Cookson v. Louis Marx & Co.

23 F. Supp. 615, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1995
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 21, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 F. Supp. 615 (Cookson v. Louis Marx & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cookson v. Louis Marx & Co., 23 F. Supp. 615, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1995 (S.D.N.Y. 1938).

Opinion

PATTERSON, District Judge.

The suit is for infringement of patent to Appell, 1,272,353, issued July 16, 1918, for a toy pistol, and also for infringement of patent to Daspit, 1,863,438, issued June 14, 1932, for a toy gun.1 The case has several unusual features. In the original bill the plaintiff complained of infringement of the Daspit patent only. The defendant, having obtained what purported to be an assignment of the Appell patent from the patentee when suit on the Daspit patent was threatened, counterclaimed for infringement of the Appell patent. In the counterclaim it was averred under oath that the Appell patent was valid, that the defendant was selling toys containing the invention embodied in the patent, and that the plaintiff was an infringer. The defendant’s counterclaim was filed in July 1934, prior to expiration of the Appell patent.

The fact was, however, that Appell, a resident of Illinois, had been adjudicated a spendthrift and a conservator had been appointed for him by an Illinois court years before he made the assignment to the defendant, and the conservatorship was still in force. The plaintiff, having discovered Appell’s disability, proceeded to purchase the Appell patent from the conservator and obtained an instrument of assignment from him. This happened in Octobep [617]*6171934, prior to the expiration of the patent. The plaintiff in April, 1937 filed a supplemental bill on the Appell patent, alleging ownership, validity and infringement. The defendant then recast its pleading. It withdrew the original answer and counterclaim and filed an answer to the bill and supplemental bill, denying validity and infringement as to each of the two patents, and disputing also the plaintiff’s title fo the Appell patent. The counterclaim based on the Appell patent was dropped.

First, the Appell patent. Although the defendant does not raise it, there is a question of equitable jurisdiction. The supplemental bill, wherein the plaintiff for the first time sought relief as to the Appell patent, was filed after expiration of that patent. The plaintiff accordingly did not pray for an injunction but merely for an accounting of profits. The rule in Root v. Lake Shore Railway Co., 105 U.S. 189, 26 L.Ed. 975, to the effect that a suit in equity for a naked account of profits cannot be maintained after expiration of a patent, would ordinarily require the dismissal of the supplemental bill on jurisdictional grounds or the transfer of the suit on the Appell patent to the law side of the court. But the supplemental bill contains allegations to the effect that the plaintiff had not made, used or sold any device under the patent for the six years preceding, had obtained no financial advantage from the invention and had sustained no actual damage from the use of the invention by others. It was held by the Circuit Court of Appeals of this circuit in Tompkins v. St. Regis Paper Co., 236 F. 221, that a bill for patent infringement filed after expiration of patent, demanding only an accounting for profits, might be maintained on the equity side where the bill set forth that no actual damage had been suffered from infringement; indeed, the allegations in the present case seem to have been taken bodily from the opinion in that case. The Tompkins Case, while discussed without enthusiasm by Judge Hough in Le Roy v. De Vry Corporation, 2 Cir., 16 F.2d 18, 20, has never been overruled or retracted, and it is binding on this court. It follows that the supplemental bill for infringement of the Appell patent states a case cognizable in equity.

The plaintiff’s title to the Appell patent is disputed by the defendant. The patent act provides that patents are assignable in law by instrument in writing. 35 U.S.C.A. § 47; Revised Statutes, § 4898. This does not mean that the patentee must in every case execute the assignment by his own hand. On creditor’s bill a court of equity may appoint a trustee to make an assignment of a debtor’s patent right in case the debtor himself does not make the required assignment, and an assignment executed by the trustee will pass title to a purchaser. Ager v. Murray, 105 U.S. 126, 26 L.Ed. 942; Wilson v. Martin-Wilson Fire Alarm Co., 151 Mass. 515, 24 N.E. 784, 8 L.R.A. 309. There can be no doubt that legal capacity to make an assignment of patent and the aids to incapacity are matters which Congress might have regulated brtt which it chose to leave to the law of the state of the assignor’s domicile, Illinois in this case. See Waterman v. Mackenzie, 138 U.S. 252, 11 S.Ct. 334, 34 L.Ed. 923; Fetter v. Newhall, C.C.N.Y., 17 F. 841. By lav/ of Illinois a person who is legally declared to be a spendthrift has no capacity to transfer his property. The conservator of such a person has authority to transfer personal property without specific order of the court. Illinois Revised Statutes, 1937, ch. 86; Schmidt v. Shaver, 196 Ill. 108, 63 N.E. 655, 89 Am.St.Rep. 250; Hempstead v. Broad, 275 Ill. 358, 114 N.E. 120. The defendant therefore took nothing by the assignment made by the patentee, an adjudicated spendthrift; on the other hand, the assignment made by the conservator conveyed the patentee’s title to the plaintiff.

On the issues of validity and infringement of the Appell patent, the plaintiff submits that the defendant is bound by the allegations in its counterclaim. The defendant, in the mistaken belief that the patent belonged to it, did allege in the counterclaim that the patent was valid and that the defendant was using the patent. If it is held to these allegations the plaintiff’s case is proved. But the allegations have only the force of admissions, withdrawn when the counterclaim itself was withdrawn prior to the trial. The plaintiff was not misled to his injury by these representations. The defendant is not estopped to deny validity and infringement. See De La Vergne Machine Co. v. Featherstone, C.C.Ill., 49 F. 916. Those issues-are open for decision on the merits.

The Appell patent is for a toy pistol which will produce a clatter like the firing of an automatic pistol while the trigger is kept under pressure of the finger. The toy is actuated by a spring motor of [618]*618the type frequently found in toys; a toothed wheel is adapted to be driven by the spring; a hammer is in position to be vibrated against a diaphragm by the teeth of the wheel .or of another wheel meshed to it; the movable parts are held in inoperative position by the top of the trigger, but respond to the spring when the trigger is pressed. While the structure is simple and utilizes only a few well-known elements, there is nothing in the record to indicate that the concept of such a toy was not original with Appell. Certainly the prior art brought forward by the defendant shows nothing like it. Pickl, 1,188,315, had a toy pistol that would produce a single report, but his pistol bore no resemblance to Appell’s in structure or in result. Willett, 1,205,498, showed a toy pistol capable of emitting a short succession of reports. Willett’s means were quite different; pressure on the trigger caused rotation of an arm-carrying member, and passage of the arms between a - sprung hammer and a sounding plate produced the reports as the hammer snapped back into position. The Swiss patent to Alemann, 4,590, was for a musical mechanism within a toy revolver.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F. Supp. 615, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1995, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cookson-v-louis-marx-co-nysd-1938.