Speed Corporation v. Louise K. Webster

262 F.2d 482, 120 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 256
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 7, 1959
Docket15800_1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 262 F.2d 482 (Speed Corporation v. Louise K. Webster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Speed Corporation v. Louise K. Webster, 262 F.2d 482, 120 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 256 (9th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

By this appeal the appellant asks reversal of the Trial Court’s judgment which, after rejecting appellant’s defenses of prior-art-coverage and no-invention as against appellee’s Speed patent, upheld validity of that patent (which is numbered 2,253,990, was issued August 26, 1941, and was for handles for holding the variously contoured shanks of tools, such as files, screw drivers, hack saw blades and the like), and found infringement of appellee’s Speed patent by the accused devices made under appellant’s Kindley Patent No. 2,676,811, issued April 27, 1954, also for such tool handles, and enjoined appellant from further infringement of appellee’s Speed patent, and awarded only single damages, costs, and attorneys’ fees for amounts later to be determined.

This Court has jurisdiction pursuant to 35 U.S.C.A. § 281, and 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 1291, 1292(1) and (4) and § 1338(a).

For some time before and after March 1948 appellee’s late husband was the owner of, and before that date manufactured tool handles under, the Speed patent which later by valid mesne assignments became the property of and is now owned by appellee who is entitled to all recoverable relief herein sought by her. For the period from March 1948 to August 1949, the appellant acquired from appellee’s late husband and owned an exclusive manufacturing and selling license for, and did acquire from the same licensor certain equipment, supplies and tool parts formerly used for the manufacture of, and did manufacture and sell about 14,000, tool handles under that patent and license.

That license, however, was terminated on August 9, 1949. Not long after that time, appellant embarked upon its present tool handle manufacturing career, and a little more than a year following the cancellation of that license, appellant’s employee, II. W. Kindley, filed a patent application for his claimed tool handle invention. That apparently was for the benefit of the appellant because that application was assigned to appellant, and thereafter on April 27,1954, the Kindley (appellant’s) Patent No. 2,676,-811 issued from the Patent Office when it was, always since then and for some time prior thereto has been and now is, owned by appellant. And the accused devices are made in accordance with that Kindley patent of applicant.

*484 The issues are: (1) was appellee’s patent valid, (2) if it was, did appellant’s accused device infringe appellee’s patent, (3) was appellee guilty of laches because of her waiting from 1952 to 1956 to institute her present court action, and (4) in view of the Trial Court’s finding that the infringement was not willful, was it proper for the Trial Court to award attorneys’ fees for appellee?

Obviously, issues (1) and (2) are the most important because the others turn upon them. At the trial no witnesses were called to testify, and the case was submitted for decision exclusively upon the stipulated facts set out in the pretrial order and certain sample articles including devices manufactured under or conforming to appellant’s and appellee’s patents which were approved by counsel for admission and were admitted as physical exhibits by the Trial Court. To visually show this Court exactly how these physical exhibits worked, counsel at the argument manually demonstrated the details and relationships of the devices’ component parts and of the actual operation of such parts in their performance of their different functions in the comparable utility of the appellant’s and ap-pellee’s patented tool handles.

By such stipulated facts and exhibits and such visual demonstration of exhibits, we are convinced that the accused devices are in all essential respects copies of the tool handles called for in the specifications of appellee’s Speed patent claim, and that the record in this case and the applicable law fully support the Trial Court’s thoroughly reasoned opinion, and that, in particular, that Court was correct in ruling as to the validity of appellee’s Speed patent that

“ * * * the arrangement of jaws of the handle of the Speed patent are such that they will adjust themselves to accommodate tool shanks of varied contours. This feature or thought cannot be ascertained in any of the prior art patents cited nor can it be determined that it was contemplated by the prior art.”

and as to the infringement of appellee’s Speed patent by appellant’s Kindley patent that

“That the cam arrangement on the jaws and ferrule of Defendant’s device is of somewhat different form cannot be relied upon by Defendant to escape a holding of infringement. Paraphrasing a holding in this Court — Defendant substituted a known equivalent for Plaintiff’s cam arrangement which accomplished the same result by the same means, and the cooperating factors had the same function as those delineated by Plaintiff. Myers v. Beall Pipe & Tank Corp., D.C.Or.1941, 36 F.Supp. 752.”

As to issue (3), the Trial Court rejected appellant’s contention that appellee’s pending action is barred by laches because appellant suffered no detriment as a result of appellee’s delay in bringing this action. A claim of laches raises a question of fact upon which the finding of the Trial Court has heavy weight. There is substantial evidence to support that finding here, and that Court’s action on issue (3) will stand.

As to issue (4), the suggestion of error in the allowance of attorney fees requires more consideration. The statute under which the award was made was re-enacted in July, 1952 as 35 U.S.C. § 285. This enactment still allows the Trial Court to make such an allowance to the prevailing party “in its discretion”, but the text was changed from the former enactment 35 U.S.C. § 70 by adding the qualifying words “in exceptional cases”. The Trial Court here found that there was no willful infringement, but nevertheless awarded attorney fees. The questions are whether there are circumstances appearing in the findings and evidence which place this action among the exceptional cases and give the Trial Court discretion to make such allowance, and, if so, what ruling should this Court make respecting such claimed error?

The Trial Court, as a basis for its allowance of attorneys fees, may have, *485

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Bluebook (online)
262 F.2d 482, 120 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/speed-corporation-v-louise-k-webster-ca9-1959.