Where the assignors of a patent right were joined with the
assignee for a particular locality, in a bill for an injunction to
restrain a defendant from the use of the machine patented, and the
defendant raised, in this Court, and after a final decree, an
objection arising from a misjoinder of parties, the objection comes
too late.
Moreover, in the present case, the parties consented to the
decree under which the account in controversy was adjusted.
That consent having been given, however, to a decree by which an
account should be taken of gains and profits, according to the
prayer of the bill, the defendant was not precluded from objecting
to the account upon the ground that it went beyond the order.
The report having been recommitted to the master, with
instructions to ascertain the amount of profits which might have
been realized with due diligence, and the master
Page 56 U. S. 547
having framed his report upon the theory of awarding damages,
this report, and the order of the court confirming it, were both
erroneous.
Under the circumstances of this case, the decree should have
been for only the actual gains and profits during the time when the
machine was in operation, and during no other period.
Page 56 U. S. 553
MR. JUSTICE DANIEL delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellees, on the 24th of July, 1848, obtained from the
court above mentioned an injunction to restrain the appellants from
using or vending one or more planing machines substantially the
same in construction and mode of operation as the machine which had
been patented to William Woodworth, deceased.
In their bill they allege the originality of the invention of
the patentee, the extension of the patent after his death for the
space of seven years beyond its original limitation to the
appellee, William W. Woodworth, as administrator of the inventor,
and the grant by said administrator to the appellee, Brooks, of the
exclusive right to construct and use the invention within certain
specified limits for the entire period of that extension. The bill
further alleges a second extension by act of Congress of the patent
to the said administrator for the term of seven years from the 27th
day of December, 1849, but states that in consequence of doubts
entertained as to the correctness of the specification and of the
fact of said letters patent having been found to be inoperative,
they were duly surrendered, and new letters patent bearing date on
the 8th day of July, 1845, were issued to the appellee, William W.
Woodworth and his assigns, for the residue of the term of 28 years
from 27th of December, 1828; that subsequently to this last
renewal, the appellee, William W. Woodworth, had granted to the
appellee, Wilson, and to his assigns all the right and title
acquired by him by the issue of the last letters patent with the
amended specification. That the appellee, Brooks, by his deed of
the 20th of July, 1847, had granted and assigned to the appellee,
Tyler, one-half Brooks' right in the patent to Woodworth for the
term ending on the twenty-seventh of December, 1849, to be used
within the Town of Lowell and not elsewhere. That the appellee,
Wilson, by deed of the 20th of May, 1848, assigned and confirmed to
Brooks and his assigns the exclusive right of constructing and
using
Page 56 U. S. 554
twenty planing machines according to the letters patent with the
amended specification, and gave authority to Brooks, in Wilson's
name, to execute all such deeds of confirmation to the assignees of
any rights and privileges within the County of Middlesex as he
should deem fit, and that in virtue of this power and authority,
he, Brooks, did by his deed of July 1, 1848, grant and confirm to
the appellee, Tyler, in the name and behalf of the said Wilson as
well as in his own name, all the rights and privileges described in
the deed from Brooks to Tyler of the 20th of July, 1847. The bill
further alleges that the appellants were then using, and for some
time had used, within the City of Lowell, one of the machines
substantially the same in construction and mode of operation as the
planing machine in the said last mentioned letters patent
described, the exclusive right to make, use and vend which is by
law vested in the appellees. The bill also charges that theretofore
two actions at law had been instituted in that court, the one
against a certain James Gould and the other against Rodolphus and
James, Edwards and Cyrus Smith, for the violation of the exclusive
privileges granted to the plaintiffs in those actions under patent
last aforesaid, by using a machine substantially the same with the
said planing machine invented by the said William Woodworth, and
that, upon issues made up in both these actions, the jury found
that the defendants had infringed the patent, and subjected them to
the payment of damages. It avers the use, as before stated, by the
appellants of their machine to be an infringement of the Woodworth
patent and a violation of the exclusive rights and privileges of
the appellees, and concludes with a prayer that the appellants may
be decreed to account for and pay over the appellees all gains and
profits which have accrued from using their said machines since the
expiration of the said original patent; that they may be restrained
by injunction from using or vending any one or more of said
machines; that the machine or machines in the possession or under
the control of the appellants may be destroyed or delivered over to
the appellees, who ask also for general relief.
The appellants by their answer state that during a part of the
time which has elapsed between the autumn of 1841 and April 1,
1844, they have used in their mill at Lowell a single planing
machine constructed according to a patent granted to James H.
