Leeds & Catlin Co. v. Victor Talking Machine Co.,
ante, p.
213 U. S. 301,
followed as to validity of Berliner patent for talking
machines.
There is a distinction between the article which a combination
machine deals with and the constituent elements composing the
combination, and while it may not be infringement to supply the
unpatented article dealt with by the combination, it is
infringement to make and supply an unpatented element, necessary
for the operation of the combination.
Morgan Envelope Co. v.
Albany Paper Co., 152 U. S. 425,
distinguished.
The combination itself, regardless of whether any or all of the
elements be old or new, is the invention, and, in law, is as much a
unit as a single or noncomposite instrument, and one using or
contributing to its use without permission infringes it.
Page 213 U. S. 326
Whether the elements of a combination patent are or are not
patented is immaterial.
Where an element of a combination becomes unfit by
deterioration, there is a destruction of the combination, and a
renewal of that element amounts to reconstruction
The right of substitution or resupply of elements of a
combination extends only to repair and replacement made necessary
by deterioration so as to preserve its fitness; license goes no
further, and does not extend to furnishing such elements to
increase effectiveness or variety of the results of the
combination.
Unpatented elements of a patented combination may not be sold
for use therewith, although they may legally be sold for use with
other machines, and so
held that it was infringement to
sell record discs specially adapted therefor to the users of a
patented talking machine although such discs were not patented and
could lawfully be used in combination with other talking
machines.
150 F. 147, 154 F. 58, affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 213 U. S. 329
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
This writ was issued to bring up for review the judgment of the
circuit court, affirmed by the circuit court of appeals, adjudging
petitioner guilty of contempt of court for violating the injunction
which has just been considered in No. 80, and to pay a fine of
$1,000, one-half to the United States and one-half to complainants
in the suit, respondents here.
The injunction, as we said in the opinion in No. 80, enjoined
petitioner, the Leeds & Catlin Company, from manufacturing,
using, or selling the method expressed in Claim 5 of letters patent
No. 534,543 to Emil Berliner, dated February 19, 1895, or the
apparatus covered by Claim 35.
On the fifteenth of November, 1906, respondent Victor Talking
Machine Company filed a petition in the circuit court, charging
petitioner with a violation of such injunction. A rule was issued
against the Leeds & Catlin Company to show cause why an
attachment should not issue against it for contempt of court for
violating the injunction, which came on to be heard upon supporting
and opposing affidavits and the answer of the Leeds & Catlin
Company.
Page 213 U. S. 330
A judgment was entered adjudging the Leeds & Catlin Company
guilty of contempt, which was affirmed by the circuit court of
appeals. 150 F. 147, 154 F. 58.
The answer of petitioner referred to the record in No. 80, and
in this Court it is stipulated that the record shall be used as
part of the record in the pending cases, and certain of the
defenses there made are repeated here. For instance, it is
contended, and the record in No. 80 is adduced to support the
contention, that (1) the patent in suit having expired before the
suit was begun, the circuit court was without jurisdiction to
entertain the suit; (2) claims in suit being for the functions of a
machine are void. And it is further contended that,
"hence the judgment finding defendant [petitioner] in contempt
(a) was void because beyond the jurisdiction of the court, and (b)
should be set aside because, the claims being void, the injunction
was improperly granted."
These contentions are disposed of by the opinion in No. 80, and
we may confine our discussions to the other defenses made in the
contempt proceedings.
The facts are practically undisputed, and a detail of them is
unnecessary. It is enough to say that petitioner is a manufacturer
of disc records, such as are described in No. 80. That is, a record
upon which is inscribed a lateral undulating groove of even depth,
which, when the disc is revolved, compels the reproducing stylus to
be vibrated and propelled across its face.
It will be observed how important the record is to the invention
embodied in the claims. It is the undulations in the side walls of
the spiral groove which vibrate the stylus back and froth,
transmitting the recorded sound waves to the diaphragm at the same
time propelling the stylus as it engaged with the record. It a
comparison may be made between the importance of the elements, as
high a degree (if not a higher degree) must be awarded to the disc
with its lateral undulations as to the stylus. It is the disc that
serves to distinguish the invention -- to mark the advance upon the
prior art. "As to the reproducing stylus," as is said by
respondent,
"it is only necessary that it should be shaped for engagement
with the record,
Page 213 U. S. 331
and so positioned and supported as to be free to be vibrated and
propelled by the record."
The lower courts found that most of the sales (we quote from the
opinion of the circuit court of appeals) of the records by
petitioner
"were knowingly made . . . to enable the owners of Victor
talking machines to reproduce such musical pieces as they wished by
the combination of the Leeds & Catlin record with said
machines; that the Leeds & Catlin Company made no effort to
restrict the use to which their records might be put until after
motion to punish for contempt had been made; that the only effort
at such restriction ever made was to insert upon the face of the
record a notice to the effect that such record was intended and
sold for use with the 'feed-device' machine; that the records sold
by plaintiff in error [petitioner] were far more frequently bought
to increase the repertoire of the purchaser's Victor machine than
to replace worn-out or broken records."
The "feed-device machine" referred to by the court was a talking
machine bought by petitioner after, as petitioner avers, the
circuit court of appeals affirmed the injunction, and in connection
with which it sold, as it also avers, and used, its sound records.
