I. T. S. Rubber Co. v. Essex Rubber Co.

272 U.S. 429, 47 S. Ct. 136, 71 L. Ed. 335, 1926 U.S. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 22, 1926
Docket36
StatusPublished
Cited by201 cases

This text of 272 U.S. 429 (I. T. S. Rubber Co. v. Essex Rubber 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
I. T. S. Rubber Co. v. Essex Rubber Co., 272 U.S. 429, 47 S. Ct. 136, 71 L. Ed. 335, 1926 U.S. LEXIS 12 (1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sanford

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit in equity brought by the I. T. S. Rubber Company against the Essex Rubber Company in the Federal District Court for Massachusetts, for the infringement of United States patent No. 14,049, on resilient heels, reissued to the I. T. S. Company January 11, 1916, as assignee, on an original patent to John G. Tufford, issued in 1914. After final hearing on the pleadings and proof 1 the bill was dismissed by the District Court for want of infringement. This was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals, 1 F.. (2d) 780. And there being a conflict of opinion with the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit as to the scope of the patent, this writ of certiorari was granted.

The Essex Company, which manufactures and sells the ' heels alleged to infringe, expressly admitted the validity of the reissued patent. And the only questions are: First, whether it is estopped to deny infringement; second, if not, whether infringement is shown.

.1. In the courts below the I. T. S. Company relied on estoppels by reason of adjudications in various prior suits brought by it in the Sixth Circuit against dealers in the Essex Company’s heels. In the brief for the I. T. S. Company in this Court it is asserted, in general terms, that the action of the Essex Company “ in suits brought against its jobbers in the Sixth Circuit estop it from denying in *432 fringement here,” and that the Circuit Court of Appeals erred in holding that it was not estopped by the decrees in such suits. The argument in the brief, however, specifies and deals with only one of such prior suits; and there being as to the others no semblance of compliance with the requirements of Rule 25 of this Court, 2 we need consider only the suit specifically relied on.

That was a suit brought by the I. T. S. Company against one Wendt, a dealer in Essex heels of a type involved in the present suit, in which infringement of the patent was adjudged. The I. T. S. Company contends that the Essex Company, although not a party of record, took entire control of the defense, participated in the suit until the final decree, paid all the expenses, and is now estopped from-denying infringement as therein adjudged. .

The material facts found by the District Court are: The Essex Company, after being notified by Wendt of the commencement of the suit, notified the counsel of the I. T. S. Company that it did not wish to, and would not, appear. Wendt thereafter voluntarily allowed the suit to go by default, and an order was entered taking the bill pro confesso. This was followed by an interlocutory decree pro confesso adjudging the infringement of the patent and Wendt’s liability for damages and profits, and ordering an accounting. Down to the entry of this decree the Essex Company exercised no control over the management and conduct of the suit. Thereafter the Essex Company, having previously written Wendt that it would reimburse *433 him for any losses he sustained by reason of the suit, suggested that he and counsel whom it had employed procure an adjustment of the damages and profits. Wendt and the counsel for the Essex Company thereupon secured an agreement to settle the case by Wendt’s payment of $1,000. This was embodied in a stipulation signed by the I. T. S. Company’s counsel and by the Essex Company’s counsel as counsel for Wendt, and filed in.the case. This stipulation, with the interlocutory decree, was thereafter made the basis of a final decree, re-adjudging the infringement, reciting the settlement, and, adjudging that the I. T. S. Company recover of Wendt $1,000 and the costs of the suit. Wendt paid this judgment and was reimbursed by the Essex Company. The District Court further found specifically that, under the circumstances, the Essex Company did not control the suit; and held that, even though the I. T. S. Company' understood that the counsel negotiating the settlement represented the Essex Company as well as Wendt in adjusting the damages, it was not estopped from contesting the question of infringement raised in the present case.

On the appeal the Circuit Court of Appeals stated that the record showed clearly that the Essex Company refused to become a party to the suit or assume any control over it, and took no part in the conduct or control of the suit, but only in the adjustment of the damages ” after the pro confesso decree had been entered; and approved both the findings and ruling of the District Court.

There is nothing which, under the well settled rule, Del Pozo v. Wilson Cypress Co., 269 U. S. 82, 89, justifies us in disturbing the concurrent findings of fact of the two courts below; and we concur in their ruling that on the facts thus found the Essex Company is not estopped from contesting the question of infringement.

2. The question of infringement as here presented turns upon matters of law arising out of a file wrapper *434 defense interposed by the Essex Company, which insists that the reissued patent, although valid, was so limited in scope by the proceedings in the Patent Office that the Essex heels do not infringe.

The patent covers the part of a shoe commonly called a rubber heel, or cushion heel lift. 3 This is usually made of rubber, and is attached to the under side of the leather heel so as to furnish a yielding, resilient heel, giving softness to the tread and quietness in walking. These heels, which are in common use, are of two types, the flat and the concavo-convex, both of which were old when Tufford made his invention. The flat heel, which is the older, is cemented to the leather and then fastened on by nails or screws. The driving in of the nails or screws, however, has a tendency to cause the rubber to spring away from the leather around the edges and produce an open seam. In the concavo-convex type the body of the rubber heel is curved downwards. It is attached to the leather heel, without any cement, by placing its upper concave side-under the leather, pressing it upward flatly and then nailing or screwing it on tightly. This, through the tendency of the rubber to resume its original curved form, tends to keep it tightly pressed upwards against the ■leather and overcome the tendency of the flat heels to separate from the leather at the edges. This characteristic of the concavo-convex heels, often called the “ tight-edge effect,” was referred to as early as 1889 in Ferguson’s patent No. 638,228.

The Tufford heel is of the concavo-convex type. We insert here reproductions of Figure 2 of the drawings of the reissued patent, which is described as “ a front to rear sectional view through the lift in position disposed against the under side of a shoe heel and immediately prior to application thereto,” and shows one-half of the lift on a *435 median section; and of Figure 4, which is described as “ a perspective view looking at the upper side of the lift removed.”

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Bluebook (online)
272 U.S. 429, 47 S. Ct. 136, 71 L. Ed. 335, 1926 U.S. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/i-t-s-rubber-co-v-essex-rubber-co-scotus-1926.