Stoody Co. v. Mills Alloys, Inc.

67 F.2d 807, 20 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 1, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4645
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 4, 1933
Docket7059
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 67 F.2d 807 (Stoody Co. v. Mills Alloys, Inc.) 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
Stoody Co. v. Mills Alloys, Inc., 67 F.2d 807, 20 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 1, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4645 (9th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

SAWTELLE, Circuit Judge.

This suit was brought by the appellant for the alleged infringement by the appellees of the appellant’s United States letters patent No. 1,757,601, issued May 6,1930, and covering a welding rod used for applying welding on facing for well drilling tools and the like, which are subject to extreme abrasion.

The welding rod in its preferred form consists of a mild steel tube of suitable length, closed at both ends, and filled with pieces of tungsten carbide. In use, the steel of the tube is melted by the heat of an acetylene torch, and is fused to the steel of the bit. The tungsten carbide particles apparently are not affected by the heat of the torch: they neither lose their hardness nor do they dissolve in the molten mild steel. They are distributed through the deposited steel of the tube, which, when it solidifies on the bit, forms a matrix for the evenly distributed tungsten carbide particles, usually of a size ranging from a pin head to a match head.

Because of its hardness, which closely approaches that of a diamond, and which is retained through the welding operation, tungsten carbide resists the abrasion to which the bit is subjected in drilling. This prolongs the life of the bit, which, when faced with this rod, wears as follows:

The mild steel matrix in which the tungsten carbide particles are imbedded wears away between those particles, exposing them in the form of small projecting hard fragments, which perform most of the cutting action.

The patent was issued on an application filed on January 30, 1928, by Winston F. Stoody, Shelley M. Stoody, and Norman W. Cole, who assigned their joint application to the appellant. The patent was issued to the appellant. Under a prior stipulation, an uncertified copy of patent No. 1,757,601 was introduced in evidence at the hearing before the master.

On motion of the appellant, an order of reference to a special master was made by the District C'ourt. The appellees agreed to such reference. The order empowered the master “to make his conclusions of fact in issue and recommend the judgment to be entered thereon; * * * to do all things and to make such orders as may be required to accomplish a full hearing on all matters of fact and law in issue, * * * as fully and completely as though this reference had not been made and as though this cause had been tried before the Court, reserving to the Court the full right and power to review and determine all questions of fact and law,” etc.

The master found that the appellees’ “article of manufacture and sale differs in no material detail from the device of the patent,” and that it is “intended for use in the same manner.” It seems clear that, if tho appellant’s patent is valid, the appellees’ welding rod is an infringement of it. Our own independent examination of the two rival devices, which are part of the exhibits before us, has convinced us of their virtual identity.

The defenses relied upon by the appellees, as enumerated in the briefs and in the master’s report, were as follows: (1) There is no invention disclosed; (2) the patent was obtained by fraud; (3) the invention was not joint in nature; (4) the subject-matter of the patent was first invented by the appellee Mills.

The master found in favor of the appellees on the first defense — -lack of invention on the part of the appellant’s welding tube— and found against the appellees on the other three defenses. Accordingly, he recommended that a decree be entered finding the appellant’s letters patent invalid.

Both sides filed exceptions to the master’s report, and all exceptions were by the court overruled and disallowed. The court below entered a final decree adopting the master’s findings of fact and conclusions of law, and adjudging the appellant’s letters patent to *809 be invalid. From that decree the present appeal was taken.

Under our view of the ease, it is necessary to consider only the defense in which the appellee’s position was sustained by the master and the court below; namely, that the appellant’s patent was invalid for want of invention.

In a brief memorandum opinion handed down a few days before the final decree was recorded, the court below expressed the view that “the grant of the patent to plaintiffs [appellant] invests it with no presumption of validity and plaintiff has failed to sustain any claim of invention by a preponderance of the evidence.” This holding by the court is made the subject of three assignments of error.

In this connection, we may observe that error is not assignable to the opinion of a court.

This court has repeatedly so held. In Yangtsze Rapid S. S. Co. v. Deutsch-Asia^ tisehe Bank, 59 F.(2d) 8,12, we said: “But, while we do not agree with the reasoning of the lower court, we do concur with the conclusion reached by it. It is not necessary that a judgment be affirmed for the precise reasons that seemed controlling in the lower court. In McCloskey v. Pacific Coast Co. [C. C. A.] 169 F. 794, 801, 22 L. R. A. (N. S.) 673, the late Judge Gilbert of this court said: ‘But notwithstanding that the theory upon which the court below awarded its injunction may have been erroneous, the injunction must not be disturbed if in the pleadings and the proofs we may discover any tenable ground upon which it may be sustained.’ [Cases cited.]”

Similarly, in Stoffregen v. Moore (C. C. A. 8) 271 F. 680, 681, the court said: “The assumptions of fact complained of in assignments of error 1 and 2 are found, if anywhere, in a memorandum opinion of the trial court incorporated for some reason in what is called a bill of exceptions. These two assignments of error present nothing for review: First, because they are based upon the opinion of the court, which cannot be the basis of an assignment of error. The opinion may be' wrong, and still the judgment be right. Second, we are by statute forbidden from reversing a judgment for error of fact on writ of error. Rev. St. § 1011; Comp. Stat. § 1672 [28 USCA § 879].”

That this rule applies to asserted errors of law as well as .to those of fact, appearing in an opinion of a court, is clear from the ease of United States v. Porter Fuel Co. (C. C. A. 8) 247 F. 769, 770, 771, which is on all fours, on this point, with the instant controversy. There, too, the validity of a patent was involved, and alleged error on the part of the lower court as to the question of burden of proof was involved. The appellate court said: “When counsel for plaintiffs come to demonstrate why the court erred in dismissing the complaint they present their argument under two headings as follows: (1) The District Court erred in its ruling in respect to the burden of proof. * * * These headings are practically new assignments of error, and are based upon what the trial court said in delivering its oral opinion. The opinion of the court was not the subject of exception or assignment “of error. The* reasons given in the opinion for the judgment of the court might be wrong, and still its judgment right. It is what the court did, and not what it said, which is subject to exception and review.” See, also, Smart v. Wright (C. C. A. 8) 227 F. 84, 85; Nowata County Gas Co. v. Henry Oil Co. (C. C. A. 8) 269 F. 742, 744; Wineinger v. Union Pac. R. Co. (C. C. A. 8 ) 276 F 65, 67; City of St. Paid v. Certain Lands in City of St. Paul, Minn. (C. C. A. 8) 48 F.(2d) 805., 807.

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67 F.2d 807, 20 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 1, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoody-co-v-mills-alloys-inc-ca9-1933.