Shapiro & Aronson, Inc. v. Franklin Brass Foundry

272 F. 176, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1333
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 21, 1921
DocketNo. 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 272 F. 176 (Shapiro & Aronson, Inc. v. Franklin Brass Foundry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shapiro & Aronson, Inc. v. Franklin Brass Foundry, 272 F. 176, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1333 (E.D. Pa. 1921).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

We state our conclusions with respect to the points reargued as follows:

[1] 1. We adhere to the views before expressed with respect to the validity of the letters patent. We find ourselves in accord with the propositions of law pressed upon our attention by counsel for defendant, but not in their application to the facts of this case. A design, in order to be patentable, must be “new, original, and ornamental.” These words convey the thought that the design must possess artistic merit [177]*177and be above the commonplace. The motive for the enactment of the law is to encourage in their efforts those who make their appeal to the artistic sense. As before stated, it is difficult to find an expression which will describe what it is which makes this appeal. The judgment delivered, with respect to any design or any work of art, that it possesses artistic merit, is founded almost solely on taste. Such merit could not very well be denied to any work of art which called forth the applause of a large number of people. Mere commercial success, it is true, is not a very satisfactory test of artistic merit; but, unless the question is to be determined altogether in accordance with the tastes of the one who is pronouncing judgment, it is the best test we have, because it is the practical equivalent of the fame which attaches to a work of art. If the design satisfies the tastes of many people, by whom it is pronounced to have artistic merit, such merit cannot very well be denied to it for patent purposes, without a denial of the very reward which by ihe law is held out to designers. The thought is that any one who designs something which is different from the designs which have preceded it, and which, because of its attractiveness to the eye, commands a ready and large sale, shall be rewarded by the exclusive right to make and sell. The commercial success may mean lack of artistic appreciation on the part of purchasers, or it may mean artistic merit in the design. By analogy to patented articles, it is regarded as evidence of the latter. The fact finding, made and adhered to, is that the patentee, in the language of the law, invented such a design, and to him, in consequence, helongs the reward.

[2] 2. A-reargument was allowed upon the second point involved, in order that the fact situation with respect to it might be more fully developed. The ruling before made, that the plaintiff was entitled to an accounting, was made in deference to the practice in patent cases of so far developing the facts as that validity and infringement could be found, and referring to a master the inquiry into the facts bearing upon the question of profits and damages. • Independently of the application of R. S. § 4900 (Comp. St.'§ 9446), this practice is followed in all cases almost without exception. When there is a controversy, however, with respect to a compliance with R. S. § 4900, two facts must be found by the court. One is that the notice, constructive or actual, required by the statute, has been given, and the other that acts of infringement followed the notice: The duty of making neither of these findings can be delegated to a master. The finding is a judicial act, which cannot be delegated. Both facts are in controversy.

We adhere to the finding, before made, that actual notice of the patent rights of the plaintiff was given to the defendant. It is true that there is no evidence to warrant the finding that in the notice the patent was described by number and date. When, however, a person was notified that what he is doing is an infringement of the patented right, and the person notified then disclaims any purpose to infringe, and declares his intention to desist from such infringement, if he afterwards continues or repeats it, he cannot escape the payment of damages on the plea that he was an innocent infringer without notice. This was [178]*178the ground on which the finding was made that the defendant had received the required notice. This finding, however, does not carry with it the further finding of infringement after notice. It was this fact, the evidence of which we wished to have more fully developed through a reargument.

[3] We adhere to the finding before made, and now repeat it with more definiteness, that the defendant did infringe after notice of the patent rights of plaintiff. The evidence of this is his own admission. He was dealing in chandeliers having the defendant’s patented arm. This he had been doing, as he claimed, in ignorance-of the plaintiff’s patent rights. As soon as notified of those rights, he made a disclaimer of his purpose to infringe, and the promise that h'e would not further infringe. He had on hand at that time a stock of the infringing arms. His statement is that he did not afterwards make or supply himself with the patented arms, but his admission is that he did sell what he had in stock. When he was both making and selling, he was guilty of a double trespass upon the rights of plaintiff; but he did not rid himself of the guilt of infringement by ceasing to manufacture while continuing to sell. It is true that his statement on its face carries the impression that the number of chandeliers of the infringing type afterwards sold was negligible. The finding of the fact that sales were made, and that in consequence there was something for which the defendant could be called upon to account, justified, at least prima facie, a reference for the purpose of having an account stated. If it satisfactorily appeared that the number of sales was negligible, this would justify a refusal to require an accounting. We cannot make this second finding, however, on the mere and more or less loose statements of the defendant with respect to the number. This is the comment which, as before made, is criticized by the defendant. This neither means that a defendant assumes the burden of disproving infringement, nor ■that acts of infringement can be found from testimony which is wanting in definiteness.

[4] When, however, a defendant admits infringement, this is evidence from which infringement can be found; and, infringement having been found, an accounting cannot be denied on the ground of a finding that the infringement was negligible in extent merely because the defendant has accompanied, or sought to qualify, his admission of infringement by loose and indefinite statements with respect to the extent of it. When a patent is found to be valid and infringed, a plaintiff has the right to a full inquiry into the extent of the infringement, and the practice is not to make this inquiry previous to the findings of validity and infringement, but to defer it until these preliminary findings have been made.

[5] 3. A third point to which the reargument addressed itself was the correctness of the finding that, whether there was infringement after notice or not, the plaintiff would in any event have the right to an accounting for profits, or, stated in another way, the word “damages” in R. S. § 4900, does not include profits. The question involved has been diversely ruled in different circuits, and indeed in this district. [179]*179The question in many of the cases, usually cited as bearing upon it, was not squarely raised. It was, however, raised and met in Rollman v. Universal (D. C.) 207 Fed. 97, and Churchward v. Bethlehem (D. C.) 262 Fed. 438. The line of thought leading to the conclusion reached is short and direct.

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Bluebook (online)
272 F. 176, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shapiro-aronson-inc-v-franklin-brass-foundry-paed-1921.