Muther v. United Shoe MacHinery Co.

21 F.2d 773, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1468
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 15, 1927
Docket743
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 21 F.2d 773 (Muther v. United Shoe MacHinery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muther v. United Shoe MacHinery Co., 21 F.2d 773, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1468 (D. Mass. 1927).

Opinion

BREWSTER, District Judge.

This is an infringement suit based on letters patent No. 1,112,643, issued to plaintiff October 6, 1914, on his application filed January 31, 1914. The bill of complaint was filed August 19, 1916.

The patent involved has already been held to be a valid patent by Judge Anderson, whose decision was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. 288 F. 283.

The proceedings were referred to a master “to take and report--to the court an account of” defendant’s profits “and to take and report an account of any and all damages to which the plaintiff may be lawfully entitled, which plaintiff has sustained by reason of” defendant’s infringement of claims 1, 2, and 3 of said patent.

The claims are as follows:

“1. A device for setting eyelets in one of a plurality of layers of a flexible material, said device comprising an anvil and a cooperating setting device having a projecting setting shoulder and a contracted portion above the setting shoulder.
“2. An eyelet setting device consisting of means for setting eyelets in one of the outside layers of a plurality of layers of material, comprising a lower anvil, an eyelet positioning device and an'upper setting device having a slightly projected setting shoulder and a contracted portion above the setting shoulder.
“3. The combination of a punching and eyelet setting device for setting eyelets in one or .more of the layers of a plurality of layers of material, comprising a punch and a setting device having a projecting setting shoulder and a contracted portion above the setting shoulder.”

The plaintiff offered no evidence of the gains and profits which defendant derived by reason of the infringement, but the master finds and rules that the plaintiff is entitled to damages sustained by reason of the infringement in the sum of $214,271.20, of which sum $154,271.20 is the amount of the damages ascertained by the application of the rule of reasonable royalty and $60,000 is the amount of the interest added by way of damages.

To the action of the master both parties have objected and excepted. The ease is now before this court on the exceptions.

The patent relates to an eyelet setting tool used by shoe manufacturers in the setting of blind, or invisible, eyelets in the shoe upper. A shoe upper is ordinarily made up of a number of layers of material stitched together. The lacing holes are punched through all the layers. In this hole the eyelet is inserted and clinched. In blind eyelet setting the eyelet is inserted from the inside of the shoe and extends through a portion, but not all, of the layers. It is clinched beneath the outer layer of material so that the clinched eyelet is not visible on the outside of the shoe. Plaintiff’s invention was designed for use in conjunction with shoe machines. The structural elements of the tool and the function of each were, first, a restricted or upsetting shoulder which engages the upper end of the eyelet and spreads it outwardly and down upon the subjacent layers of the material; second, a contracted portion or recess above the upsetting shoulder which allows the outer layer to spring back after the shoulder has passed through it,-so that it would not be caught in the prongs of the eyelet in the clinching process; and, third, the regulating abutment or secondary shoulder which prevents the advancing eyelet barrel from pushing all the layers up over the setting shoulder.

Since the plaintiff filed his application, the defendant has acquired patent rights covering the generic claims for the abutment feature, and it has also been successful in litigation in the federal courts of New Jersey in establishing its rights to the restricted upsetting shoulder generically. The plaintiff owns the combination of the setting shoulder and the recess. The plaintiff has also acquired the Glines patent, No. 1,110,258, issued September 8,1914 covering a particular form of adjustable abutment. The master finds that during the whole of the infringing period “the use of the setting shoulder and of the abutment, apart from the combination with the recess, was free to the world.”

The plaintiff began to put his blind eyelet setting device on the market in March, 1914. It was the first tool of the kind on the market, and met with immediate favor in the shoe trade. Beginning at that time plaintiff granted licenses to shoe manufacturers for the use of the patented tool; the licensee paying as royalty the sum of 2 cents per dozen pair of low shoes having not to exceed six *775 eyelets on a side, and 3 cents per dozen pair on all boots and shoes having more than six eyelets on a side. The licensed tool was furnished free of charge, and was to remain the property of the plaintiff. This royalty was not increased or decreased during the infringing period, and the master finds it to be an established royalty for use of the invention.

The earlier licenses conferred the right to use punching and setting devices, in the process known as blind eyeletting, under any inventions or letters patent that plaintiff might thereafter obtain giving him a right to grant such licenses.

Early in 1915 a revised form was adopted licensing under letters patent No. 1,110,258 (Clines patent) and No. 1,112,643 (Muther patent). The licensees used the tool in Peerless rapid eyelet setting’ machine, manufactured by the Peerless Machine Company. The plaintiff owned substantially all of the capital stock of the Peerless Machine Company. This corporation leased its machines, and under the terms of the lease the lessee could only use the machine with eyelets furnished by the lessor. But the machine company also sold outright the machine, with no such conditions attaching.

The defendant is a manufacturer of shoe machinery, and manufactured and distributed among shoe manufacturers infringing blindeyeletting punches. No royalties or compensation in the nature of rent was paid defendant for the use of sueh infringing devices. The benefits accruing to it from its infringement were the profits derived from the sale of eyelets and the general benefits resulting from supplying the customers with suitable instruments for blind eyeletting.

Plaintiff only granted one license to make and lease the patented tool. This was to the Atlas Tack Company, which gave it the right to manufacture and lease the device, charging users the same royalties which plaintiff charged, one-third of the royalties so charged to be paid to plaintiff. The master held, and properly so, that this single license was “insufficient to establish a uniform license fee as a measure of damages against a manufacturer of the infringement who was not a user.” He therefore found no established royalty for the right to manufacture and sell or lease. The master also was unable on the evidence to determine the extent of plaintiff’s damages on the basis of lost royalties, and regarded the ease as one in which the rule of reasonable royalty might properly be invoked. He proceeded to find such reasonable royalty to be I two-thirds of the established royalty for use, with the result that the amount of plaintiff’s damages on that basis was determined as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
21 F.2d 773, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muther-v-united-shoe-machinery-co-mad-1927.