In a suit in equity for the infringement of a patent for a
design for carpets where no profits were found to have been made by
the defendant, the circuit court allowed to the plaintiff, as
damages, in respect to the yards of infringing carpets made and
sold by the defendant, the sum per yard which was the profit of the
plaintiff in making and selling carpets with the patented design,
there being no evidence as to the value imparted to the carpet by
the design.
Held that such award of damages was improper
and that only nominal damages should have been allowed.
Where a bill founded on a design patent with a claim for a
pattern and separate claims for each of its parts is taken as
confessed, it alleging infringement of the "invention," the patent
will be held valid for the purposes of the suit.
Page 114 U. S. 440
The joinder of such claims in one patent does not
per
se invalidate the patent or any claim at the objection of a
defendant.
A claim of "the design for a carpet, substantially as shown,"
refers to the description and the drawing, and is valid.
An objection that a patent for a design is for an aggregation of
old ornaments and embodies no "invention" is concluded where the
bill alleges infringement of the "invention," and is taken as
confessed.
Where the master reported no profits, and nominal damages, in a
suit in equity for the infringement of a patent for a design, and,
on exception by the plaintiff, the circuit court allowed a sum for
damages and this Court reversed its decree, the plaintiff was
allowed costs in the circuit court to and including the
interlocutory decree and the defendant was allowed his costs after
such decree.
These were all suits in equity for alleged infringements of
patents.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
These are three suits in equity brought in the Circuit Court of
the United States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania against
John Dobson and James Dobson, trading as John and James Dobson and
as "The Falls of Schuylkill Carpet Mills." No. 1 is brought by the
Hartford Carpet Company for the infringement of design letters
patent No. 11,074, granted March 18, 1879, to the plaintiff as
assignee of Winthrop L. Jacobs, for three and one-half years, for a
design for carpets. No. 2 is brought by the Bigelow Carpet Company
for the infringement of design letters patent No. 10,778, granted
August 13, 1878, to the plaintiff as assignee of Hugh Christie for
three and one-half years for a design for carpets. No. 3 is brought
by the Bigelow Carpet Company for the infringement of design
letters patent No. 10,870, granted October 15, 1878, to the
plaintiff as assignee of Charles Magee for three and one-half years
for a design for carpets.
Page 114 U. S. 441
No. 1 was commenced on the 26th of April, 1879, and Nos. 2 and 3
on the 7th of May, 1879. In No. 1 and No. 3 the defendants appeared
by a solicitor, but did not plead, answer, or demur to the bill,
and it was taken as confessed, in each suit, on the 11th of July,
1879, and on the 2d of September, 1879, and interlocutory decree
was entered in each suit awarding a perpetual injunction, and an
account of profits and damages. In No. 2, an answer was filed on
the 3d of September, 1879, denying infringement and setting up want
of novelty. A replication was filed, and on the 5th of November,
1879, a preliminary injunction was granted. Testimony was taken,
and on April 23, 1880, on final hearing, a decree was made for a
perpetual injunction, and an account of profits and damages. Some
testimony on the accounting in Nos. 1 and 3 was taken in November,
1879, but most of the evidence before the master was taken in the
three suits at the same time, in June, 1880.
In No. 1, the master filed a report on January 18, 1881, setting
forth that the plaintiff, before the master, waived all claim for
profits and limited its claim to the damages it had suffered by the
infringement; that the defendants had sold 20 pieces, of 50 yards
each, of carpet containing the patented design; that the plaintiff
claimed $13,400 damages, being 67 cents a yard, on 400 pieces of
carpet, of 50 yards each, as being the decrease of the plaintiff's
sales caused by the infringement, estimating the cost to the
plaintiff of making and selling the carpet at $1.08 per yard, and
his selling price at $1.75 per yard, and that the master had
rejected that claim, as founded on inadmissible evidence, and a
further claim of $3,000 damages, for expenses caused to the
plaintiff, by the infringement, in getting up other designs, and
changing its looms to other carpets. The report was for six cents
damages. The plaintiff excepted to the report because it did not
find profits to have been made by the defendants, and did not
report more than nominal damages. The court sustained the
exceptions, and decreed to the plaintiff $737, being for 20 pieces
of infringing carpet made and sold by the defendants at 55 yards
per piece, or 1,100 yards at 67 cents per yard, as the plaintiff's
profit per yard on carpet of the patented design. The final decree
was
Page 114 U. S. 442
for $737 and costs, and a perpetual injunction. The defendants
have appealed.
