T. L. Smith Co. v. Cement Tile Machinery Co.

258 F. 636, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1169
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Iowa
DecidedJuly 17, 1919
DocketNo. 28
StatusPublished

This text of 258 F. 636 (T. L. Smith Co. v. Cement Tile Machinery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T. L. Smith Co. v. Cement Tile Machinery Co., 258 F. 636, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1169 (N.D. Iowa 1919).

Opinion

RF,ED, District Judge.

This matter was referred to a special master to take an accounting for the plaintiffs’ profits or damages because of the infringement by the defendant of the complainant’s patent, which he has done, and has filed his report of such accounting, and reports that the plaintiffs are entitled to recover from the defendant damages in the sum of $2,184.08, and recommends that judgment be entered therefor in favor of the plaintiffs against the defendant. To this report both plaintiffs and defendant have filed exceptions.

The summary of the master’s report and the basis of the allowance to the defendant are as follows:

Total amount received by defendant from sales of mixing machines infringing plaintiffs’ patent during each year which it continued to so infringe plaintiffs’ patent:
Year. . Amount Received. Costs or Expense Paid by Defendant in Manufacturing Such Machines.
1912 .§ 363 58 $ 625 65
1913 . 7,485 99 8,220 20
3914 . 13,997 22 12,518 52
1915 . 20,310 29 19,124 51
1916 . 22,124 01 22,010 60
1917 . 4,118 82 3,716 95
Total ree’d. 868,400 51
Total cost. 66,216 43
$ 2,184 08
—balance to which plaintiffs are entitled to recover.

It thus appears that during the years 1912 and 1913 the defendant expended $996.28 in making the infringing machines more than he received therefor, and this amount was allowed to the defendant by the master as a credit upon the amount received by it during the six years it was manufacturing and selling the infringing devices of plaintiffs’ patent.

[1] First. The plaintiffs except to the allowance of this credit to the defendant upon the ground that it was an ordinary loss in conducting the business which it should stand and not be allowed credit therefor. But it was a loss incurred by the defendant in making the infringing machines, and lessens to that extent the amount of its gains or profits in making the infringing structures, and is a legitimate credit upon the amount received by it for the damages it is required to account to the plaintiffs.

Second. It next appears that the master allowed the defendant a credit of $2,975 as the costs of certain patterns (or repairing the same), jigs, and templets necessarily made by it in producing the infringing machines for which the plaintiffs are allowed to recover in this suit. The plaintiffs except to this allowance of credits upon the ground that the defendant wrongfully infringed the plaintiffs’ patent; that expenses incurred by it in so doing are but losses which it must bear; and upon the further ground that the items for which the amounts were so expended are as valuable to it to-day as when made, and that it can use them for any purpose desired. But the patterns, jigs, and [638]*638templets were made for the special purpose of producing the infringing machines for which plaintiffs are entitled to recover, and are of no value to the defendant for any other purpose, and are a legitimate item of expenditure for producing the machines for which plaintiffs' are entitled to recover in this suit.

[2] There is no evidence or claim that the infringing structures were wantonly or willfully made by the defendant to injure the plaintiffs, or for any other reason than a mistaken one of a supposed right to make them; and in such cases compensation to the patentee for the damages sustained by him, and not punishment of the defendant, should limit the plaintiffs’ recovery to the actual damages they have sustained. The exceptions of the plaintiffs to this item are overruled.

[3] Third. The plaintiffs further except to the master’s report upon the ground that he has made an improper apportionment of the defendant’s profits, in that “all the profits arising out of the sales of .mixing machines, including trucks, skids, engines, housings, and loaders, should have been included (in the allowance to the plaintiffs), in which event the profits to be accounted for (to the plaintiffs) would have equaled the sum of $6,512.76 in lieu of $2,184.08, as found by the master as the profits for which the defendant must account.”

It is not easy to understand just what is meant by this exception of the plaintiffs, unless it be that the master has not properly apportioned to the plaintiffs the entire damages sustained by them in the infringing structures manufactured by the defendant, hut has excluded therefrom certain items which are not covered by the plaintiffs’ patent. In other words, that the master has not allowed the plaintiffs the value of certain infringing structures as an entirety, but has excluded therefrom certain items not covered by the plaintiffs’ patent. This subject-matter is made a ground of defendant’s exception to the master’s report, in which it is claimed by the defendant that the master has allowed the plaintiffs for certain items included in the various infringing structures as made by the defendant that are not covered by the plaintiffs’ patent, and that plaintiffs have therefore been allowed the value of certain items included in the infringing structures which are not covered by the plaintiffs’. patent. As we understand these separate exceptions by the plaintiffs and the defendant, they may be considered together, and are the most difficult questions presented by the exceptions of the respective parties.

As we understand the plaintiffs’ contention, it is that the entire commercial value of the infringing machine as manufactured by the defendant is the basis upon which the plaintiffs are entitled to recover regardless of the fact that in the construction of such machine certain items or elements may have been included therein not covered by the plaintiffs’ patent. While the defendant’s contention is that, the plaintiffs’ patent being for an improvement only, it .is only the elements used by the defendant in making such machines that are covered by the plaintiffs’ patent that the plaintiffs are entitled to recover for. See Mowry v. Whitney, 14 Wall. 639, 652, 20 L. Ed. 860; followed in [639]*639Garretson v. Clark, 111 U. S. 120, 4 Sup. Ct. 291, 28 L. Ed. 371. In the latter-named case the Supreme Court says:

“When a patent is for an improvement, and not for an entirely new machine or contrivance, the patentee nrust show in what particulars his improvement has added to the usefulness of the machine or contrivance. lie must separate its results distinctly from those of the other parts, so that the benefits derived from it may be distinctly seen and appreciated.”

And it was held that the failure of the patentee in such a case to so distinguish the separate parts of his structure, so that the benefits derived by him from its separate parts might be distinctly seen or appreciated, was fatal to his rights to recover more than nominal damages. Such rule, however, if not distinctly overruled, is clearly modified by the later decisions of that court. Thus in Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co. v. Wagner Manufacturing Co., 225 U.

Related

Garretson v. Clark
111 U.S. 120 (Supreme Court, 1884)
Mowry v. Whitney
81 U.S. 620 (Supreme Court, 1871)
Brown v. Lanyon Zinc Co.
179 F. 309 (Eighth Circuit, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
258 F. 636, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/t-l-smith-co-v-cement-tile-machinery-co-iand-1919.