 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 559, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5412 (9th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

ROSS, District Judge.

After a patent has been adjudged valid and infringed, as has been done in the case before us, the question of damages for that infringement is necessarily one of detail.

In such an appeal, there presses upon the reviewing court, with more than the usual insistence, the immemorial canon that, given substantial evidence to support its judgment, the trial court must have its way.

Such is the situation that confronts us here.

1. Statement of the Case.

This appeal concerns the accounting for damages, which accounting was conducted by the District Court after the mandate was issued by the Court of Appeals on the previous appeal, which dealt with the issues of validity and infringement. The appellant Coleman also asks this Court of Appeals to review the judgment of contempt. The previous appeal is reported at 9 Cir., 233 F.2d 71, certiorari denied, 352 U.S. 952, 77 S.Ct. 326, 1 L.Ed.2d 243. In the earlier case, the Court of Appeals decided that the patent involved in the instant case, No. 2,602,-441, was valid and infringed, and that fact cannot be relitigated now, though the appellant in his brief seeks to do so. This case deals strictly with the accounting and the judgment of contempt.

The patent in suit is fully described and discussed in our decision in the earlier appeal, supra, and we need not review that discussion here.

The District Court handed down the following judgment:

The appellant, hereinafter sometimes referred to as Coleman, willfully and deliberately infringed the plaintiff’s patent.

Coleman was guilty of civil contempt for its failure to comply with the terms of the injunction issued by the District Court.

Holly is entitled to judgment as follows:

(a) For lost profits, $1,450,661.78;
*662 (b) Increase of 33%% of lost profits to provide full compensation for the injury caused to the plaintiff by the defendant’s infringement, $483,553.93;
(c) Increase of 25% of lost profits to provide for exemplary damages, $362,-665.45;
(d) Treble damages for defendant’s sales after the injunction became final, December 28, 1956, $69,483.38;
(e) Reasonable attorneys’ fees, $130,000;
(f) Additional attorneys’ fees and expenses, resulting from Coleman’s noncompliance with the injunction, $9,269.-77;
(g) Costs, $3,008.42;
(h) Injunction against Coleman, prohibiting manufacture, use, or sales of wall heaters of the patented combination or like certain of the defendant Coleman’s models.

2. The Appellant’s Argument.

The original evidence before this appellate court was mistaken and incorrect.

Holly’s damage cannot be equated with Coleman’s sales.

Coleman acted in good faith, and the Special Master so found.

The Court’s award of $1,450,661.78 as the plaintiff’s lost profit is factually and legally erroneous because:

1. The realities of the wall heater market situation make it impossible to conclude that Holly would have made all of Coleman’s sales.
2. The law requires that any claimed actual damages for patent infringement be proved with certainty, and there is no presumption of damage beyond that of a reasonable royalty.
3. The 19% profit margin attributed to Holly is without support in the record.
4. The 33% % increase of the assumed lost-profits damages is arbitrary, unreasonable, and without evidentiary support.

As Coleman’s good faith is completely vindicated, there is no legal basis for the award of punitive damages and attorneys’ fees, because—

1. The Court’s finding of bad faith is-directly contrary to the Special Master’s, report, although based upon the same evidence.
2. The infringing air actually was of no value to the Coleman heater.
3. Coleman’s engineers believed in good faith that they were not using the Holly combination.
4. Coleman’s conclusion that it did not infringe was based upon its knowledge of the actual nature of the heater, and not upon the mistaken testimony introduced by Holly and accepted by the Court.
5. Coleman was advised by its patent attorney that there was no infringement.
6. The fact that Coleman developed and patented its own heater design creates a presumption of good faith.
7. Coleman did not fail to “exercise-due care.”
8. The original adjudication of infringement does not establish bad faith.

The adjudication that Coleman’s modified heater infringed is contrary to the-evidence and was improper on a motion-for contempt.

The facts of this case permit only the “reasonable royalty” approach to the damage issue, and the record enables this Court of Appeals to fix a reasonable royalty.

3. The Appellee’s Argument.

Coleman is rearguing the entire case, despite the decisions of the lower court. It is also arguing points not covered in its Points on Appeal or in its Specification of Errors.

The willful infringement, the advance in the art provided by the plaintiff’s invention, and Coleman’s appropriation, thereof in its entirety, preclude assessment of damages on the basis of a reasonable royalty, on the basis of the advantage provided by the infringing device “over a standard of comparison,” or on the basis of apportionment of the profits.

The proper measure of damages is the-reasonably probable profit that Holly *663 would have made on the infringing sales, since that profit is larger than the profit that Coleman made on the infringing sales. Coleman’s profit was less than the profit that it is reasonably probable Holly would have made on the infringing sales and hence is not the proper measure of damages. As a minimum, therefore, Holly would be entitled to recover Coleman’s actual profit, $1,186,537, irrespective of whether Holly would have made the sales that Coleman made if Coleman had not entered the field. An infringer’s profits are a traditional measure of damages.

An award based upon profits, either Holly’s lost profits or Coleman’s actual profits, does not fully compensate Holly. In addition, Holly suffered price reductions on its own sales that were forced by Coleman’s competition, increased selling expenses, and curtailment of its market expansion based upon the use of the patented wall heater as a leading product.

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Bluebook (online)
269 F.2d 660, 122 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 559, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coleman-company-inc-a-corporation-v-holly-manufacturing-company-a-ca9-1959.