Dowagiac Manufacturing Co. v. Minnesota Moline Plow Co.

235 U.S. 641, 35 S. Ct. 221, 59 L. Ed. 398, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1822
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 11, 1915
DocketNos. 6 and 7
StatusPublished
Cited by213 cases

This text of 235 U.S. 641 (Dowagiac Manufacturing Co. v. Minnesota Moline Plow 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
Dowagiac Manufacturing Co. v. Minnesota Moline Plow Co., 235 U.S. 641, 35 S. Ct. 221, 59 L. Ed. 398, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1822 (1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Van Devanter

delivered the opinion of the court.

.We have here to review two decrees dealing with an accounting of profits and an assessment of damages resulting from the infringement of a patent granted *643 February 10, 1891, for certain “new and useful improvements in grain-drills, commonly known as 'shoe-drills.’” The suits wherein these decrees were rendered were both brought by the same plaintiff but were against different defendants charged with separate infringement. The plaintiff, besides owning the patent, was manufacturing and selling drills embodying the patented improvements; and the defendants, who were wholesale dealers in agricultural implements, were selling drills embodying substantially the same improvements. The drills made by the plaintiff were sold under the name “Dowagiac,” and the names “McSherry” and “Peoria” were applied to most of the others. . The defendants purchased from manufacturers who,, as has since been settled, Were infringing the plaintiff’s rights. At an early stage in the litigation the validity of the patent was sustained, the defendants were held to be infringers, further infringement by them was enjoined, and the cases were referred in the usual way for an accounting of profits and an assessment of damages. 108 Fed. Rep. 67; 118 Fed. Rep. 136. Upon the evidence submitted the masters reported that the recovery should be limited to nominal damages and their reports were confirmed by the Circuit Court. Its action was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. 183 Fed. Rep. 314.

The conclusion that 'the recovery should be thus restricted was rested upon these grounds: First," that the patent was not for a new and operative drill, but only for designated improvements in a type of drill then in use and well known; second, that the value of .drills embodying this invention, as marketable machines, was not wholly attributable to the designated improvements, but was due in a material degree to other essential parts which • were not patented; third, that the plaintiff failed to carry the burden, rightly resting upon it, of submitting evidence whereby the profits from the sale of the. infringing drills *644 could be apportioned between the patented improvements and the unpatented parts; and, fourth, that, although the number of sales made by the defendants was disclosed, the evidence did not present other data essential to an assessment of the damage sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the defendants’ infringement.

Partly because another Circuit Court of Appeals seemingly had reached a different conclusion in other litigation arising out of this patent (see McSherry Co. v. Dowagiac Co., 160 Fed. Rep. 948; 163 Fed. Rep. 34; Brennan & Co. v. Dowagiac Co., 162 Fed. Rep. 472) and partly because of the importance of the questions involved, writs of certiorari were granted requiring that these cases be certified here for review and determination. See Judicial Code, § 240.

Since the writs were granted the rules bearing upon the apportionment of profits in such cases, the relative obligations of the parties to submit evidence looking to an apportionment, and the character of evidence which may be submitted, have been extensively considered and com-prehensively stated in Westinghouse Co. v. Wagner Co., 225 U. S. 604. What was said there materially lessens our present task.

At the outset it should be observed that, while the defendants were infringers and bound to respond as such to the plaintiff, their infringement was not wanton or wilful. The masters and the courts below expressly so found and the evidence sustained the finding. The defendants,. therefore, were not in the situation of the infringing manufacturer in Brennan & Co. v. Dowagiac Co., 162 Fed. Rep. 472, of whom the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit said (p. 476): "It has made and sold these infringing drills with a purpose to imitate the patentee’s construction.”

It js quite plain, as we think, that the patent was not for a new and operative grain-drill, but only for particular *645 improvements in a type of grain-drill then in use and well known. The invention was so described in the specification forming part of the patent. The inventor there said:

“This invention relates to new and useful improvements in grain-drills commonly known, as ‘shoe-drills;’ and it consists in a certain construction and arrangement of parts, as hereinafter more fully set forth, the essential features of which being pointed out particularly in the ' claims.

“The object of the invention is to provide an independent spring-pressure for each of the shoes and covering-wheels of the drill, whereby the work of the drill is rendered éfficient in uneven ground, and to provide means whereby said shoes and covering-wheels may be raised from the ground when the implement is not in use or when transporting it from one field to another.”

In keeping with this statement the claims in the patent were limited to a suitable construction and arrangement of spring-pressure rods in combination with certain correlated elements of the seeding part of a grain-drill — the part which opens the furrows, guides the seed into them and then closes them. Of course, this was an important part, but it was only that; for other parts were required to ■ complete the machine and make it operative. Some of these were simple and easily supplied, such as the.tongue and attachments to which the horses were hitched. Others were complex and required careful adjustment. This was especially true of the feeding mechanism whereby the grain was fed from the feed box or reservoir into the several hoppers in continuous, uniform and precisely measured streams, so that it might be deposited in the furrows evenly and in suitable quantity. Only when all the parts were present and so adjusted as to perform their respective functions was the drill a practical and successful machine. In this respect no change resulted from the invention covered by the patent. It effected material *646 improvements in one part, but did not obviate or diminish the necessity for the others.

We think the evidence, although showing' that the invention was meritorious and materially contributed to the value of the infringing drills as marketable machines, made it clear that their value was not entirely attributable to the invention, but was due in a substantial degree to the unpatented parts or features. The masters and the courts below so found and we should hesitate to disturb then- concurring conclusions upon this question of fact, even had the evidence been less clear than it was..

In so far as the profits from the infringing sales were attributable to the patented improvements they belonged to the plaintiff, and in so far as they were due to other parts or features they belonged to the defendants. But as the drills were sold in completed and operative form the profits resulting from the several parts were necessarily commingled.

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Bluebook (online)
235 U.S. 641, 35 S. Ct. 221, 59 L. Ed. 398, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dowagiac-manufacturing-co-v-minnesota-moline-plow-co-scotus-1915.