La Baw v. Hawkins

14 F. Cas. 899, 2 Ban. & A. 561
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 F. Cas. 899 (La Baw v. Hawkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
La Baw v. Hawkins, 14 F. Cas. 899, 2 Ban. & A. 561 (circtdnj 1877).

Opinion

NIXON, District Judge.

On the reference for an account, ordered in the above case,2 the master has made an alternative report. The large amount of evidence taken has been returned, and the master, referring to it, states that if the profits and damages are to be measured by the royalty or license fee of S3 on each mitre machine manufactured and sold by the defendants, a decree should be entered for $1,443 in favor of the complainants. But if the actual profits realized by the defendants belong to, and are to be awarded to the complainants, he finds these to be the sum of $2.072.41.

The counsel for the defendants has filed three exceptions to the report, to wit: 1. Because the master, by his report, finds against the exceptants and in favor of the complainants for the sum $2.672.41, on the principle that the complainants are entitled to all the gains and profits, resulting to the except-ants, after deducting the costs of manufacturing and selling 4S1 mitre machines; whereas he should have been governed by the rule that the complainants had established a license fee for the use of their patent, and that the measure of their loss or damage, was the amount of that fee, to wit, $1,443. 2. Because the master, in taking, stating and reporting the account, and assessing the said damages on the principle of gains and profits, excluded the sixth item of $962, under the head of “Sundries” in the schedule of costs of manufacturing — the amount of royalty claimed to have been paid by the exceptants, to the owners of the Hall’s letters patent — whereas the said master should have included the said sum in the amount of the costs of manufacturing and selling the said mitre machines, the said sum of $962 having been actually paid by them for such royalty. 3. Because the master rejected the item of $64 charged for engraving and electrotyping, whereas he should have allowed that amount as part of the costs of manufacturing and selling the said mitre machines, the same having been expended for the purpose of advertising the sale of the said machines.

The counsel for the complainants has filed no exceptions: but contented himself, at the hearing, with submitting an argument, tending to show that the actual profits shown to have been realized by the defendants should be awarded, and that the master properly excluded the items referred to in the 2d and 3d exceptions of the defendants. Upon this state of facts, the only matters, which seem to require the consideration of the court, are the defendants’ exceptions.

. 1. The first refers to the rule or principle on which the profits and damages should be awarded. Some confusion, I think, has arisen in the case, because the master and the counsel have not clearly’ distinguished between them. This is not to be wondered at, in view of the unsettled condition of the law in this regard. Under the patent act [5 Stat. 117], profits may be defined to be the net gains of the infringer from the use of the patented invention, while damages are the losses sustained by the owner in consequence of the infringement. The bill of complaint was filed since the law was passed authorizing the owner of a patent to recover, in one suit, damages as well as profits, and it prays for both. • The interlocutory decree followed the prayer of the bill, and the reference directed the master to take an account of the gains and profits which the defendants have received, or which have arisen or accrued to them from infringing the exclusive rights of the complainants by the manufacture, use and sale of the mitre machines patented in the letters patent upon which the suit was brought, and also, in addition thereto, to assess the damages which the complainants have sustained by reason of such infringement.

[901]*901No general rule can be announced to govern tbe master in taking the account in such a ease. Sometimes the profits of the in-fringer is the sole criterion of the actual damage sustained by the patentee, and then a report of the net gains covers the whole ground of profits and damages. In other instances — I do not say that this is one of them — it would be the duty of the master, under such á reference, to add together the net gains of the infringer and the license fee which the patentee has fixed, and to make the aggregate the measure of the profits and damages, which the wrong-doer ought to pay. But the alternative report of the master seems to imply that he is not permitted to include both, and that he must make an election and reject either the one or the other.

An examination of the testimony returned to the master shows that no established royalty or license fee exists. The only evidence in regard to it was the agreement entered into between the complainants and Seymour & Whitlock, dated September 21st, 1870, which was proved before the master and annexed to his report. The owners of the patent, by this agreement, transferred to Seymour & Whitlock “the sole and exclusive right and monopoly of manufacturing, selling and vending machines and improvements thereto, under and by virtue of the said letters patent (of the complainants) and the reissue and renewal thereof, for the term of the existence of the said patent, reissue and renewal thereof,” as fully as the grantors could have done had not said grant been made. It seems to have been executed in reference to the alleged infringement of the defendants, as nothing was to become due for the use of the invention, as long as Hawkins & Dodge continued to infringe. Six dollars royalty was to be paid for each machine manufactured and sold during the first six months after the said Hawkins & Dodge ceased to manufacture mitre machines “with angular knives reciprocating vertically for cutting mitres in materials with a shear cut.” and three dollars for every machine sold after the expiration of the said six months. Such a transfer by the owners of their entire interest in the patent, to be paid for by a certain royalty, is not the establishment of the ordinary license fee, by the payment of which any one acquires the right of using the patented invention. It grants a monopoly, in consequence of which the grantees can afford to pay a much larger price for its exclusive use than if they were subject to competition from other licensees. It cannot be invoked as a safe criterion of the measure of the complainants’ damages, unless evidence is offered showing that the licensees of the complainants were deprived of the sale of the number of mitre machines which the defendants manufactured and sold. No such proof was made or attempted, ■and the first exception of the defendants must be overruled.

2. The second exception relates to the refusal of the master to allow to the defendants, as a part of the expenses of their manufacture and sale, the sum of $902, the royalty which they had agreed to pay for the use of Hall’s patent. The defendants were manufacturing and selling mitre machines under certain letters patent (No. 21,194) granted to one Stephen W. Hall, August 17th, 1S58, and the court has held that the use of the said patent was an infringement of the complainants’ invention. But they were none the less liable to pay the royalty charged by the owner of the Hall patent. It may well be that one machine infringes another, and yet the former may contain improvements which add materially to the value of the latter. 1 had occasion to consider this question in the case of American Nicholson Pavement Co. v. City of Elizabeth [Case No.

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Bluebook (online)
14 F. Cas. 899, 2 Ban. & A. 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/la-baw-v-hawkins-circtdnj-1877.