Hutchinson on the 16th of July, 1839, which machine, in some of its
combinations, substantially resembles the machine specified in the
patent granted to Woodworth in 1845, but is unlike any machine
specified in the patent to Woodworth in 1828. They aver also that
the planing business had been carried on as aforesaid in virtue of
the Hutchinson machine, at
Page 56 U. S. 555
Lowell with the full knowledge of the appellee Brooks and
without objection from him until within a short time previously,
and that they had no knowledge or belief of any infringement by
them of the patent to Woodworth until after the decision in Gould's
case, after which decision they were informed that the patent to
Woodworth had been surrendered and reissued with a new
specification, the validity of which reissued patent had not,
within their knowledge or belief, been established until the
decision of the suit against the said Edwards and Smith. The answer
denies the originality of Woodworth's claim by averring that James,
Joseph, Aaron, and Daniel Hill and Leonard Gilson, in the District
of Massachusetts, as early as 1827, and John Hale of Bloomfield, in
the State of New York, in the year 1828, had knowledge of and had
made and used planing machines essentially the same and prior to
the pretended invention of William Woodworth, deceased.
At the May term of the court, 1849, this cause coming on to be
heard upon the bill, the answers, replications, and exhibits, by
the consent of the parties it was decreed by the court that the
appellees (the complainants below) were entitled to the perpetual
injunction and to the account prayed for by the bill, said account
to commence at such time as shall be found by the master and be
confirmed by the court. The decree proceeds that the master in
taking said account shall have power to require the parties to
produce before him, on oath, all books and papers relating thereto,
and to hear such oral evidence as either party may produce, and on
the motion of either of the parties, to examine either of the other
parties upon interrogatories. And all further directions are
reserved until the coming in of the master's report.
In pursuance of this decretal order, upon the examination of the
parties on oath and upon evidence produced
aliunde, the
master reported that the amount of gains and profits received by
the defendants below upon 3,962,700 feet of plank, the number of
feet planed by them, was at the rate of fifty cents per thousand
feet, no exception being taken to the amount of the work stated to
have been done by the said defendants or to the gross amount at
which the work was charged by them per thousand, but exception
being taken to the report of the master upon the ground that the
rate of profit charged to the defendants below should have been one
dollar instead of fifty cents per thousand, the court by a father
decretal order recommitted the report to the master with
instructions to ascertain the amount of profits which may have been
or with due diligence and prudence might have been realized by the
defendants for the work done by them or their servants by the
machines
Page 56 U. S. 556
described in the complainant's bill, and that the account of
profits should commenced from the date of the letters patent issued
with the amended specifications. In obedience to the decretal order
last mentioned, the master made a second report, by which he
charged the defendants for profits on the work done by their
machine at the rate of one dollar per thousand feet, instead of
fifty cents, as in his former report, from the 8th day of July,
1845, the date of the reissued patent. He says it is true that the
rate of profit adopted by him is conjectural,
"but that he does not think he has infused into the case any
element to unfavorable to the defendants. That by the decision of
the court they were trespassers and wrongdoers, in the legal sense
of the words, and were consequently in a position which might make
them liable to be mulcted in damages greater than the profits they
have actually received; the rule being not what benefit they have
received, but what injury the plaintiffs have sustained."
To this second report of the master exceptions were filed by the
appellees, the plaintiffs below, founded upon the departure of the
master from the safe and just rule of actual profits, as prayed for
by the bill, and the adoption of a rule of proceeding which was
vague and conjectural, and unsustained by the evidence in the
cause. At the May term, 1851, the circuit court decreed that this
report of the master, except so far as interest is thereby
disallowed, should be confirmed and that the appellants should
within ten days pay to the appellees the sum of $3,962.96, with
interest thereon from the day of filing the bill, with costs. It is
this decree, founded upon the antecedent proceedings herein
adverted to, that we are to review, and it may here be remarked
that the statement of those proceedings has been unavoidably
protracted from the necessity for considering two questions of a
preliminary character raised in the argument, and which it is
proper to dispose of before deciding upon, and before reaching the
merits of, this cause.
1st. It has been insisted on behalf of the appellants that the
appellee, Tyler, claiming as assignee under Woodworth, Wilson, and
Brooks and asserting a title complete in himself within a certain
locality, could not regularly unite in his bill those persons whom
he had shown had no title within the same locality, and who could
not therefore be embraced in a decree in his favor -- a decree
which, in its terms and effect, must exclude every kind of interest
in those co-plaintiffs within the same limits. It is true, as a
rule of equity pleading, that none should be made parties, either
as complainants or defendants, who have no interest in the matters
in controversy, or which can be affected by the decree of the
court.
