Parker Rust Proof Co. v. Ford Motor Co.

23 F.2d 502, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 918
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJanuary 17, 1928
Docket424
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 23 F.2d 502 (Parker Rust Proof Co. v. Ford Motor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker Rust Proof Co. v. Ford Motor Co., 23 F.2d 502, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 918 (E.D. Mich. 1928).

Opinion

TUTTLE, District Judge.

This is an infringement suit, based on letters patent No. 870,937, granted November 12, 1907, to J. W. Coslett, for improvements relating to tbe treatment of iron or steel for preventing rusting, and is before this court on exceptions to tbe master’s report on tbe subject of damages and profits. Claims 3 to 6, inclusive,, of this patent, were before tbe court, and-.. *503 were found valid and infringed by the ravenizing process employed by the defendant and by the sale of its ravenized products. 6 F(2d) 649. This word “ravenized,” is here employed to designate the specific embodiment of the Coslett invention, practiced at the plant of the defendant at Highland Park, Mich.

The Ford Motor Gompany, a Michigan corporation transferred all of its assets to the Ford Motor Company, a Delaware corporation, on May 1, 1920. The stoek ownership of the two corporations was not the same. Defendant insists that no award may be made to the plaintiff against the Delaware corporation for any acts of the Michigan corporation occurring prior to May 1, 1920, the date of acquisition of the business by the Delaware corporation. A decision of this question is made unnecessary by the holding of this court, later discussed, on the subject of notice to the defendant.

The patent in suit was purchased by the plaintiff on December 2, 1916, and the record shows that the Ford Motor Company, the Michigan corporation, began infringing on January 1, 1917. In December, 1916, Mr. Barthel, chief patent counsel for defendant and its predecessor, ordered a copy of the patent in suit from the United States Patent Office, and at the argument on the exceptions to the master’s report, before this court, counsel for defendant conceded that this copy was procured for defendant’s predecessor and was the subject of a consultation with the legal department of defendant or its predecessor, between 1918, at the earliest, and 1920, at the latest. At • this hearing on the exceptions to the master’s report, counsel for defendant were given an opportunity to show that defendant was informed at that conference that it was not infringing this Coslett patent, but this opportunity was declined; counsel for defendant asserting that the conference was privileged. The .master found that defendant and its predecessor received and had actual knowledge of the patent in suit prior to January 1, 1917, and that they concealed the knowledge of their infringement from plaintiff until September 9, 1920, prior to which time plaintiff had no knowledge thereof. This court is satisfied that defendant was informed by its own counsel that it was infringing the patent in suit by the use of its ravenizing process.

During the infringement trial, defendant showed that its ravenizing process was a secret known only to three men, one of whom had died just before the trial, and that no other person was admitted to the room where the ravenizing solutions were prepared.

The master’s finding that prior to January 1, 1917, the Ford Motor Company, a Michigan corporation, and that from and after May 1, 1920, the defendant, a Delaware corporation, received and had actual knowledge of the patent in suit, and that these two corporations concealed from plaintiff knowledge of their infringement, and that until September 9, 1920, plaintiff had no knowledge thereof, is approved. However, the fact that the defendant and its predecessor had actual knowledge that it was infringing the patent in suit does not entitle plaintiff to recover damages or profits for the entire period of such knowledge. Proof is required to show that the defendant was notified by the plaintiff of the infringement, and recovery begins only from the date when plaintiff gave the notice specified in section 4900 of the Revised Statutes (35 USCA § 49; Comp. St. § 9446), which was on September 9, 1920. Muther v. United Shoe Machinery Co. (D. C.) 21 F.(2d) 773; Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co. v. Condit, etc., Co., 159 F. 154.

From the time it started in business, plaintiff’s income consisted of license fees paid by others for the right to use the rustproofing processes set forth in its 20 or more patents, all based oh the patent in suit, in the profits it made on the materials used by its licensees in such processes, and in the profits it made in its jobbing plant rustproofing articles of iron and steel for others. Its uniform license contracts provided for -annual payments, depending upon the sizes of the processing tanks used by the licensees; the rate during the period from September 9, 1920, to November 12, 1924, being as follows:

For the first 1,000 gallons of capacity, $1 per gallon per year.

For the next 2,000 gallons of capacity, 75 cents per gallon per year.

For the next 2,000 gallons of capacity, 50 cents per gallon per year.

For the next 2,000 gallons of capacity, 25 cents per gallon per year.

For all additional capacity, 12% cents per gallon per year.

The licensees were obligated to purchase the materials used in the rust-proofing process from plaintiff, the clause in the contract being as follows:

“It is made a condition of this license and of the licensee’s right to use and apply the patents, inventions, methods, and processes hereinabove referred to, or which may *504 hereafter be disclosed or revealed to it in writing or otherwise by the licensor, that the. licensee shall, and it hereby covenants and agrees, in the exercise of this license and the rust-proofing work conducted thereunder, to use in such 'rust-proofing only, Solite, Parkerol, and Hyro aeid compound; and such other mixtures, compounds, solutions, acids, or other material as shall be prepared, recommended, furnished, or supplied only by the licensor and desired by the licensee for such rust-proofing; and the licensor agrees to furnish and supply to the licensee, upon the latter’s formal order? during the continuance of this license, all the licensee’s requirements of such Solite, Parkerol, Hyro aeid compound, and such other mixtures, compounds, acids and other material for rustproofing, and the licensee agrees to pay for the same at the prices and on the terms set forth in the annexed schedule A, which is made a part hereof, said prices being the same prices charged by the licensor to all other licensed manufacturers using the licensor’s rust-proofing inventions, processes, and materials in like quantities and under like conditions; said prices are subject hereafter to change by the licensor, but all changes therein, whether increase or decrease, the licensor agrees shall be uniform and without discrimination among all licensed manufacturers dealing on the same basis as the licensee herein.”

But the licensees were at liberty to use, not only the original Coslett process, but any modification thereof set forth in the other patents owned by plaintiff. The license rate, however, did not vary.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F.2d 502, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-rust-proof-co-v-ford-motor-co-mied-1928.