National Cash Register Co. v. Realty & Industrial Corp.

12 F.R.D. 346, 91 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 364, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3587
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedDecember 12, 1951
DocketCiv. A. 556-50
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 F.R.D. 346 (National Cash Register Co. v. Realty & Industrial Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Cash Register Co. v. Realty & Industrial Corp., 12 F.R.D. 346, 91 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 364, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3587 (D.N.J. 1951).

Opinion

FORMAN, Chief Judge.

Defendants Realty and Industrial Corporation and William S. Gubelmann have entered objections to certain interrogatories propounded by plaintiff, National Cash Register Company. The said defendants also moved for an order directing that .this cause be set down for the purpose of trying separately the issues raised by paragraph 3 of the answer filed herein and directing that the trial and all matters incidental thereto of the remaining issues of the complaint and answer be deferred pending determination of the first mentioned issue.

First I will discuss and rule upon the

Objections to Plaintiff’s Interrogatories.

Plaintiff alleges in its complaint that it was licensed under certain agreements to use 38 patents issued to defendant William 5. Gubelmann, of which 28 have expired. It states that it paid defendants royalties under said agreements from September 12, 1922 to March 31, 1950. In order to resolve the question as to whether the 10 patents which had not expired on March 31, 1950 reached the mechanism of its National Class 3000 machine or National Class 31 machine it seeks a declaratory judgment that it is not obligated in any of its agreements to continue to make royalty payments.

Under Rule 33 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C. fol. § 2072, plaintiff has served upon defendants a series of interrogatories for the purpose of ascertaining what mechanisms defendants contend require the continuance of royalties to narrow the issues for trial. The interrogatories 2(a) to 2(f) through 21(a) to (f) are directed to each of the 10 patents as they relate first to the National Class 3000 and then to the National Class 31 machines. Interrogatories 2(a) to (f) are typical of all the others to and including 21 (a) to (f) and are as follows:

“2(a). Specify by number each of the 239 claims of said U. S. patent, No. 1,924,-653 that describes any mechanism present in the National Class 3000 machine illustrated and described in Plaintiff’s Exhibit 6. (This subparagraph in each interroga[348]*348tory is not objected to by defendants and has been answered.)

“2(b). As to each of the claims of U. S. patent No. 1,924,653 specified in the answer to Interrogatory No. 2(a) identify the elements of the mechanism described in said claim by reference to the drawings and reference to numerals of said U. S. patent, No. 1,924,653.

“2(c). As to each of the claims of U. S. patent No. 1,924,653 specified in the answer to Interrogatory No. 2(a) identify, by reference to the numbers of the drawings of Plaintiff’s Exhibit 6, the mechanism present in the said National Class 3000 machine that is described in said claim.

“2(d). Specify by number each of the valid claims of said U. S. patent, No. 1,924,-653, in and by which there was patented any invention embodied in said National Class 3000 machine.

“2(e). As to each of the claims of U. S. patent, No. 1,294,653, specified in the answer to Interrogatory No. 2(d), identify the embodiments of the invention patented by said claim and disclosed by said patent, No. 1,924,653, by reference to the drawings and reference numerals’ of said patent.

“2(f). As to each of the claims of U. S. patent, No. 1,294,653, specified in the answer to Interrogatory No. 2(d), identify the embodiments of the invention patented by said claim and included in the said National Class 3000 machine by reference to the drawings and reference numerals of Plaintiff’s Exhibit 6.”

Defendants have answered subdivision (a) in each series of interrogatories from 2 to 21, but they object to answering subdivisions (b) to (f) inclusive of each series and state as their reason “The ground on which defendants object to answering the above interrogatories is that none of them calls for a statement of fact, but all of them call for the interpretation of claims of patents referred to in the interrogatories and expressions of opinions and legal conclusions based thereon. In addition, the answers to the (b), (c), (e) and (f) interrogatories of each group would require defendants to make compilations which would involve a great amount of time and expense and these compilations can be made by plaintiff as well as they can be made by defendants.”

In particular as to subdivision (b) defendants argue that plaintiff or its counsel is as fully capable as the defendants of reading the patents in question and of determining from such patents the elements, thereof that are called for by the claims defendants have specified in answering to-subdivision (a) of each interrogatory; that these and all the other interrogatories objected to improperly call upon defendants-to construe and interpret the claims of the patents and that they have “a tendency to* peek into opponents’ preparation for trial”. However, interrogatories (a) and (b) do-nothing more than to attempt to elicit from the defendants an identification of the elements of the mechanism described in-the claims in the patents by reference to-the drawings and reference numerals of the patents themselves, and are proper.

In the following interrogatories, series-(c), the plaintiff likewise seeks to elicit from the defendants the particular mechanism in the machines of the plaintiff by reference to numbers contained in the plaintiff’s drawings of its machines which the defendants contend are described in each of their claims.

In answering series (a) of the interrogatories in question defendants have reduced’ the patents involved to 7 and the claims from something over 8,00 to 103.

The defendants argue that they are called! upon now to render opinions, give away their evidence to their opponents and incur extraordinary labor and expense in answering the questions.

In this, I cannot agree. Of course it is implicit that the defendants will be obliged ■ to undergo processes requiring thought and analysis of their position in this case. It must, however, be remembered that this is an action for a declaratory [349]*349judgment and the plaintiff has alleged that the defendants- have no legitimate claim. Defendants, on the other hand, have answered that under the 10 patents (now reduced to 7) they have claims amounting to infringement of their patents and breaches of their agreement for which the plaintiff must be held liable. No matter which way the burden of proof shifts as between the parties to this litigation, ponderously complicated machinery is its subj ect, and the issues can be tremendously clarified if not indeed reduced in number by the declarations called for by the plaintiff’s interrogatories in series (b) and (c).

The furnishing of this information at most can be said only to accelerate the time for the expenditure of labor and disburse- - ment of expense by the defendants, for ultimately they would be obliged to make known their stand with at least equal definitiveness with which, they are now called upon to do. And if the plaintiff benefits by knowing accurately the exact elements pictured in the patents’ drawings and in their own drawings on which the defendants rest their charges, I can only consider that this is the exact result that the pretrial discovery proceedings of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were designed to produce.

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12 F.R.D. 346, 91 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 364, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-cash-register-co-v-realty-industrial-corp-njd-1951.