Vide Story's equity pleadings, ch. 4, § 231; so
too, in § 232 of the same work,
Page 56 U. S. 557
it is said:
"In cases where the want of interest applies, it is equally
fatal when applicable to one of several plaintiffs as it is when
applicable to one of several defendants. Indeed, the objection in
the former case is fatal to the whole suit, whereas in the latter
case it is fatal if taken in due time only as against the defendant
improperly joined."
In the same work, § 544, it is said that
"In cases of misjoinder of plaintiffs, the objection ought to be
taken by demurrer, for if not so taken, and the court proceeds to a
hearing on the merits, it will be disregarded, at least if it does
not materially affect the propriety of the decree."
The language of Lord Langdale in the case of
Raffity v.
King, as reported in the Law Journal, vol. 6, 93, is very
clear upon this question, where he says,
"As to the objection to John Raffity being made a plaintiff, I
am not satisfied it would under any circumstances be considered of
such importance as to deprive the other plaintiffs of the relief
they are entitled to. There have been cases in which the court,
with a view to special justice, has overcome the difficulty
occasioned by a misjoinder of plaintiffs,"
and in the case of
Morley v. Lord Hawke, cited in 2
Younge & Jervis 520, before Sir William Grant, the rule is thus
stated as to the misjoinder of plaintiffs.
"The defendant objected to any relief's being granted in that
state of the record, and without determining the effect of the
objection if brought forward earlier, I think it is now too late.
If the objection had been stated in the answer, the plaintiffs
might have obtained leave to amend their bill and might have made
John Raffity a defendant instead of a plaintiff, for which there is
an authority in the case of
Aylwin v. Bray, 2 Younge &
Jerv. 518, note, and in such a case as this, where the objection is
reserved to the last moment, I think it ought not to prevail."
In the case before us, the objection of misjoinder of the
plaintiffs nowhere appears upon the pleadings, nor, for aught that
is disclosed, was it insisted upon even at the hearing: it is urged
for the first time after the hearing and after a final decree, and
to allow this objection at so late a stage of the proceedings would
be a surprise upon the appellees, and might operate the most
serious mischiefs. In this case and at this time, the allowance of
such an objection would be peculiarly improper, for here the
objection cannot be viewed as having been merely waived by
reasonable and ordinary implication, but the defendants have
expressly consented to a decree between the parties as they were
then arrayed upon the record. As to this objection, therefore, we
think it comes too late to be of any avail, and should not affect
the cognizance of the court either as to the parties or the subject
matter of the controversy.
2d. On the part of the appellees (the
Page 56 U. S. 558
complainants in the circuit court), it has been insisted that
the decretal order, made in this cause by consent, covered and
ratified in advance all the subsequent proceedings on the part of
the court, rendering those proceedings inclusive of the final
decree, a matter of consent, which the appellants could have no
right to retract, and from which, therefore, they could not legally
appeal. In order to try the accuracy of this argument and of the
conclusions sought to be deduced therefrom, it is proper to examine
the order which is alleged in support of them. The words of that
order are as follow:
"This cause came on &c., and by consent of parties it is
declared by the court" -- what? "That the complainants are entitled
to the perpetual injunction and the account prayed for by the
bill." It seems to us incomprehensible that by this consent of the
defendant below, he had consented to anything precise and
unchangeable beyond the perpetual injunction, much more so that he
had thereby bound himself to acquiescence in any shape or to any
extent of demand which might be made against him under the guise of
an account. Indeed the complainants below, and the circuit court
itself, have shown by their own interpretation of this decretal
order that they did not understand it to mean, as in truth by no
just acceptation it could mean, anything fixed, definite and
immutable, for the complainants below excepted to the report of the
master, and the court recommitted that report with a view to its
alteration. Nor can we regard the reference to the master as in the
nature of an arbitration, for if so deemed, the award of that
officer must have been binding unless it could be assailed for
fraud, misbehavior, or gross mistake of fact. In truth, the account
consented to was the account prayed for by the bill, and in the
plain words of the bill,
viz.,
"that the defendants may be decreed to account for and pay over
all such gains and profits as have accrued to them from using the
said machines since the expiration of said original letters
patent."
This language is particularly clear and significant -- such gain
and profits, and such only, as have actually accrued to the
defendants, and we are unable to perceive how, by such an assent,
the appellants, the defendants below, could have been concluded
against exceptions to anything and everything which might have been
evolved by that report, however illegal or oppressive.
