Onondaga Indian Wigwam Co. v. Ka-Noo-No Indian Mfg. Co.

182 F. 832, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4985
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York
DecidedNovember 4, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 182 F. 832 (Onondaga Indian Wigwam Co. v. Ka-Noo-No Indian Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Onondaga Indian Wigwam Co. v. Ka-Noo-No Indian Mfg. Co., 182 F. 832, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4985 (circtndny 1910).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge.

The acts of the defendants complained of and alleged in the bill of complaint constitute an infringement of the complainant’s patent and also unfair competition in trade. They result in two wrongs, and one question is: Can the facts be proved and the unlawful and wrongful acts enjoined in one action? It is impossible to separate the acts constituting the infringement from those amounting to unfair competition in trade. You cannot allege the one fully without alleging the other if you allege the patent and the invasion of the rights granted thereby. If you allege the patent and infringement thereof and set out the acts of infringement in full, you have set out substantially all the acts constituting unfair competition in trade, and the question is: May you allege that such unlawful acts constitute not only infringement, but unfair competition, and demand a decree enjoining their continuance? Jurisdiction in the Circuit Court of the United States is based on infringement of the patent. There is no diversity of citizenship. This court would not have jurisdiction of acts constituting unfair competition if there were no patent or acts constituting infringement of such patent. But a bill of complaint in the Circuit Court of the United States may set up all the facts constituting and resulting in the wrong complained of, and even if such acts, when alleged, present federal questions and state and local questions and such questions are entirely separate from each other, the Circuit Court gains jurisdiction by reason of the presence of the allegations raising questions of federal cognizance, and, having jurisdiction, may proceed to hear the entire case and decide all the questions in the case and may decide or pass upon the federal questions or leave them undetermined and pass upon the local or state questions alone. And in such case the Circuit Court may decide the federal questions adversely to the complainant, and then pass upon and decide the case in favor of the complainant on the state or local questions alone. This is precisely what was done in Siler et al. v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co., 213 U. S. 175, 29 Sup. Ct. 451, 53 L. Ed. 753. In that case the Kentucky Railroad Commission, by order, imposed a general maximum intrastate tariff schedule, and it was alleged that such tariff schedule was unconstitutional and void as being in violation of the Constitution of the United States, and also that it was void as beyond the power of the commission under the [834]*834act of' the Legislátúre' of the state of Kentucky to make. The court, 'after stating the federal questions, said:

bill also contained the averment that the .order of the Railroad Commission of Kentucky in making a general schedule of maximum rates for the railroads mentioned in its order was invalid, as unauthorized by the statute. This is, of course, a local or state question. The federal questions as to the invalidity of the state statute, because, as alleged, it was in violation of the federal Constitution, gave the Circuit Court jurisdiction, and, having properly obtained it, that court had the right to decide all the questions in the case, even though it decided the federal questions adversely to the party raising them, or even if it omitted to decide them at all, but decided the case on local or state questions only.”

In that case the wrong complained of was the imposition and enforcement or attempted enforcement of general maximum rates for the transportation of all commodities upon all railroads to and from all points within the state of Kentucky. The bill alleged that the enforcement was illegal, for the reason it was or would be confiscatory of property, and in violation of the Constitution of the United States for several reasons, and also that under the statute of the state in question the -commission had no power to impose and enforce it. If suit had been based on the latter groundl alone, the Circuit Court would have had no jurisdiction, there being no diversity of citizenship, but the state court would have had. So here the wrong to complainant is the taking away or impairment of its right to make and sell a certain article of commerce which right it gained in two ways: (1) By virtue of the patent and the adoption under it of a certain form and construction of such article; and (2) by making it of that form and building up a large trade such article coming to be known as of the complainant’s make. The'bill says that, for these reasons and under the patent, it had the .exclusive right to make and sell the article, presenting a federal question which gives the Circuit Court of the United States jurisdiction; and, second, the bill says that having made the article in this form, etc., it came to be known to the trade as of complainant’s make, and that defendants have no right to make the same article in imitation of complainant’s and put it on the market, and so take away or destroy complainant’s trade and business in that article. If complainant’s patent is valid, the defendants had and have no right to do what it' is alleged they did do and are doing; and, if the patent is invalid, the defendants had and have no right to do what they did do and are doing. In the Siler Case, supra, if the law of the state authorized the act of the commission, but violated the Constitution of the United States, then the acts were illegal and void and could be enjoined, andl if, on the other hand, there was no violation of the Constitution and the acts were not authorized,' such acts were illegal and void, and could be enjoined. I can discover no difference in principle between the two cases; no reason why the Siler Case is not applicable' and pertinent here. The law does not encourage a multiplicity of actions to right a wrong,.and I can discover no reason, in view'of the Siler Case, why the complainant must pursue his’ case for infringement in the federal court andl his case for unfair competition in the state court. This very question was before the Circuit,Court-of .Appeals, Sixth Circuit, Lurton, Day, and Severens, [835]*835Circuit Judges, Burton and Day being now of the Supreme Court of the United States. Globe-Wernicke Co. v. Fred Macey Co., 119 Fed. 696, 703, 56 C. C. A. 304. That court held, speaking of a bill which alleged both infringement of a patent and unfair competition in trade in selling the alleged infringing article:

“The bill was not founded on two separate matters or transactions. The conduct of the appellee complained of consisted of the same acts. The legal qualities of those acts were in some respects different, and the result was that the facts presented a double aspect. It is upon this consideration that such a bill can be sustained against an objection that it is multifarious.”

In that case the bill charged infringement and also unfair competition in trade, as is done here. A demurrer to the bill, so far as it charged unfair competition, was sustained, but later an amendment was allowed again charging the unfair competition. The evidence was taken on both aspects of the bill; a demurrer to the amended bill having been interposed, but not decided. On the final hearing, the bill was dismissed by the Circuit Court, which held that the patent was invalid and the demurrer to the unfair competition charge was sustained. The Circuit Court of Appeals held that the patent was invalid, but also held (see language quoted) that the bill was not multifarious.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 F. 832, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4985, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/onondaga-indian-wigwam-co-v-ka-noo-no-indian-mfg-co-circtndny-1910.