In No. 2, the master filed a report on January 18, 1881, setting
forth that the plaintiff, before the master, waived all claim for
profits and limited its claim to the damages it had suffered by the
infringement; that no testimony had been taken showing the amount
of the defendants' sale of the infringing carpet; that the
plaintiff claimed $11,250 damages, being 75 cents a yard on 300
pieces of carpet, of 50 yards each, as being the decrease of the
plaintiff's sales caused by the infringement, estimating the cost
to the plaintiff of making and selling the carpet at $1.10 per
yard, and his selling price at $1.85 per yard, and that the master
had rejected that claim as not sustained by the evidence, and also
a further claim for expense caused to the plaintiff by the
infringement, in getting up another design, and in resetting its
looms to manufacture the same. The report was for six cents
damages. The plaintiff excepted to the report for not finding more
than nominal damages. The court sustained the exceptions, and
decreed to the plaintiff $750, being for 20 pieces of infringing
carpet made by the defendants at 50 yards per piece, or 1,000 yards
at 75 cents per yard, as the plaintiff's profit per yard on carpet
of the patented design. The final decree was for $750 and costs,
and a perpetual injunction. The defendants have appealed.
In No. 3, the master filed a report on January 18, 1881, setting
forth that the plaintiff, before the master, waived all claim for
profits, and limited its claim to the damages it had incurred by
the infringement; that the defendants had sold 31 pieces, amounting
to 1,684 1/4 yards, of carpet containing the patented design; that
the plaintiff claimed $3,750 damages, being 75 cents a yard on
5,000 yards of carpet, as being the decrease of the plaintiff's
sales, caused by the infringement, estimating the plaintiff's
profit on making and selling the carpet at 75 cents per yard, and
that the aster had rejected that claim as not sustained by the
evidence, and also a further claim for the cost of getting up
another design to replace the one infringed. The report was for six
cents damages. The plaintiff excepted to the report, because it did
not find profits to have been made by
Page 114 U. S. 443
the defendants, and did not report more than nominal damages.
The court sustained the exceptions and decreed to the plaintiff
$1,312.50, being for 35 pieces of infringing carpet made and sold
by the defendants at 50 yards per piece, or 1,750 yards at 75 cents
per yard, as the plaintiff's profit per yard on carpet of the
patented design. The final decree was for $1,312.50 and costs, and
a perpetual injunction. The defendants have appealed.
The circuit court proceeded on the ground, as stated in its
decision, 10 F. 385, that it was to be presumed that the
defendants' carpets displaced in the market an equal quantity of
the plaintiffs' carpets, and that the profits which the plaintiffs
would have made on that quantity of carpets was the measure of
their damages. It rejected the claims for losses for any greater
decline in the plaintiffs' sales, and on looms, as "too remotely
connected with the defendants' acts as their supposed cause," and
"too speculative in their character," to be allowed.
Leaving out of view all question as to the presumption that the
plaintiffs would have made and sold, in addition to the carpets of
the patented designs which they did make and sell, the infringing
carpets which the defendants made and sold, which are alleged to
have been of poorer quality and cheaper in price, it is plain that
the price per yard allowed as damages was the entire profit to the
plaintiffs, per yard, in the manufacture and sale of carpets of the
patented designs, and not merely the value which the designs
contributed to the carpets. There was no evidence as to that
value.
It is provided by § 4921 of the Revised Statutes that, in a suit
in equity for the infringement of a patent, the plaintiff may, on a
decree in his favor, recover the damages he has sustained, in
addition to the profits to be accounted for by the defendant, such
damages to be assessed by the court or under its direction, and
with the same power to increase the damages, in the discretion of
the court, as in the case of verdicts, and the damages intended are
"the actual damages sustained," in the language of § 4919.
Root
v. Railway Co., 105 U. S. 189,
105 U. S. 212.
By § 4933, all these provisions apply to patents for designs.
Page 114 U. S. 444
This Court has, in a series of decisions, laid down rules as to
what are to be regarded as "profits to be accounted for by the
defendant," and what as "actual damages," in suits for the
infringement of patents, and no rule has been sanctioned which will
allow, in the case of a patent for a design for ornamental figures
created in the weaving of a carpet or imprinted on it, the entire
profit from the manufacture and sale of the carpet as profits or
damages, including all the profits from carding, spinning, dyeing,
and weaving, thus regarding the entire profits as due to the figure
or pattern, unless it is shown by reliable evidence that the entire
profit is due to the figure of pattern. It is matter of common
knowledge that there is an infinite variety of patterns in carpets,
and that, between two carpets of equal cost to make and equal merit
as to durability of fabric and fastness of color, each with a
pattern pleasing to the taste, one having a design free to be used
and the other a design protected by a patent, the latter may or may
not command in the market a price larger than the former. If it
does, then the increased price may fairly be attributed to the
design, and there is a solid basis of evidence for profits or
damages. But short of this, under the rules established by this
Court, there is no such basis. The same principle is applicable as
in patents for inventions. The burden is upon the plaintiff, and if
he fails to give the necessary evidence, but resorts instead to
inference and conjecture and speculation, he must fail for want of
proof. There is another suggestion of great force. The carpet with
the infringing design may be made on an infringing loom, and
various infringing processes or mechanisms for carding, spinning,
or dyeing may be used in making it, and if the entire profit in
making and selling it is necessarily to be attributed to the
pattern, so it may as well on principle be attributed to each of
the other infringements, and a defendant might be called on to
respond many times over for the same amount. There is but one safe
rule: to require the actual damages or profits to be established by
trustworthy legal proof.
