Union Electric Welding Co. v. Curry

279 F. 465, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 1570
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 17, 1922
DocketNo. 3572
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 279 F. 465 (Union Electric Welding Co. v. Curry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Electric Welding Co. v. Curry, 279 F. 465, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 1570 (6th Cir. 1922).

Opinions

DENISON, Circuit Judge.

Upon a former appeal, this court held that the patent involved (Curry, No. 908,649, January 5, 1909, for. a "tool for twisting wire ties”) was valid and. infringed. Curry v. Union Co., 230 Fed. 422, 144 C. C. A. 564. Upon the accounting thereafter had in the court below, the master reported that the defendant’s profits from the infringement were $45,147.50, and from a final decree for this amount the defendant again brings the case here.

[ 1 ] The tool, which was before the court upon the former appeal as a samp'le of defendant’s infringement, was strictly a hand tool. The operator grasped the bag in one hand, and, after adjusting the tie to the neck of the bag and upon the hooks of the tool, seized the tool in the other hand and pulled it away from the bag. By this operation, the tie was 'twisted. Upon the accounting, it appeared that many of the tools sold by defendant — mostly, if not all, before the decree of this court — had been so-called bench tools, in which the tool had been fastened to a bench, and the operator placed the tie in the hooks of the tool, put the neck of the bag in position to bear against the slack of the tie, and then pulled'the bag away from the tool. Excepting as to this method of operation, the bench tool did not differ from-the hand tool, save in some details which made the former a closer copy of the patented construction than the latter was.

For application of the claims of the patent, the equivalency of the two is clear.. The part which, in Curry, is called a handle, and is in effect a spirally grooved nut, which, by its motion longitudinally of the inclosed spiral screw shaft, causes the latter to revolve, and which handle is held in the operator’s hand, and by him moved along longitudinally of the screw shaft, takes the form, in the defendant’s bench tool, of a frame which is fastened to the bench and held there while the operator pulls the shaft longitudinally through it. This difference is a mere incident to the reversal of operation. Claim 3 is not infringed by the bench tool, lacking the swiveled end knob, but this is not material to the accounting. The broader claim, 2, is a better basis for a finding of damages or profits than claim 3 could be.

It was at least within the discretion of the master, subject to the supervision of the trial court, to include the bench tools in the accounting, although they had not been mentioned in the evidence prior to the interlocutory decree. See Kalamazoo Co. v. Proudfit Co. (C. C. A. 6) 243 Fed. 895, 899, 156 C. C. A. 407, and cases there cited. Indeed, in a case where, as here, the adoption of the second form preceded the interlocutory decree, it is difficult to see how liability for its use could survive the, accounting and remain enforceable in another suit.

The master made a finding of damages based upon certain theories which were challenged by defendant in its exceptions; but since the final decree was based wholly upon the finding of profits, and there was no overlap or duplication between the two bases for recovery, we do not find it necessary to consider any of the conflicting theories as to these damages.

Upon the subject of profits, the first issue is as to the method of computation and of apportionment, so far as the latter is necessary. Upon this issue we may, without prejudice to defendant, assume that the [467]*467questions are the same as if the patent had been upon the tie itself and the defendant’s business had been the making and selling of infringing ties. It appears that the business began in 1912. In that year there was a loss of $1,018.81. During the years 1913, 1914, and 1915, there were large profits. After the former decree of this court, as rendered early in 1916, the defendant endeavored to continue its business during that year, with such changes in its tool as were thought to avoid infringement, but with such lack of success that, in the year 1916, there was a. loss of $1,237, and, in the early part of 1917, defendant went out of business, selling all its machinery, tools, materials, etc., on hand, and distributing the proceeds among its stockholders, save for the portion of the proceeds which was impounded by a proceeding collateral to this accounting.

During this whole period, it engaged in one relatively trifling noninfringing branch of business, in which it met a loss of $1,781, and in another noninfringing enterprise, amounting to less than 5 per cent, of the total business, and in which it made some profits. The profits, the master apportioned, allocating to the noninfringing branch the same percentage of total profits that the noninfringing sales bore to the 1 otal sales. The profits to be deemed the result of the infringement were: then computed by putting upon one side of tlie account all the money that had been paid back to stockholders as dividends, or paid out. in this patent litigation, or had been paid or was owing to them on the liquidation, and putting upon the other side all the investments in the, business, plus interest since the dates of the investments. The balance was deemed to be the profits of the entire enterprise. From this the master deducted the profits allocated to the noninfringing branch, 4.36 per cent., and to the balance added the losses which had been made in the noninfringing business — since these losses had been met out of. and thus reduced, the final infringing profits — and added, also, the losses for 1912 and 1916, under the rule which forbids infringers to deduct losses for one period from profits of another.

[2] This is substantially the method of ascertaining infringing profits which was applied and approved in the Seventh Circuit in Schmertz Co. v. Western Co. (D. C.) 203 Fed. 1006; Id., 226 Fed. 730, 734, 141 C. C. A. 486, and we think it wholly appropriate to the facts of this case,1 with one exception. Tt is often true that losses in one period may not be deducted from profits in another (Crosby Steam Gage & Valve Co. v. Consolidated Co. 141 U. S. 441, 12 Sup. Ct. 49, 35 L. Ed. 809: Canda Bros. v. Michigan Co. [C. C. A. 6] 152 Fed. 178, 81 C. C. A. 420), but the applicability of this rule must depend upon the facts of the case

[3] There is no invariable rule that each calendar year must stand by itself. The losses for 1912 (SI.018), this being the introductory year, naturally seem to be a part of the expense incurred in working up the business and bringing about the profits in the later period, and we think the defendant should have credit for these losses. This credit the defendant had received under the method here adopted in arriving at and stating the net profits of the entire enterprise, and it was there[468]*468fore error to withdraw the credit by adding the $1,018 to the actual profits of the entire period.

The losses for 1916 illustrate the application of the rule, as those for 1912 do its exception. Those of 1916 were incurred in an attempt to find a successful method of continuing the business in a noninfringing way after the decree, and there is no reason why the defendant should have credit for-them in ascertaining the profits which came from the infringement before the decree. They pertain to a distinct period. It was therefore correct to add the sum of $1,237 to the entire profits.

[4]

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Bluebook (online)
279 F. 465, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 1570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-electric-welding-co-v-curry-ca6-1922.