Luminous Unit Co. v. Freeman-Sweet Co.

3 F.2d 577, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2476
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 11, 1924
Docket3232
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 3 F.2d 577 (Luminous Unit Co. v. Freeman-Sweet Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luminous Unit Co. v. Freeman-Sweet Co., 3 F.2d 577, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2476 (7th Cir. 1924).

Opinion

EVAN A. EVANS, Circuit Judge.

This suit was to enjoin the further infringement of certain claims of patent No. 1,076,418, and to recover damages for past infringement. Plaintiff prevailed, and the decree in its favor, finding claim 1 valid and infringed, and directing an accounting, was affirmed by this court on appeal. 264 F. 107. Thereafter the mandate of this court was duly issued, and in conformity therewith a decree was entered in the District Court. Thereafter a motion was made to vacate such deeree and to enter one dismissing the complaint, which motion was granted. This *578 decree, the one here involved, is herewith set forth. 1

It is insisted that the court erred in vacating the decree entered pursuant to the mandate of this court, and in entering one at variance with the previous ruling of this court; reliance being bad for this position' on tbe law of tbe ease. Tbe “law of tbe, ease” is too well understood to require exposition or elucidation. It bas been invoked and applied times without number. 2 Tbe. latest ease from this court, recognizing and- *579 applying the law of the ease, is Lackner v. Starr, 2 F.(2d) 516, decided at the last session.

The rule is expressed in Re Sanford Fork & Tool Co., 160 U. S. 247, 16 S. Ct. 291, 40 L. Ed. 414, and restated in Re Potts, 166 U. S. 266, 17 S. Ct. 521, 41 L. Ed. 994, as follows: “When a case has been once decided by this court on appeal, and remanded, ® * “ whatever was before this court and disposed of by its decree is considered as finally settled. The Circuit Court is bound by the decree as the law of the case, and must carry it into execution, according to the mandate. That court cannot vary it, or examine it for any other purpose than execution, or give any other or further relief, or review it, even for apparent error, upon any matter decided on appeal, or intermeddle with it, further than to settle so much as has been remanded. * * * If the Circuit Court mistakes or misconstrues the decree of this court, and does not give full effect to the mandate, its action may be controlled, either upon a new appeal (if involving a sufficient amount) or by a writ of mandamus to execute the mandate of this court.”

Turning to the record to ascertain what was decided on the former appeal, and what fact or facts, if any, supposedly new, were brought to the attention of the District Court which occasioned the change in the decree, we find that subsequent to the entry of the original decree in the District Court, appellant, the holder and owner of the patent herein involved, filed “a petition and application to surrender said Guth patent, No. 1,076,418, and to grant a reissue patent on said application and said surrender of said original patent,” and pursuant to “said petition and application there was granted and issued a reissue patent, No. 14,680.” Such fact, however, was brought to the attention of the Circuit Court of Appeals on the previous appeal, where appellee (then appellant), in addition to attacking the validity of the patent in suit and disputing its infringement, asked that the cause, he dismissed because; “subsequent to the entry of the decree in the District Court, patentee had surrendered its patent and sought to secure a reissue patent.”

Disposing of that issue, this eourt said: “Appellant’s motion for a dismissal of the entire cause because, since the submission of the ease on this appeal, the original patent was surrendered and a reissue patent granted, must be denied. It is unnecessary for us to consider what the effect of a surrender and a reissue, not modifying in any manner the claims in suit, but adding another claim, would be, if the suit on the original patent were undetermined, or a decree therein were interlocutory in the true sense as to the merits of the patent controversy; in the case before us, the surrender and reissue were effective only after the entry of ’ the decree determining validity and infringement and granting a permanent injunction; and in National Brake & Electric Co. v. Christensen et al., 258 F. 880, 169 C. C. A. 600, decided April 29, 1919, we held, on full consideration, that such a decree was final in essence, even though interlocutory in time relation. The rights of the parties are determined as of the date of such a decree, a subsequent surrender of the patent does not involve an abandonment of such rights (Mevs v. Conover, 125 U. S. 144, 145, 23 L. Ed. 1008), and the recovery on the accounting will not be based upon the surrendered patent, but upon that decree which itself is based upon a patent in full force at the date of its entry.”

To determine whether there should he a reversal of the order now appealed from, we are first confronted with the existence of error in onr previous decision, and, if sneh exists, the application of the law -of the ease to the facts of this ease. The degree of finality accorded the decree upon the former hearing, based upon the authority of the Christensen Case, 258 F. 880, 169 C. C. A. 600, is at variance with the views expressed in the subsequently decided case of Simmons Co. v. Grier Bros. Co., 258 U. S. 82, 42 S. Ct. 196, 66 L. Ed. 475. The writer of this opinion, the only judge of the present court who participated on the previous hearing, acknowledges his full share of responsibility for the conclusion there reached. We at that time relied upon the law as announced in the Christensen Case. Had the ease of Simmons Co. v. Grier Bros. Co., supra, been decided, a different conclusion would have been announced.

There is no room for controversy as to the effect of the surrender of the patent sued upon and the issuance of a reissue patent. The surrender of this patent, followed by the issuance of a reissue patent, not only , nullified the original patent, but took from the patentee his right to recover damages for infringements committed prior to the cancellation of the old patent. McCormick *580 Company v. Aultman Company, 169 U. S. 606, 18 S. Ct. 443, 42 L. Ed. 875; Reedy v. Scott, 90 U. S. (23 Wall.) 352, 23 L. Ed. 109; Peck v. Collins, 103 U. S. 660, 26 L. Ed. 512; Meyer v. Pritchard, 131 U. S. CCIX, Appx., 23 L. Ed. 961; Moffit v. Garr, 66 U. S. (1 Black.) 273, 17 L. Ed. 207; Lattig & Goodrun v. Dean, 117 O. G. 1798. Are we in a position to now correct the error? In other words, should we apply the law of the ease ? To what extent the law of the case should govern the disposition of a pending suit in the appellate court which made the erroneous pronouncement has always been and always will be a more or less vexatious question.

The rule of the “law of the ease” dif-' fers, to a certain extent, both in the reasons back of it and in its eonelusiveness, from the rule of res adjudicata, and also from the doctrine of stare decisis. As to its eonelusiveness, it lies somewhere between the 'two.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F.2d 577, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luminous-unit-co-v-freeman-sweet-co-ca7-1924.