GRONER, C. J.
The case is before us now on motion of the Alien Property Custodian, one of appellees, to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction in this court and likewise in the District Court on the ground that this is a suit against the United States and the United States have not consented to be sued. Briefly, the facts are these:
In June, 1940, Robert A. Smith, assignor of Polaroid Corporation (one of appellants), filed in the Patent Office an application for letters patent on an invention. One of Smith’s claims paralleled in all respects the claim of one Sauer, a German national, who had previously applied for and obtained a patent thereou. In September, 1940, the Commissioner of Patents declared an interference between Smith’s application and the patent of Sauer. In August, 1942, the Alien Property Custodian, acting under the authority of the Trading with the Enemy Act as amended,1 issued an order vesting in himself the Sauer patent; and thereupon intervened in the place of Sauer in the Patent Office proceedings. The Board of Interference Examiners in April, 1943, awarded priority of invention to Sauer. Thereafter, Smith petitioned for reconsideration and the Alien Property Custodian filed a memorandum in opposition. Upon reconsideration the original decision was amplified and adhered to, and Smith’s application was denied. No appeal to the Court of Customs and Patent Appeals was taken, but Polaroid, a Delaware [220]*220corporation, and its assignor Smith, a citizen of the United States, commenced an R. S. § 4915 proceeding2 in the District Court against the Commissioner of Patents, and named the Alien Property Custodian a party defendant. The Commissioner and the Custodian answered the complaint on the merits and the parties stipulated that the proceedings in the Patent Office should be admitted in evidence as a part of the record. Upon hearing and submission of the case, Judge O’Donoghue, after finding the facts, concluded as a matter' of law that the plaintiff Smith was not the true, original and first inventor of the invention forming the subject matter of the claim, and the suit was dismissed. On appeal to this court the parties, including the Alien Property Custodian, stipulated as to the record and as to the filing of briefs, but before we reached the case for hearing the Custodian moved that the appeal be dismissed for the reasons stated in the forepart of this opinion.
The basis of the motion is that Congress, in Section 9(a) of the Trading with the Enemy Act, has conferred jurisdiction in a certain class of suits against the Alien Property Custodian, and by § 7(c) has restricted suits against the Custodian to cases specifically permitted by the Act.3 And from this it is argued that since the present suit is not brought under that Act, it may not be maintained. Yet we are also told by counsel for the Custodian that it is conceded that Polaroid does not attack the Custodian’s title to the Sauer patent, or claim any title or. interest in that patent, but merely seeks in a 4915 suit to establish a device of its own as a prior invention and thus indirectly to challenge the validity of the Sauer patent. And this we think is a correct statement.
An examination of the many cases involving seized enemy patents arising out of World War I and out of this war discloses that the question whether a suit of this nature may be maintained against the Custodian is new,
Two cases consistent in resuli with the present case are (1), Insurance Co. of Pennsylvania v. Prussian Nat. Ins. Co., 112 Misc. 199, 184 N.Y.S. 103, 105, where it was held that the Trading with the Enemy Act docs not prevent action in a State court to reform a German insurance company’s contract of re-insurance, notwithstanding the seizure oí the insurance company by the Alien Property Custodian. There it was said that the suit was brought by an American plaintiff merely to determine the obligations of an alien enemy, and as to this the court said:
“There is nothing in the statute to indicate, and no reason to suppose, that our government intended that this act [Trading with the Enemy] should handicap its own citizens. It may he presumed that the governmental intention was to the contrary.
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GRONER, C. J.
The case is before us now on motion of the Alien Property Custodian, one of appellees, to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction in this court and likewise in the District Court on the ground that this is a suit against the United States and the United States have not consented to be sued. Briefly, the facts are these:
In June, 1940, Robert A. Smith, assignor of Polaroid Corporation (one of appellants), filed in the Patent Office an application for letters patent on an invention. One of Smith’s claims paralleled in all respects the claim of one Sauer, a German national, who had previously applied for and obtained a patent thereou. In September, 1940, the Commissioner of Patents declared an interference between Smith’s application and the patent of Sauer. In August, 1942, the Alien Property Custodian, acting under the authority of the Trading with the Enemy Act as amended,1 issued an order vesting in himself the Sauer patent; and thereupon intervened in the place of Sauer in the Patent Office proceedings. The Board of Interference Examiners in April, 1943, awarded priority of invention to Sauer. Thereafter, Smith petitioned for reconsideration and the Alien Property Custodian filed a memorandum in opposition. Upon reconsideration the original decision was amplified and adhered to, and Smith’s application was denied. No appeal to the Court of Customs and Patent Appeals was taken, but Polaroid, a Delaware [220]*220corporation, and its assignor Smith, a citizen of the United States, commenced an R. S. § 4915 proceeding2 in the District Court against the Commissioner of Patents, and named the Alien Property Custodian a party defendant. The Commissioner and the Custodian answered the complaint on the merits and the parties stipulated that the proceedings in the Patent Office should be admitted in evidence as a part of the record. Upon hearing and submission of the case, Judge O’Donoghue, after finding the facts, concluded as a matter' of law that the plaintiff Smith was not the true, original and first inventor of the invention forming the subject matter of the claim, and the suit was dismissed. On appeal to this court the parties, including the Alien Property Custodian, stipulated as to the record and as to the filing of briefs, but before we reached the case for hearing the Custodian moved that the appeal be dismissed for the reasons stated in the forepart of this opinion.
