Western Electric Co. v. General Talking Pictures Corp.

16 F. Supp. 293, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2017
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 16, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 16 F. Supp. 293 (Western Electric Co. v. General Talking Pictures Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Electric Co. v. General Talking Pictures Corp., 16 F. Supp. 293, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2017 (S.D.N.Y. 1936).

Opinion

BYERS, District Judge.

These patent causes were tried together during February, 1934. Intervening engagements of court and counsel delayed argument until November 27, 1935.

The pleadings disclose that the plaintiff . American Telephone and Telegraph Company is the owner of the several patents involved, and that the plaintiffs Western Electric Company, Inc., and Electrical Research Prpducts, Inc., are the holders of licenses from the first-named; that the Western Electric Company, Inc., possesses all rights under or arising from said patents to exclude others from the manufacture, use, etc., of the patented devices; that the Western Electric Company, Inc., and Electrical Research Products, Inc., are possessed of all claims arising out of alleged infringement as set forth in the bill, and the rights for their own benefit to bring suit against any infringer.

The patents are eight in number, and it is unnecessary to allocate them to the three causes enumerated, because the issues are commonly identical.

The defendant was organized in September, 1928, under the laws of Delaware, and its business is that of leasing recording and reproducing equipment for talking motion pictures in the United States; it is said to have taken over the De Forest Phonofilm Corporation which then had installed, in various theaters in the United States, talking motion picture equipment according to the sound on film system.

The plaintiffs allege that the defendant, without a license under any of the said patents, has illegally made, sold and used within the United States the inventions and improvements contained in the said patents; to restrain this alleged infringement the plaintiffs seek an injunction and the delivery to them of the alleged infringing devices and an accounting with costs.

In addition to denials, the defendant pleads that it does not manufacture, use or sell the apparatus charged to infringe, and that said apparatus was manufactured and sold to it as manufactured under the patents in suit, by a licensed manufacturer under the patents, or by those having rights to grant such licenses; and that this was done by a licensee of the owner of the patents with the latter’s knowledge, consent and/or acquiescence. Also the validity of the patents is put in issue.

The major controversy concerns the legal effect of the sale to the defendant of the amplifying devices manufactured under the patents by American Transformer Company, holding a license so to manufacture and sell to certain classes of purchasers only as set forth in the license; each of the amplifying devices so purchased by defendant bears a notice reading: “This apparatus is licensed only for radio, amateur, experimental and broadcast reception under the following patents of the Radio Corporation of America and Associated Companies.” (The Radio Corporation of America was the licensing medium of several corporations including the three plaintiffs in this cause, and the inclusion of its name in this recital does not alter the status of the parties as heretofore stated.)

*295 The amplifying devices required tubes which the defendant procured in the open market by purchase from authorized distributors ; each tube carton bore a license notice reading as follows:

“License Notice.
“In connection with devices it sells, Radio Corporation of America has rights under patents having claims (a) on the devices themselves and (b) on combination of the devices with other devices or elements, as for example in various circuits and hook-ups.
“The sale of this device carries a license under the patent claims of (a), but only for (1) talking machine uses, (2) radio amateur uses, (3) radio experimental uses and (4) radio broadcast reception; and only where no business features are involved.
“The sale does not carry a license under patent claims of (b), except only (1) for legitimate renewals and repairs in apparatus and systems already licensed' for use under such patent claims on combinations, (2) for assembling by amateurs and experimenters, and not by others, with other licensed parts or devices, or with parts or devices made by themselves, but only for their own amateur and experimental radio uses where no business features are involved, and not for sale to or for use by others, and (3) for use with licensed talking machines and licensed radio broadcast receiving devices; and only where no business features are involved.
“This device is licensed for no other use unless, by special written contract of sale with Radio Corporation of America, the purchaser has agreed to use it in some other special manner only, as set forth in the contract of sale. The right to employ the device in such special manner is nontransferable except by special agreement with Radio Corporation of America.”

The amplifying apparatus covered by the patents was produced and sold by over thirty concerns holding licenses from the plaintiffs ; all of the devices, however, contained the restrictive notice first above quoted.

The defendant’s position is shortly this:

That, since the plaintiffs licensed the American Transformer Company to make and sell the amplifying devices, when sales had been made by it, those devices became the absolute property of the purchaser, free from any restriction whatever, and that the purchaser had the right to use them in any way that it saw fit; in other words, to disregard the terms of the notice, although actual knowledge is conceded on the part of the purchaser, of the restricted nature of the license and of the terms of the notice at the time of purchase.

The special argument is made to avoid infringement, that the amplifying device could not be used without tubes and, as the tubes were purchased in the open market and could serve no purpose other than as equipment for amplifiers, the purchaser was free from any restriction concerning the use thereof, and particularly it was at liberty to insert the tube or tubes in these amplifiers so acquired, and make use of the complete devices without regard to the terms of either or both notices.

It is next contended that, even though the foregoing defenses should not be sustained, the court should find from the evidence that the plaintiffs acquiesced in the acquisition by the defendant of the amplifiers, with knowledge that the defendant intended to lease them for the use of moving picture theaters, and hence the plaintiffs should not now be heard to complain of the alleged infringement. This branch of the case involves a closely contested question of fact based upon numerous conversations between officers and representatives of the plaintiffs, and the defendant’s president in connection with the development of the defendant’s business.

Infringement in the usual sense is denied; it is admitted that the devices leased by the defendant to its customers embodied the inventions in the several patents, but it is asserted that each patent is for a combination of elements, namely, the structure containing the circuits and instrumentalities included therein which form a complete whole, and the radio tube or tubes which are also complete as such. It is urged that the latter require replacement from time to time as they wear out and that they have no function apart from their place in the amplifier.

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16 F. Supp. 293, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2017, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-electric-co-v-general-talking-pictures-corp-nysd-1936.