Leeds & Catlin Company v. Victor Talking Machine Company (No. 2)

213 U.S. 325, 29 S. Ct. 503, 53 L. Ed. 816, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1877
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 19, 1909
Docket81
StatusPublished
Cited by135 cases

This text of 213 U.S. 325 (Leeds & Catlin Company v. Victor Talking Machine Company (No. 2)) 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
Leeds & Catlin Company v. Victor Talking Machine Company (No. 2), 213 U.S. 325, 29 S. Ct. 503, 53 L. Ed. 816, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1877 (1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

This writ was issued to bring up for review the judgment of the Circuit Court, affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals, adjudging petitioner guilty of contempt of court for violating the injunction which has just been considered in No. 80, and to pay a fine of $1,000, one-half to the United States and one-half to complainants in the suit, respondents here.

The injunction, as we said in the opinion in No. 80, enjoined petitioner, the Leeds & Catlin Company, from manufacturing, using or selling the method expressed in claim 5 of letters patent No. 534,543 to Emil Berliner, dated February 19, 1895, or the apparatus covered by claim 35..

On the fifteenth of November,. 1906, respondent, Victor Talking Machine Company, filed a petition in the Circuit Court, charging petitioner with a violation of such injunction. A rule was issued against the Leeds & Catlin Company to show cause why an attachment should not issue against it for contempt of court for violating the injunction, which came on to be heard upon supporting and opposing affidavits and the answer of the Leeds & Catlin Company.

*330 A judgment was entered adjudging the Leeds & Catlin Company guilty of contempt, which was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. 150 Fed. Rep. 147; 154 Fed. Rep. 58.

The answer of petitioner .referred to the record in No. 80, and in this court it is stipulated that that record shall be used as part of the record in the pending, cases, and certain of the defenses there made are repeated here. For instance, it is contended, and the record in No. 80 is adduced to support the contention, that (1) the -patent in suit having expired before the suit was begun, the Circuit Court was without jurisdiction to entertain the suit; (2) claims in suit being for the functions of a machine are void. And it is further contended that “ hence the judgment finding defendant [petitioner] in contempt (a) was void, because beyond the jurisdiction of the court; and (b) should be set aside, because the claims being void the injunction was improperly granted.”. These contentions are disposed of by the opinion in No. 80, and we may confine our discussions to the other defenses made in the contempt proceedirigs.

The facts are practically undisputed, and a detail of them is unnecessary. It is enough to say that petitioner is a'manufacturer of disc records, such as are described in No. 80. That is, a record upon which is inscribed a lateral undulating groove • of even depth, which, when the disc is revolved, compels the reproducing stylus to be vibrated and propelled across its face.

It will be observed how important the record is to the invention embodied in the claims. It is the undulations in the side walls of the spiral groove which vibrate the stylus back and forth, transmitting the recorded sound waves to the diaphragm, at the same time propelling the stylus as it engages with the record. If a comparison may be made between the importance of the elements, as high a degree (if not a higher degree) must be awarded to the disc with its lateral undulations as to the stylus. It is the disc that serves to distinguish the invention — to mark the advance upon the prior art. “As to the reproducing stylus,” as is said by respondent, “it is only necessary that it should be shaped for engagement with the record *331 and so positioned and supported as to be free to be vibrated and propelled by the record.”

The lower courts found that most of the sales (we quote from the opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals) of the records by petitioner “were knowingly made to enable the owners of the Victor Talking Machines to reproduce such musical pieces as they wished by the combination of the Leeds & Catlin record with said machines; and that the Leeds & Catlin Company made no effort to restrict the use to which their records might be put until after motion to punish for contempt had been made; that the only effort at such restriction ever made was to answer upon the face of the record and notice to the effect that such record was intended and sold for use with the 'feed-device machine;’ that the records sold by plaintiff in error [petitioner] were far more frequently bought to increase the repertoire of the purchaser’s Victor machine than to replace worn-out or broken records.” The “feed-device machine” referred to by the court was a talking machine bought by petitioner after, as petitioner avers, the Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the injunction, and in connection with which it sold, as it also avers, and used, its sound records. The court assumed, for the purpose of the cause, that the feed-device machine might be regarded as not infringing any of the rights of the Victor Company under the Berliner patent. The court further found that it was established by the evidence that the discs were equally suitable for that machine as for the machine of the Victor Company, but that it “was not at or before the time of beginning this proceeding a practically or commercially known reproducer of musical or spoken sound, whereas the Victor machine, embodying the claims of the Berliner patent here under consideration, was at such times widely known and generally used, and that the plaintiff in error [petitioner] knew, and sold its records with the knowledge, that if its output was to be used at all by the public it would be Used , with the Victor machine, and in the combination protected by the claims of the Berliner patent, before referred to.” And the court concluded that upon these *332 facts it was clear'that petitioner had “made and sold a single element of the claims of the Berliner patent, with the intent that it should be united to the other elements and complete the combination. And this is infringement. Heaton Peninsula Co., v. Eureka Co., 77 Fed. Rep. 297; adopted by this court, Courtelyou v. Lowe, 111 Fed. Rep. 1005.”

Petitioner contests the conclusion and opposes it by the principle, which, it is contended, is established by cases in this court, as well as at circuit, that “the person who has purchased a patented combination from the patentee has the right to replace an unpatented element of the combination.and for such purpose to purchase such element from another than the pat-entee or his licensee.” To bring this principle in clear relief it is said that “the majority of the Circuit Court of Appeals has held that such replacement of a single unpatented element of the combination is reconstruction and not within the rights of the purchaser of the patented combination from the patentee.” And, to complete its argument, petitioner adds that where an inventor so arranges the parts of his patented combination' that it cannot satisfactorily, successfully or usefully be continued in use, without successive replacements of one of its elements, “.the replacement of such element, if unpatented, by the purchaser of the combination from the patentee is in accordance with the intention of the 'patentee and not a reconstruction of the patented combination, but an act within the rights of the purchaser.” For these principles Morgan Envelope Co. v. Albany Paper Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
213 U.S. 325, 29 S. Ct. 503, 53 L. Ed. 816, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1877, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leeds-catlin-company-v-victor-talking-machine-company-no-2-scotus-1909.