Seibert Cylinder Oil-Cup Co. v. William Powell Co.

38 F. 600, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2178

This text of 38 F. 600 (Seibert Cylinder Oil-Cup Co. v. William Powell Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seibert Cylinder Oil-Cup Co. v. William Powell Co., 38 F. 600, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2178 (circtsdoh 1889).

Opinion

Sage, J.

The complainant sues as assignee for infringement'of patent No. 138,243, granted to John Gates, 29th of April, 1873, for improvements in lubricators for steam-engines. The validity of the patent, although denied in the answer, is not contested. The lubricators manufactured and sold by the defendant contain the complainant’s in[601]*601vention. The defense rests solely upon the following facts: December 1, 1883, the complainant and the Detroit Lubricator Company (which was the owner of patents claimed to anticipate complainant’s) entered into a contract that neither party should sue the other, or directly or indirectly authorize suit against the other, or its agents or vendees, under any of the patents then or thereafter to be owned by it; that neither should imitate the styles or shapes of lubricators made by the other; and that, whereas the Seibert Company was the owner, in -whole or in part, of certain letters patent granted to Nicholas Seibert for improvements in lubricators, and the Seibert Company claimed, and the Detroit Company denied, that the Detroit Company had infringed and was infringing the same, the Detroit Company should thereafter pay royalties, as specified in the agreement, to the Seibert Company, so long as the Seibert Company should perform its covenants and stipulations, and during the life of the agreement, which was to continue in force until the expiration of the Seibert patents; and in consideration thereof the Seibert Company agreed not to molest the Detroit Company, its agents or ven-dees, by suit or otherwise, for any alleged infringements of said Nicholas Seibert patents, outside of the New England states. The Seibert Company also agreed not to authorize the use of the Nicholas Seibert patents outside of the New -England states, except as above. This agreement amounted to a license to the Detroit Company, and it included the Gates patent. Oil-Cup Co. v. Lubricator Co., 34 Fed. Rep. 216. The defendant is a licensee of .the Detroit Lubricator Company. The license, upon its face, is limited to patents owned by that company. The lubricators manufactured by the defendant, although different in style and shape from that shown and described in the. Gates patent, and from those made by the Seibert Company, are nevertheless infringements of the Gates patent. The contract of December 1,1883, does not grant to the Detroit Company an exclusive license for the manufacture or use of the Gates patent. That feature of the contract appears only in the stipulations relating to the Nicholas Seibert patents. This conclusion disposes of the entire defense. The contract in evidence between the Seibert Company and the Western Railroad Association cannot avail the defendant. The Detroit Company and the defendant are alike strangers to it. It is only an agreement by the Seibert Company to release upon terms the railroad companies composing the association from any and all claims on account of their use of lubricators purchased from the Detroit Company or from its successors, assigns, agents, or licensees. This view of the case renders it unnecessary to consider whether the contract of December 1, 1883, between the Seibert Company and the Detroit Company has been rescinded. A decree will be entered for the complainant, for an injune- • tion and account.

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Bluebook (online)
38 F. 600, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seibert-cylinder-oil-cup-co-v-william-powell-co-circtsdoh-1889.