Packard Motor Car Co. v. Overland Motor Co.

28 F.2d 306, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1481
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedApril 11, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 28 F.2d 306 (Packard Motor Car Co. v. Overland Motor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Packard Motor Car Co. v. Overland Motor Co., 28 F.2d 306, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1481 (N.D. Ill. 1928).

Opinion

GEIGER, District Judge.

The case is before the court upon the plaintiffs’ motion for an injunction pendente lite upon a supplemental bill. Upon the original bill the case was heard by the District Court, and the issues involved the validity and infringement of claims 9, 11, and 18 of the patent. From the decree entered April 10, 1924, pursuant to an opinion filed the preceding March 22d (297 F. 474), an appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals was immediately taken. On March 2, 1925, that court reversed the judgment, with directions to dismiss the bill; the ground being the laches of the patentee in the prosecution of his patent. Thereupon the plaintiffs were granted a rehearing by the Circuit Court of Appeals, with the result that on January 22, 1926, the case was certified to the Supreme Court of the United States for answer to two questions previously decided adversely to the plaintiffs. On May 31, 1927, the Supreme Court (274 U. S. 417, 47 S. Ct. 672, 71 L. Ed. 1131) answered the certified questions, rejecting the view originally taken by the Circuit Court of Appeals upon its reversal of the decree, thus necessitating the consideration of the ease by the latter upon the issues of validity and infringement, and on December 1, 1927, the decree of the District Court was affirmed (22 F.[2d] 566); the determination involving, as the Circuit Court of Appeals puts it, the question of validity, “infringement not being questioned.”

Notwithstanding the long pendency of the case and its vicissitudes just noted, notwithstanding contrariety of contention, the matter now before the court involves, questions within entirely close compass, and, as I conceive, no facts which are open, to fair controversy. This does not mean that the parties are agreed upon-the manner in which facts which they mutually recognize must be dealt with. All that is meant is that, , though the court is impressively cautioned to recognize and adhere to rules of great rigor upon considering an application for injunction pendente lite in a patent ease, neither party has pointed out that evidentiary matter pertinently bearing on the disposition of the motion, the character and quality thereof, other than is now before the court, will be forthcoming.

On the contrary, it is hard to believe that, were the ease before the court now on final hearing, either of the parties would offer much, if anything,- in addition to the facts which both have now clearly disclosed, and which, being here, are conceived to be and are already dealt with by the parties as ultimate, thus necessitating a determination of their effectiveness to decide the issue one way or another just as upon final hearing. In the affidavits tendered in support of, or in opposition to, the plaintiffs’ motion, or upon oral discussion of the case or briefs submitted, there is nothing to dispel the idea that each party, no matter how much is said to persuade the court to take one view or the other, recognizes the questions to be within close compass, and that their solution .can hardly be aided by any further showing. Probably, if it were granted, either or both of the parties might exert efforts’through the testimony of experts in further attempted elucidation of their respective positions. But it is believed that a careful study of what has now been presented, in the light of the previous history of the ease and its record, which is before us, will satisfy one that, probably, such further endeavors would be cumulative only, and cannot weaken the basic position taken by one, nor strengthen that taken by the other, of the parties. The facts, on either side of the present controversy, appear to me to be not only undisputed, but incontrovertible.

In the informal discussion which will ensue, it has been deemed unnecessary to incorporate, except by reference, much of the descriptive detail of structures which must be considered. Counsel for the parties have seen fit to discuss the ease largely upon the assumption that not only structural, but legal, differences may be apprehended and asserted upon references to exhibits, either physical or paper, whose details.are not difficult to understand or to compare, no matter how variant contentions respecting conclusions may be.

The plaintiffs having indicated’ in the [308]*308original bill the three claims declared upon, and having charged infringement. by reference to structures whose characteristics and names apparently were within the apprehension of the -defendant, the latter tendered certain interrogatories, whose subject-matter were three different styles of wheels or structures, which are in the case as Exhibits 1, 2, and 3, and were asked, “Do the plaintiffs charge that the use or sale of * * * automobiles equipped with the particular type of wheel shown in the respective exhibits” is an infringement of any of. the claims of letters patent (in suit) enumerated in the bill of complaint; and, further, in case of affirmative answer to any or all of the questions, what particular claims are charged to be infringed by any of the structures ?

The plaintiffs’ bill had charged, as a specific instance of the infringement by the defendant, “the use and sale by defendant to others to be used * * * of motor vehicles equipped with detachable wheels, made by the Budd Wheel Company * * * and known to the trade as ‘Budd’ wheels.”Of the three exhibits, subjects of interrogatories by the defendant, 1 and 2 are described as “detachable wire wheels made by Budd Wheel Company”; whereas Exhibit No. 3 is described as “detachable disc wheels made by Budd Wheel Company,” and the defendant in its answer admitted the actual selling of the three types of wheels. The plaintiff responded to the interrogatories thus: That with respect to Exhibits 1 and 2 “the plaintiffs charge infringement” of' all the, enumerated claims; that with respect to Exhibit 3 “the plaintiffs do not charge infringement of 'the claims enumerated in the bill of complaint with reference to the particular construction shown in the drawing, Defendant’s Exhibit- No. 3.” (Italics supplied.)

The supplemental bill now seeks to bring within the comprehension of the suit, and a decree, the alleged infringement by the defendant in selling, for use upon motor vehicles, a structure, concededly before the court as one sold by the defendant, known as the “Whippet wheel.” Its consideration, it is again confidently asserted, presents no matter of fact suggesting the necessity of proofs which would enable the court better to determine the basic contentions of the respective parties. Broadly, the plaintiffs invoke the patent and the asserted liberal estimate placed thereon by the appellate court; whereas the defendant rests alternately upon a detail of the plaintiff’s claim of breadth, upon the legal identity of the Whippet wheel with the subject-matter of interrogatory No. 3, above referred to, the negative answer to which in some way es-tops the plaintiffs, immunizes the defendant, if not the world, and, lastly, that the Cowles patent in no event can comprehend the defendant’s present “Whippet” structure— that it is in truth noninfringing. And it is believed that the contentions of the parties may conveniently be considered and disposed of by recognizing at the threshhold of the case these more or less interrelated questions —interrelated in the sense that each has matter in common with the others:

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28 F.2d 306, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/packard-motor-car-co-v-overland-motor-co-ilnd-1928.