Considering next the decretal order for the recommitment of the
first report, the second report, made in obedience to that order,
and final decree founded upon the second report, we are constrained
to regard them all as alike irreconcilable with the prayer of the
bill, with the just import of the consent decree, and with those
principles, which control the action of courts of
Page 56 U. S. 559
equity. In the instructions to the master it will be seen that
he is ordered
"to ascertain and report the amount of profits which may have
been, or with due diligence and prudence might have been, realized,
by the defendants for the work done by them or by their servants by
means of the machines described in the complainant's bill,
computing the same upon the principles set forth in the opinion of
the court, and that the account of such profits commence from the
date of the letters patent issued with the amended
specification."
The master, in this report made in pursuance of the instructions
just adverted to, admits that the account is not constructed upon
the basis of actual gains and profits acquired by the defendants by
the use of the inhibited machine, but upon the theory of awarding
damages to the complainants for an infringement of their monopoly.
He admits, too, that the rate of profits assumed by him was
conjectural, and not governed by the evidence, but he attempts to
vindicate the rule he had acted upon by the declaration that he was
not aware that he had
"infused into the case any element too unfavorable to the
defendants. That by the decision of the court they were trespassers
and wrongdoers, in the legal sense of these words, and consequently
in a position to be mulcted in damages greater than the profits
they have actually received, the rule being not what benefit they
have received, but what injury the plaintiffs have sustained."
To what rule the master has reference in thus stating the
grounds on which his calculations have been based we do not know.
We are aware of no rule which converts a court of equity into an
instrument for the punishment of simple torts, but upon this
principle of chastisement the master admits that he has been led,
in contravention of his original view of the testimony, and upon
conjecture as to the realty of the facts, and not upon facts
themselves, to double the amount which he had stated to be a
compensation to the plaintiffs below, and the compensation prayed
for by them, and the circuit court has, by its decree, pushed this
principle to the extreme by adding to this amount the penalty of
interest thereon from the time of filing the bill to the date of
the final decree.
We think that the second report of the master and the final
decree of the circuit court are warranted neither by the prayer of
the bill, by the justice of this case, nor by the well established
rules of equity jurisprudence.
If the appellees, the plaintiffs below, had sustained an injury
to their legal rights, the courts of law were open to them for
redress, and in those courts they might, according to a practice,
which however doubtful in point of essential right, is now too
inveterate to be called in question, have claimed not compensation
merely, but vengeance, for such injury as they could show that they
had sustained. But before a tribunal which refuses
Page 56 U. S. 560
to listen even to any, save those whose acts and motives are
perfectly fair and liberal, they cannot be permitted to contravene
the highest and most benignant principle of the being and
Constitution of that tribunal.
There they will be allowed to claim that which,
ex aequo et
bono, is theirs, and nothing beyond this.
In the present case it would be peculiarly harsh and oppressive,
were it consistent with equity practice, to visit upon the
appellants any consequences in the nature of a penalty. It is
clearly shown that the appellants, in working their machine, were
proceeding under an authority equal to that the same, indeed, which
bestowed on Woodworth and his assignees the right to their
monopoly. The appellants were using a machine patented by the
United States to Hutchinson, and might well have supposed that the
right derived to them from such a source was regular and
legitimate. They were, then, in no correct sense wanton infringers
upon rights of Woodworth or of those claiming under him. So soon as
the originality and priority of the Woodworth patent was
ascertained by law, the appellants consented to be perpetually
enjoined from the use of their machine, the Hutchinson machine, and
to account for whatever gains and profits they had received from
its use. Under these circumstances, were the infliction of damages,
by way of penalty, ever consistent with the practice of courts of
equity, there can be perceived in this case no ground whatever for
the exercise of such a power.
On the contrary, those circumstances exhibit in a clearer light
the propriety of restricting the account, in accordance with the
prayer of the bill, to the actual gains and profits of the
appellants, the defendants below, during the time their machine was
in operation and during no other period. We are therefore of the
opinion that the decree of the circuit court is erroneous, and
should be, as it is hereby,
Reversed, with costs, and that this cause be remanded to the
circuit court with instructions to proceed therein in conformity
with the principles ruled in this opinion.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Massachusetts, and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof,
it is now here ordered, adjudged, and decreed by this Court that
the decree of the said circuit court in this cause be, and the same
is hereby, reversed, with costs, and that this cause be, and the
same is hereby, remanded to the said circuit court, for further
proceedings to be had therein in conformity to the opinion of this
Court.