Miller Saw-Trimmer Co. v. Cheshire

1 F.2d 899, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 1920
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 12, 1924
DocketNos. 3331, 3332
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 F.2d 899 (Miller Saw-Trimmer Co. v. Cheshire) 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
Miller Saw-Trimmer Co. v. Cheshire, 1 F.2d 899, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 1920 (7th Cir. 1924).

Opinion

ALSCHULER, Circuit Judge.

Both sides appeal from a decree of the District Court rendered in an action brought by the Miller Saw-Trimmer Company, appellant in the main appeal, to compel performance by appellees of a contract made in 1911 whereby Cheshire, one of appellees, contracted “to sell, transfer and set over unto (appellant’s predecessor in interest) the entire right, title and interest in and to such inventions (of Cheshire) as relate to the feeding or handling of paper, which he may hereafter make or acquire during the term of 17 years from date of this instrument, and in and to any applications for letters patent on such inventions, and a.ny letters patent that may be granted on such applications and any reissues or extensions of same.”

Cheshire was an inventor in the employ of appellant’s predecessor, and as part of the employment was engaged in designing an attachment for a platen printing press of [900]*900the Gordon style, whereby such presses, when equipped therewith, would be fed automatically instead of manually as theretofore. The attachment was successfully conceived, and Cheshire applied for a number of patents thereon, all of which applications and patents, up to the time of the said contract, were by the contract specifically assigned to his employer. Quitting this employment Cheshire worked upon a new cylinder press, embodying, among other novel features, certain new concepts in its paper feed, and for such press filed applications for two patents, in which, among other novel features claimed, were some applicable to the paper feed. The Patent Office required division as to certain points, including the part relating to the feed.

Appellant filed its bill in the state circuit court of Wisconsin, setting up the contract, charging that these inventions fall within its purview, and asking that Cheshire and associates, who had become interested with him in thése applications, be required to assign them to appellant. Upon the issues there made the Wisconsin circuit court found that the contract was valid, and that these applications came within its terms, but that as to inventions not specifically thereby assigned, the contract was so harsh and unconscionable in its terms that equity would not decree its specific performance, and ordered the bill dismissed. It also dismissed the counterclaim of the defendants to have the contract declared void as to these and future inventions.

On appeal to the Supreme Court of Wisconsin that court adjudged the contract valid and enforceable as to future inventions of the kind therein specified; but that the inventions in issue were not inventions of the kind specified in the contract, but were inventions of a printing press, of which the novel paper feed was an integral and inseparable part, and that the applications in issue did not fall within the terms of the contract. It affirmed the decree dismissing the bill and denied the relief demanded in the cross-action there. Miller Saw-Trimmer Co. v. Cheshire et al., 172 Wis. 278, 178 N. W. 855.

Thereafter four more applications for patents were filed by Cheshire, and these, with the two which were in issue in the state courts, are the subject of appellant’s bill in the federal District Court asking the same relief as in the state court, and upon the same state of facts. The District Court found that the adjudication of the Supreme Court of Wisconsin was res adjudieata and binding here, not only with respect to inventions there directly in issue, but also as to the four others, and decreed dismissal of the bill, as well as of the cross-demand of appellees for relief similar to that denied them in the state courts.

It is too plain for controversy that a final decree or judgment respecting a subject-matter in issue between litigants is binding upon them in any jurisdiction where the same issue is raised between the same parties, and surely, as to the two inventions which were specifically in issue in both courts, the judgment or decree of the state court must bind the parties here, unless there is merit in some one or more of the highly technical propositions here urged for appellant.

It is contended that, because appellees in their answer in the District Court asserted the invalidity of the contract respecting future inventions, and asked affirmative relief thereon (as to which propositions the state courts had passed favorably to appellant), appellees thereby waived their pleaded defense of res adjudieata predicated on the Wisconsin judgment. Equity rule 29 requires that every defense presentable by plea in bar or abatement shall be made in the answer, and rule 30 that “the answer may state as many defenses in the alternative regardless of consistency as defendant deems essential to his defense,” and must state any counterclaim arising out of the transaction, and may without cross-bill set out any set-off or counterclaim which might be the subject of an independent equity suit. That a counterclaim seeks relief, some or all of which may not be awarded, will not under the rules operate to neutralize or withdraw a stated defense to the action which is well founded.

Appellant further contends there was no final decree of the Wisconsin courts. First, it is urged the judgment of the state court awards defendants their damages on. dissolution of a temporary injunction which had been there granted to the plaintiff, t» be thereafter assessed, and that without a showing of some disposition of the matter of damages the judgment is interlocutory. Cases are cited where there was involved the-question of the finality of decrees finding infringement of patents, awarding injunction decreeing accounting to be thereafter had of profits or damages growing out of the infringement. Without here considering the question of finality of such decree in advance of the determination of the accounting, it is sufficient to say that it bears no [901]*901analogy to the case at bar. In suits on patents an accounting for damages or profits is ordinarily a substantia] part of the remedy sought, and indeed would not be awarded unless asked for in the bill. Here the damages, if any, assessable on the dissolution of the injunction, are merely incidental, and no part of the cause of action itself, any more than are the costs of the action. They were not accrued at the time the action was begun, and arise, if at all, only because and when it was adjudged in the state court the plaintiff had wrongfully sued out an injunction. There may be, no damages, or the party entitled may waive them, or might prefer to begin an independent action against the sureties on the injunction bond, or for any other reason may refuse to press the claim, as seems so far to have been the situation here. The disposition of this incidental matter, not arising under any issue made by the pleadings in the cause, is not essential to the finality of the judgment rendered which disposes of all issues under those pleadings.

Again it is contended there was no final judgment because, when the decree of the District Court in this cause was rendered, the decision of the Wisconsin Supreme Court had not been filed in the circuit court, and that no judgment was formally entered there in accordance with provisions of the Wisconsin Statutes.

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Bluebook (online)
1 F.2d 899, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 1920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-saw-trimmer-co-v-cheshire-ca7-1924.