Peerless Brick Mach. Co. v. Miracle Pressed Stone Co.

181 F. 526, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5590
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 30, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 181 F. 526 (Peerless Brick Mach. Co. v. Miracle Pressed Stone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peerless Brick Mach. Co. v. Miracle Pressed Stone Co., 181 F. 526, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5590 (circtdmn 1910).

Opinion

WILLARD, District Judge.

By the interlocutory degree in this case the Nolan patent, No. 811,518, for what is called a one-man brick machine, was sustained as to claims 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, and 9. As to claim 6 it was held void. It wás also held that the defendant had infringed the claims sustained, the court saying:

“The defendant’s machine is conceived and carried out as an exact duplicate of complainant’s machine and clearly infringes tile invention. That was conceded in the argument, and certainly is manifest by an inspection of the machines.”

After the injunction granted in the interlocutory decree was served, the defendant made and sold a machine which its president testified was the same as the old one, except as to the handles. These, instead of being level with the tops of the partition plates, were an inch or more below such tops, and were curved. In proceedings for violation of the injunction by the sale of the new machines, it was held that they did not infringe the Nolan patent. The case having been referred to a master to take an accounting, he reported that the profits realized by the defendant by the sale of the old machines amounted to $7,530.93, and that the complainant had suffered damages to the amount of $680. The defendant filed exceptions to this report, and the case is now before the court upon the hearing of such exceptions.

The first exception is as follows:

“The defendant excepts to the omission and substantial refusal of the master to find in accordance with the evidence produced before him that the invention covered by the claims of the complainant’s patent in suit found to have been infringed by defendant’s machine was of no intrinsic or commercial value and did not contribute anything whatever to the intrinsic or commercial value of the defendant’s said machines.”

[528]*528This is, in effect, a claim that the patentable feature of the complainant’s machine was of no use. In fact, in the fifth exception, the defendant complains of the master’s refusal “to find that the patentable feature did not contribute to the utility of the defendant’s infringing machines.” An invention cannot be held valid unless it relates to a new and useful machine. By the decree holding this patent valid it was necessarily decided that the patented feature did have some utility. Evidence upon the accounting to show that it was uséless was in my opinion incompetent. The court, moreover, held that the novel feature in the machine, and the one which the defendant now says was valueless, measured “the difference between success and failure in the brickmalcing operation.”

By other exceptions to the report the defendant presents a claim which is thus expressed in his brief:

“It is only a statement of the plainest equity to say that, unless the patented feature. has produced profits for the defendant, the complainant cannot recover any portion of the défendant’s profits.”

In support of this claim the following quotation is made from Tilghman v. Proctor, 125 U. S. 136, 8 Sup. Ct. 894, 31 L. Ed. 664:

“If the defendant gained any advantage by using the plaintiff’s invention, that advantage is the measure of the profits to be accounted for.”

Applying the rule indicated by the quotation, we are to see “if the defendant gained any advantage by using the plaintiff’s invention.” That it did use it and between January 6, 1906, and November 27, 1907, the date of the interlocutory decree, made and sold 163 machines which were copies of the complainant’s machine, is admitted. It is also admitted that the profits which it realized from such sales were $7,530.93. What part of that sum of $7,530. was due to the complainant’s invention? In other words, what part of that sum would the defendant have made if it had not used the complainant’s invention, but had-used some other? The answer is no part of it. Its president, Miracle, testified that during the time covered by the accounting there were only two machines in the market, his and the complainant’s. As his was a copy of the complainant’s, it follows that during that time there was only one machine which the defendant could use if it desired to-go into the' business of making “a one-man brick machine.” It makes no claim ¡that the Schwartz machine was in any way a competitor of the complainant’s. Such claim could not well be sustained in view of the fact that the Schwartz machine could make one brick a day, while the complainant’s could malee over 2,000.

It • was not at that time known that the handles, of the Nolan machine could be lowered, and, as the defendant now claims, the machine then successfully operated. The defendant had no choice. It must either, stay out - of the manufacture of that kind of a machine, or it must use the complainant’s invention. It chose the latter course, and it seems certain that, if it had not used the complainant’s invention, it would" not, and it could not have made $7,530 or any part of' that sum in the manufacture of a brick machine of this class. What it did make was therefore due solely to the Nolan invention, and, according to the [529]*529rule quoted above by the defendant, it must account for all the profits.

The eleventh exception is as follows:

“The defendant excepts to the refusal of the master to find that the complainant’s proofs do not afford any means for segregating the profits due to the patented feature from the entire profits made by the defendant on the infringing machines sold.”

In this class of cases the rule is thus stated by the Circuit Court of Appeals of this circuit in Brown v. Lanyon Zinc Company, 179 Fed. 309, on page 314:

“The true standard of comparison in any given case is that device or appliance which was open to the defendant and next to, the plaintiff’s invention could have been most advantageously used in the place of that invention at the time of the infringement.”

The other device or appliance must, of course, have been known at the time of the infringement.

In Black v. Thorne, 111 U. S. 122, on pages 123 and 124, 4 Sup. Ct. 326 on page 327 (28 L. Ed. 372), the court said:

“The question, therefore, was what advantage in its production did the use of the improvements in burning wet tan have over other known methods in common use of producing the same result; that is, the same heat. * * * If other methods in common use produce the same results, with equal facility and cost, the use of the patented invention cannot add to the gains of the Infringer, or impair the just rewards of the inventor.”

In Crosby Valve Co. v. Safety Valve Co., 141 U. S. 441, on page 453, 12 Sup. Ct. 49 on page 53 (35 L. Ed. 809), the court said:

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Pedersen v. Dundon
220 F. 309 (Ninth Circuit, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
181 F. 526, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peerless-brick-mach-co-v-miracle-pressed-stone-co-circtdmn-1910.