The basis of the motion is that Congress, in Section 9(a) of the Trading with the Enemy Act, has conferred jurisdiction in a certain class of suits against the Alien Property Custodian, and by § 7(c) has restricted suits against the Custodian to cases specifically permitted by the Act.3 And from this it is argued that since the present suit is not brought under that Act, it may not be maintained. Yet we are also told by counsel for the Custodian that it is conceded that Polaroid does not attack the Custodian’s title to the Sauer patent, or claim any title or. interest in that patent, but merely seeks in a 4915 suit to establish a device of its own as a prior invention and thus indirectly to challenge the validity of the Sauer patent. And this we think is a correct statement.
An examination of the many cases involving seized enemy patents arising out of World War I and out of this war discloses that the question whether a suit of this nature may be maintained against the Custodian is new,
Two cases consistent in resuli with the present case are (1), Insurance Co. of Pennsylvania v. Prussian Nat. Ins. Co., 112 Misc. 199, 184 N.Y.S. 103, 105, where it was held that the Trading with the Enemy Act docs not prevent action in a State court to reform a German insurance company’s contract of re-insurance, notwithstanding the seizure oí the insurance company by the Alien Property Custodian. There it was said that the suit was brought by an American plaintiff merely to determine the obligations of an alien enemy, and as to this the court said:
“There is nothing in the statute to indicate, and no reason to suppose, that our government intended that this act [Trading with the Enemy] should handicap its own citizens. It may he presumed that the governmental intention was to the contrary. The construction which the defendant seeks to have placed upon the statute would, however, work an injury to our own citizens by depriving them of a jurisdiction which would, in normal conditions and in times of peace, be open to them and which, for some good reason or other, they might prefer to resort to, just as the plaintiff in this case prefers to resort to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state.”14
—and (2), the case of United States v. The Sam Leonardo, D.C., 51 F.Supp. 107, 109, where it was said:
“The Alien Property Custodian could not, however, take any greater interest in property seized than the alien enemies had, and this was recognized by the provisions of the Vesting Order. Therefore, the issues originally created by the libels for forfeiture of the ships, still remains to be decided in the above entitled actions.”15
[222]*222To say in this case that the District Court had no jurisdiction because the Alien Property Custodian may not be joined with the Commissioner in an R.S. § 4915 proceeding, as the Custodian argues, would impose, in the circumstances of this case, a penalty which it is perfectly clear Congress never for a moment intended,16 and would disrupt and ignore the statutory functions of the Patent Office to a degree certainly never contemplated in the passage of the Trading with the Enemy Act.
We are accordingly of opinion that when Congress authorized suits to be brought against the Commissioner of Patents to obtain a patent, it thereby consented that the United States should be sued, and that, in the case of an American applicant, this consent is not withdrawn or qualified either by the intervention of the Custodian or the necessity of making him a party defendant.
In this view it is unnecessary to decide whether another reason may be found for denial of the motion in the provisions of the Trading with the Enemy Act in respect to the powers of the Custodian in the prosecution of applications, or for the protection of enemy patent rights seized by him. Though as to this, as we have seen, the Custodian in the instant case exercised these powers when he intervened in the proceedings in the Patent Office, displaced counsel for Sauer with counsel of his own choosing, and participated as an interested party throughout those proceedings and likewise throughout the R.S. § 4915 suit which followed.
Motion denied.
Doubtless there have been other cases in which existed the same or similar fact situations, see Mathieson Alkali Works v. Crowley, 78 U.S.App.D.C. 163, 138 F.2d 281, but apparently, until now, the question has not been raised.