Lee v. Malleable Iron Range Co.

247 F. 795, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1251
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedJanuary 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 247 F. 795 (Lee v. Malleable Iron Range Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Malleable Iron Range Co., 247 F. 795, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1251 (E.D. Wis. 1918).

Opinion

GEIGER, District Judge.

The case is before the court upon the decision and report of the special master under the decree for an accounting in respect of gains, profits, and damages. The many years of the litigation need not be reviewed, and the questions raised upon exceptions to the report, though important, are few in number and within quite.narrow compass. The record before the master, while involving much in the way of-figures, now presents no matter requiring re-examination of details, nor review of calculations in which such details are essential to produce items about which there is controversy. It is therefore possible to proceed directly to a consideration of the facts presenting questions exhaustively argued by counsel on both sides. The parties are in accord upon the fundamental fact that the accounting must be concerned with the manufacture and sale by the defendant of approximately 47,290 structures embodying the patent, between April 18, 1905, and April 18, 1911. It will suffice to begin with the defendant’s statement of account respecting their manufacture and sale. At the outset the gross sales are declared to aggregate $299,704.08. Against this the following credits are claimed :

(1) Cost of materials required...................................8152,003.06
(2) Cost of labor................................................ 37,264.87
(3) Saving in cost of manufacturing part of combinations......... 15.138.79
(4) Proportional amount of expenses, losses, etc................... 70,456.44
(5) Manufacturer’s profit.....................‘................... 20,239.97
Total.................................................8301,103.13

On its face, the statement, therefore, shows a loss of $1,399.05.

The great prosperity of defendant’s business as a whole, during the infringing period, exhibited, among other things, by dividends varying from 15 to 50 per cent, upon a capital stock of $100,000; total profits during the period of $737,374.36; commission salaries to certain officials, during the period, of $207,486.94; a great increase of net sales and an increase of average profit per range from $2.95 to $8.56, during [797]*797the same period—all these facts led the master to view with skepticism the account presented; and he was justified in this, not merely by the figures just referred to, but by the vefy act of the defendant, during these years, of incorporating in its structure, as an important feature of it, the patented combination which has given rise to these years of strenuous litigation involving its legal merit. As against such an array of facts, testimony of witnesses ascribing but minor importance to an invention to which the court had by its judgment accorded real merit was of necessity given, not only cautious, but rather scant,'consideration by the master; and he properly proceeded at once to test the account in respect of its claim to credits upon the objections made thereto by the claimant. The consideration was addressed to these items:

first. The third credit, “Saving in cost of manufacturing part of combinations, $15,138.79.”
Second. Parts of the fourth credit, $76,456.44, as relating to commission salaries, depreciation, and interest on capital invested.
Third. The fifth credit, $20,289.97 as “manufacturer’s profit.”

These will be considered in the order stated:

■ [1] The evidence discloses that initially, and in approximately 7,002 infringing combinations first made, defendant used malleable cast heating plates. In the other approximately 40,288, later manufactured, it used pressed steel plates, for whose manufacture and preparation it installed the necessary machinery and appliances. These latter, so the proofs show, could be made and used at a cost less than the malleable plates'by $15,138.79. It is urged that this saving or gain should be allowed to the defendant, as due to its thrift and foresight, and not to Beckwith’s invention. It may be said that the position is not at all supported by Mason v. Graham, 23 Wall. 276, 23 L. Ed. 86, and for the reasons appearing in italicized words of an excerpt from the opinion in that case:

"But the master further reported that defendant made infringing motions after a, pattern of Ms own devising; that they cost, per pair, 50 cents less than the Tickerstail’ mechanism which he had immediately before put upon his looms; that they were made under a patent granted to Mm; and that they cost about 50 cents less than the motions made by the plaintiffs, the difference in the cost being due to M,s invention. If this is so, it is clear that the 50 cents saved on each pair, equivalent to 50 cents profit, is not due to the oo-mplainanfs invention. * * * Manifestly the complainants are not entitled to the savings or profits resulting from the defendant’s own invention.’’

Counsel suggests that the “principle of the matter” is not affected by the fact that “the pressed steel plate was per se never the subject, of a patent”; that it could not affect the amount of saving, and “whatever saving was effected by the defendant in changing or improving its machinery and its methods of manufacture, at its own expense, something it was under no obligation to do for the benefit of the complainant, could in no way be attributed to, or be the result of, the patented invention, unless the patented invention itself inherently effected the saving.”

Now defendant’s thought of claiming a saving can be attributed to nothing other than its experience in first using the malleable cast plates; and the record suggests this query respecting defendant’s at[798]*798titude, had it always used the pressed steel plate; could it then contend that this $15,138.79 is not a part of its profit, because it or some one else might have made a more expensive plate ? Or, if the evidence disclosed the converse situation—i. e., that defendant originally used pressed steel and later, at greater cost, malleable plates—could complainant urge that the former, and not the latter, cost be taken, to the end that a larger resultant profit be exacted ? Or, again, suppose that, instead of using a “sheet steel metal reservoir,” as an element of claim II, the defendant had used “copper”—and assuming equivalency of elements—could complainant ask that defendant account for its profits upon the basis of sheet steel, rather than upon the higher cost basis of copper, actually used?

In a sense, it may be true that a choice of pressed steel, or the saving effected thereby, is not attributable to the patent; neither is the original selection of malleable cast attributable to it. But either, if and when used for plates, embodies an element of the claim; and the query is not what was or is their relative merit or cost, but what, whichever was used, was its cost ? It would be equally possible for an infringer to minimize his accountable profits by showing “savings” through reduction of high salaries to salesmen, or of expensive .advertising in the later-, as compared with the earlier, infringing period.

So, in Mason v. Graham, when it appeared that there was a “saving” attributable to a feature neither within the scope, nor an embodiment of, the patentee's right, he was not entitled to its benefit as a part of the profit.

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Bluebook (online)
247 F. 795, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-malleable-iron-range-co-wied-1918.