Phillips v. Detroit

19 F. Cas. 512, 2 Flip. 92, 3 Ban. & A. 150, 1877 U.S. App. LEXIS 1963
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan
DecidedNovember 6, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 19 F. Cas. 512 (Phillips v. Detroit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Detroit, 19 F. Cas. 512, 2 Flip. 92, 3 Ban. & A. 150, 1877 U.S. App. LEXIS 1963 (circtedmi 1877).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

The defense that the members of the board of public works were not parties to this bill, and were not served with the writ, was disposed of adversely to them upon the preliminary argument of this motion. We then held, and such we understand to be the law, that an injunction against a corporation is binding upon all persons acting for or on behalf of the corporation who have notice of the writ and of its contents, whether they be actually served with it or not. In Wellesley v. Earl of Mornington, 11 Beav. 180, 181, an injunction was issued against the defendant, but it did not extend in terms to “his servants and agents.” A motion having been made to commit his agent for a breach of the injunction, it was held irregular; but it was afterward decided that if he had knowledge of the writ he might be committed for the contempt, although not for the breach of the injunction. See, also, People v. Sturtevant, 9 N. Y. 263, 267; Bank Com’rs v. City Bank of Buffalo [6 Paige. 497]; 1 Barb. Ch. Prac. 633; High, Inj. §§ 853, S54, 802. 863; Safford v. People, 85 Ill. 558.

As respondents in the first allegation of their affidavit admit they had notice of the injunction, I think they are bound to obedience of the writ, and it only remains to determine whether they have been guilty of a violation. The authorities are full and conclusive to the point, and, indeed, it was admitted upon the argument that respondents were not entitled to claim in defense that the patent was invalid or the writ improvidently granted. People v. Sturtevant, 9 N. Y. 263; Sullivan v. Judah, 4 Paige, 444; Russell v. East Anglian Ry. Co., 1 Eng. Law & Eq. 101; High, Inj. § 873. The patent has been upheld by the decisions of at least two courts before the commencement of this suit, a fact which is, in ordinary cases, sufficient to authorize a preliminary injunction. If, in the meantime, respondents had become satisfied that it was invalid, the proper procedure was to make a showing of this fact and apply for a dissolution. If the court had jurisdiction to issue the writ, it should be obeyed until it is dissolved. I should feel no hesitation, however, in passing upon the validity of this patent, so far as any defenses may exist which were not brought to the attention of the circuit judge upon the original hearing.

Had respondents simply carried out the contracts made by them for paving the streets in question, I should have felt little difficulty in holding them innocent of any violation of this writ. The claim of the complainants’ patent is in the following words; “What I do claim as my invention, and desire to secure by letters patent, is a wooden pavement composed of blocks of any desired wood, cut from the trunks or branches of trees or saplings, of any desired length, in their natural form, the bark only being removed, placed with their fibres vertical, upon a bed of broken stone and gravel or sand, or either of them, the spaces between the blocks being filled with gravel or sand, the whole made compact by ramming, rolling, or other proper method, as herein shown and described.”

In his specification he says distinctly that he does not claim, broadly, the use of wooden blocks in the state in which they are cut from the tree or branches, nor the foundation of stone or gravel, nor the filling of the spaces between the blocks with sand or gravel, separately considered. In other words, he claims a combination, but not the separate elements of the combination.

A party may lawfully use wooden blocks in their natural form, or the foundation or filling of stone or gravel, but he cannot use them both without being guilty of an infringement. The specifications of the contracts made by respondents ealltxl for the use of “blocks, stripped of bark, of irregular or octagon shape, sawed from cedar timber." a material departure from the wooden [513]*513blocks cut “in their' natural form,” as specified in complainants’ claim. This was evidently the theory of the city counselor, who, in his affidavit, states that after the service, of the injunction he advised the board of public works “that no more pavement which they had been laying, known as the round cedar-block pavement, could be laid while said injunction remained in force; that thereupon it was proposed to split and divide the round cedar blocks, and make them into irregular shapes, and not use the block in its natural form;” and that he advised the board that such use would not be an infringement of the complainants’ patent; and the printed forms of contract which had been previously used, and which provided for blocks of a “round cylindrical shape.” were changed so as to require the use of blocks of irregular and octagon shape.

The difficulty is, that while his advice was followed in making the contracts, it was disregarded' in laying the pavements. The actual block laid was cut from the trunks and branches of trees or saplings in its natural form, precisely as is claimed in complainants’ patent, except that a segment of from half an inch to one and a half inches in thickness was split from one side of each block. I regard this as plainly a subterfuge. The slicing off of this strip did not materially change the forms of the blocks, and was of no possible utility in laying the pavement. It was, perhaps, intended to be a compliance with the advice of the city counselor that the blocks must be split and used in an irregular shape in order to avoid the patent. But nothing is better settled in the law of patents than that identity is not affected by col-orable differences, that regard is had to substance and not form, the inquiry being whether the infringing machine is the same in principle as that patented. Curt. Pat. 309; Seymour v. Osborne, 11 Wall. [78 U. S.] 516.

I do not think tiie affidavit of the respondents exonerates them from a participation in this infringement. They swear that the inspectors were instructed by them that the blocks must not be used nor laid in their natural form; that such blocks must be split and their form made irregular, and that no round block in its natural form must be accepted, and that the patent of complainants must not be infringed; tnat whenever they discovered blocks in the natural form being used they ordered them taken up; and that if any pavement was laid in violation of the injunction, it was so laid contrary to their directions.

It is, however, the duty of the biard of public works to supervise the grading and paving of all streets. 3 Sess. Paws 1873, p. 178, § 8. In their affidavit they admit they reported to the common council that the contracts had been performed and the work accepted, but claim they did so upon the report of the inspectors having charge of the work that the same was done according to the several contracts therefor, and that if the contractors laid the pavement in such manner as to violate the injunction, it was done without their knowledge, and that the acceptance of such pavement was not a violation on their part of the injunction, when the same was laid without their knowledge and consent. But their affidavit is not inconsistent with a knowledge upon their part that the only alteration of the wooden blocks consisted in splitting off the strip, as above specified. This was a nominal compliance with their instruction not to use the block in its natural form, but to split it, and possibly they may have considered that this was sufficient to avoid the patent; but if they accepted anything less than the literal performance of the contract, requiring the blocks to be cut in an irregular or octagon shape, they did so at the peril of violating this injunction.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. Cas. 512, 2 Flip. 92, 3 Ban. & A. 150, 1877 U.S. App. LEXIS 1963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-detroit-circtedmi-1877.