Standard Scale & Supply Co. v. Cropp Concrete MacHinery Co.

6 F.2d 447, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2037
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 15, 1925
Docket3337
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 6 F.2d 447 (Standard Scale & Supply Co. v. Cropp Concrete MacHinery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Scale & Supply Co. v. Cropp Concrete MacHinery Co., 6 F.2d 447, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2037 (7th Cir. 1925).

Opinion

LUSE, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). 1. Defendant’s first attack is on the allowance to plaintiffs of the amount incurred by plaintiffs for the services and expenses of accountants in the sum o'f $52,508.87. In the proceedings before the master, defendant was ordered to file its account under rule No. 63, the order being agreed upon by counsel as to its form, and in response filed an account in debit and credit form, which fell short of giving the information called for in the order. Thereupon plaintiffs applied to the master for an order directing defendant to produce before him its books, papers, records, etc., necessary to the preparation of an account such as had been previously ordered, and for the appointment of an accountant to prepare a proper account at defendant’s expense. The result was an lrder for an additional account, which again failed to give the information called for. However, when plaintiffs’ motion was called up, the master declined to require defendant to furnish additional information, but directed that plaintiffs or their accountants have access to the books of defendánts. Plaintiffs had previously engaged accountants at stipulated per diem rates to perform their accounting work on the ease. The accountants spent a great deal of time in doing the work and testifying. Their report was the basis for the master’s award as to profits and in his report this appears:

“The statement and additional statement were unsatisfactory and of little use to the plaintiffs or to the master in arriving at gains *449 and profits, and plaintiffs put their accountants, Mitchell, Castenholz & Co., on defendant’s hooks. They spent over a year in their work, and made up a statement of account in considerable detail, showing a net profit of $276,827.71 on the mixer business. * * ® The books of the accountants show that the. time charges for services up to and including June 3, 1921, amount to $48,510.92 and the out of pocket expenses to $3,997.95, a total of $52,508.87, and these amounts have been billed to plaintiff. A portion of the charge for services covers time spent in attendance and testifying before the master.” .

It appears also in the record that, early in the services of plaintiffs’ accountants on the books of the defendant, the defendant’s officers had discovered that a number of errors had been made in the accounts filed by them, but the discovery was not reported to the master, nor to any one else so far as this record shows, except a subordinate accountant in the employ of plaintiffs’ accounting firm, and only came out on the hearing before the master, at which time it was conceded by defendant that the account was inaccurate and should have shown a profit of $78,096.79, while the original and supplemental state- ' ments showed a profit of but $28,051 72, of which but a small portion was, as defendant claimed in such statements, attributable to the patented features.

The master refused to recommend recovery by plaintiffs of the sum of $52,508.87 incurred by plaintiffs as indicated. The trial court decreed that plaintiff recover the profits found by the master, and in addition the $52,508.87 mentioned; the provision of the decree relating thereto reading as follows: “Plaintiffs’ second exception to said report is sustained; wherefore, in addition to the award made by the master in the said report, plaintiffs shall recover from the defendants the sum of $52,508.87, found by the master,. on pages 6, 7, and 8 of the master’s report, to be the cost to plaintiffs of curing defendants’ default in complying with the master’s orders for an account under equity rule 63 and of making the account upon which the master’s report, is based.”

It may be conceded at the outset that the imposition of this sum may not be justified as an item of costs in the ordinary sense. McIntosh v. Ward, 159 F. 66, 86 C. C. A. 256. Nor was it imposed as such. It may be further conceded that its allowance may not be justified as a discretionary increase of damages within R. S. § 4921 (Comp. St. § 9467). There are authorities to the effect that such increase can only be imposed when the original assessment contains an item of damages as distinguished from profits. Covert v. Sargent (C. C.) 42 F. 298; National Folding Box Co. v. Robertson (C. C.) 125 F. 524; Wooster v. Trowbridge (C. C.) 115 F. 722; Root v. Railway, 105 U. S. 189, 26 L. Ed. 975. The decree here covered profits only. But it is sufficient for the purposes of this case to say that the decree below does not purport to lay this item upon defendant as an increase in damages. As above indicated, it is assessed against it as “the cost to plaintiff of curing defendant’s default.”

The proceedings before the master were had before the opinion of this court in Computing Scale Co. v. Toledo Scale Co., 279 F. 648, was handed down, and without the benefit of the observations made therein. It is there indicated that, where an infringer states his profits from his records kept as therein indicated they should be kept, the plaintiff “should be compelled to accept the statement as the measure of the money decree, unless he is prepared forthwith to allege and prove either (1) that the account was falsely stated, or (2) that the profits; if truly stated, are not an adequate measure of the complainant’s damages. If the- first ground is sustained, the chancellor, either directly or through the master, might well appoint and qualify a competent and disinterested accountant to cure the defendant's? default, and the report of the accountant should stand, unless promptly impeached for fraud or gross inaccuracy.”

But little difference, if any, in regard to the subject now under discussion, exists between such a situation, where an account is correct in form, but false in substance, and one, as here, which is not only false in substance, but unresponsive in form and substance to the order of the master, entered pursuant to rule 63. In either event the practice thus outlined in the Computing Seale Case contemplates that the existence or nonexistence of a default shall be promptly determined, and the proceedings thereafter proceed in the light of such determination. If default be so established, the chancellor, either personally or through the master, may, in the exercise of sound discretion, require that the default be cured, and may appoint an accountant as indicated in the Computing Scale Company Case. In such ease we know of no principle, legal or equitable, which would prevent the expense of the service of such accountant from being imposed upon the accounting infringer; he being the cause of such expenses and having been duly adjudged to be so. This was done by the Cir *450 cuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in Flat Slab Patents Co. v. Turner, 285 F. 257.

Although the master did not, in the instant ease, appoint an accountant, plaintiffs applied for such appointment, and the facts were such, we think, that the application ought to have been granted. Instead, the master ordered that plaintiffs’ accountants have access to defendant’s books and accounts for the propose of ascertaining profits. Does this departure from the approved practice, under which, as we have seen, accounting expense might well be imposed upon defendant, prevent its imposition? We think not. The master issued an order under rule 63, which was agreed upon by counsel for defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
6 F.2d 447, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2037, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-scale-supply-co-v-cropp-concrete-machinery-co-ca7-1925.