It is not necessary to cite at length from the cases decided by
this Court on the subject. It is sufficient to refer to them,
Page 114 U. S. 445
as follows:
Livingston v.
Woodworth, 15 How. 546;
Seymour v.
McCormick, 16 How. 480;
Mayor of
New York v. Ransom, 23 How. 487;
Mowry v.
Whitney, 14 Wall. 620;
Philp v.
Nock, 17 Wall. 460;
Littlefield v.
Perry, 21 Wall. 205;
Birdsall v. Coolidge,
93 U. S. 64;
Cawood Patent, 94 U. S. 695;
Blake v. Robertson, 94 U. S. 728;
Garretson v. Clark, 111 U. S. 120;
Black v. Thorne, 111 U. S. 122. The
true rule which applies also to a patent for a design was
formulated thus by this Court in
Garretson v. Clark:
"The patentee must in every case give evidence tending to
separate or apportion the defendant's profits and the patentee's
damages between the patented feature and the unpatented features,
and such evidence must be reliable and tangible, and not
conjectural or speculative; or he must show by equally reliable and
satisfactory evidence that the profits and damages are to be
calculated on the whole machine, for the reason that the entire
value of the whole machine, as a marketable article, is properly
and legally attributable to the patented feature."
The case of
Manufacturing Co. v. Cowing, 105 U.
S. 253, was a case falling within the last clause of the
rule thus stated, and was an exceptional case, as was stated by THE
CHIEF JUSTICE in the opinion. The general rule was recognized in
that case, and the exception was made, in regard to the oil well
gas pump there involved, because there was only a limited and local
demand for it, which could not be, and was not, supplied by any
other pump.
The rule in question is even more applicable to a patent for a
design than to one for mechanism. A design or pattern in
ornamentation or shape appeals only to the taste through the eye,
and is often a matter of evanescent caprice. The article which
embodies it is not necessarily or generally any more serviceable or
durable than an article for the same use having a different design
or pattern. Approval of the particular design or pattern may very
well be one motive for purchasing the article containing it, but
the article must have intrinsic merits of quality and structure, to
obtain a purchaser, aside from the pattern or design, and to
attribute in law the entire profit to the pattern, to the exclusion
of the other merits, unless it is shown, by evidence, as a fact,
that the profit ought to be so attributed,
Page 114 U. S. 446
not only violates the statutory rules of "actual damages" and of
"profits to be accounted for" but confounds all distinctions
between cause and effect.
The decrees must therefore all of them be reversed as to the
damages awarded.
As to No. 1, though the bill was taken as confessed, the
defendants take the point that the patent is void on its face
because it has 19 claims. It has a claim for an entire pattern, and
then a separate claim for each of 18 component parts making up the
whole. The bill alleges infringement by the making and selling of
the "invention," and of carpets containing the "invention." Even if
the defendants can raise this point after a decree
pro
confesso (
see Thomson v. Wooster, ante, 114 U. S. 104),
the patent must be held valid at least for the purposes of this
case.
In No. 2, the question of proof of making and selling by the
defendants before suit brought is raised. But we think, on the
pleadings and all the proofs, including the defendants' letter of
April 13, 1880, the case is made out. The point is also taken that
this patent is void because it has a claim for the entire pattern
and three claims for each of three constituent parts of it. No such
point is taken in the answer, which speaks of the patent as one for
a single design. If the Patent Office, in view of the question of
fees and for other reasons, grants a patent for an entire design,
with a claim for that, and a claim for each one of various
constituent members of it as a separate design, we see no objection
to it, leaving the novelty of the whole and of each part, and the
validity of the patent, open to contestation. The mere joinder of
such claims in one grant does not
per se invalidate the
patent or any particular claim at the objection of a defendant.
In No. 3, objection is taken to the patent because it claims
"the design for a carpet, substantially as shown." As the bill is
the same in form as that in No. 1 and was taken
pro
confesso, the patent is valid at least for the purposes of
this case. Aside from this, we see no good objection to the form of
the claim. It refers to the description as well as the drawing, in
using the word "shown." The objection is also made as to No. 3
Page 114 U. S. 447
that the patent is for an aggregation of old ornaments, and
embodies no invention. This objection is concluded for this case by
the language of the bill and the decree
pro confesso.
The final decrees in all of the suits are reversed and the
cases are remanded to the circuit court with directions to disallow
the award of damages in each suit and to award six cents damages in
each, and to allow to the defendants a recovery in each case for
their costs after interlocutory decree, and to the plaintiff in
each case a recovery for its costs to and including interlocutory
decree.