The court assumed for the purpose of the cause, that the
feed-device machine might be regarded as not infringing any of the
rights of the Victor Company under the Berliner patent. The court
further found that it was established by the evidence that the
discs were equally suitable for that machine as for the machine of
the Victor Company, but that it
"was not at or before the time of beginning this proceeding, a
practically or commercially known reproducer of musical or spoken
sound, whereas the Victor machine, embodying the claims of the
Berliner patent here under consideration, was at such times widely
known and generally used, and that the plaintiff in error
[petitioner] knew, and sold its records with the knowledge that, if
its output was to be used at all by the public, it would be used
with the Victor machine, and in the combination protected by the
claims of the Berliner patent, above referred to."
And the court concluded that, upon these
Page 213 U. S. 332
facts, it was clear that petitioner had
"made and sold a single element of the claims of the Berliner
patent, with the intent that it should be united to the other
element and complete the combination; and this is infringement.
Heaton-Peninsular Co. v. Eureka Co., 77 F. 297, adopted by
this court,
Cortelyou v. Lowe, 111 F. 1005."
Petitioner contests the conclusion and opposes it by the
principle which, it is contended, is established by cases in this
Court, as well as at circuit, that
"the person who has purchased a patented combination from the
patentee has the right to replace an unpatented element of the
combination, and for such purpose to purchase such element from
another than the patentee or his licensee."
To bring this principle in clear relief, it is said that
"the majority of the circuit court of appeals has held that such
replacement of a single unpatented element of the combination is
reconstruction, and not within the rights of the purchaser of the
patented combination from the patentee."
And, to complete its argument, petitioner added that, where an
inventor so arranges the parts of his patented combination that it
cannot satisfactorily, successfully, or usefully be continued in
use without successive replacements of one of its elements,
"the replacement of such element, if unpatented, by the
purchaser of the combination from the patentee, is in accordance
with the intention of the patentee, and not a reconstruction of the
patented combination, but an act within the rights of the
purchaser."
For these principles,
Morgan Envelope Co. v. Albany Paper
Co., 152 U. S. 425;
Wilson v.
Simpson, 9 How. 109;
Goodyear Shoe Machinery
Co. v. Jackson, 112 F. 146, are adduced.
The question in the case, therefore, is single and direct, and
its discussion may be brought to a narrow compass. Its solution
depends upon the application of some rudimentary principles of
patent law.
A combination is a composition of elements, some of which may be
old and others new, or all old or all new. It is, however, the
combination that is the invention, and is as much a unit in
contemplation of law as a single or noncomposite instrument.
Page 213 U. S. 333
Whoever uses it without permission is an infringer of it. It may
be well here to get rid of a misleading consideration. It can make
no difference as to the infringement or noninfringement of a
combination that one of its elements or all of its elements are
unpatented. For instance, in the case at bar, the issue between the
parties would be exactly the same even if the record disc were a
patented article which petitioner had a license to use or to which
respondent had no rights independent of his right to its use in the
combination. In other words, the fact that the disc sold by
petitioner is unpatented does not affect the question involved
except to give an appearance of a limitation of the rights of an
owner of a Victor machine other than those which attach to him as a
purchaser. The question is, what is the relation of the purchaser
to the Victor Company? What rights does he derive from it? To use
the machine, of course, but it is the concession of the argument of
petitioner that he may not reconstruct it. Has he a license to
repair deterioration, and when does repair become reconstruction?
It would seem that, on principle, when deterioration of an element
has reached the point of unfitness, there is a destruction of the
combination, and a renewal of the element is a reconstruction of
the combination. And it would also seem on principle that there
could be no license implied from difference in the durability of
the elements or periodicity in their use. This, however, is
asserted, and we come to the consideration of the cases upon which
the assertion is based, and how far it has application under the
facts of this record.
Great stress is put upon
Morgan Envelope Co. v. Albany Co.
supra. That case was a bill in equity for the infringement of
three letters patent -- one for a "package of toilet paper," known
as an "oval roll" or "oval king" package, one for a "toilet paper
fixture," and one for an "apparatus for holding toilet paper." The
first patent was declared invalid for want of novelty. Of the other
two it was said that they were practically the same, and were for
a
"combination of the paper roll described
Page 213 U. S. 334
in the former patent, with a mechanism for the delivery of the
paper to the user in an economical manner."
It was conceded that the mechanism of the patents involved
patentable novelty, but it was contended that, it being constructed
for the purpose of delivering paper to users inconvenient length,
such a roll was not a proper part of the combination, and that,
conceding it was a part of the combination, there was no
infringement. The first contention, the court said, raised the
question whether, when a machine is designed to manufacture,
distribute, or serve out to users a certain article, the article so
dealt with can be said to be a part of the combination of which the
machine itself is another part. In commenting on the question, the
court expressed the view that, if the contention could be
sustained,
"it would seem to follow that the log which is sawn in the mill,
the wheat which is ground by the rollers, the pin which is produced
by the patented machine, the paper which is folded and delivered by
the printing press,"
might be claimed as an element of a combination. The court,
however, refrained from expressing an opinion upon the point,
because it conceived that the facts of the case failed to sustain
the charge of infringement. And this on the ground that the
defendants in the suit had neither made, sold, nor used the
patented mechanism, except as they purchased it from the patentee,
and the only acts proven against them were that they sold rolls of
paper of their own manufacture with fixtures manufactured and sold
by the plaintiff, the fixtures having been obtained by defendants
from the original purchasers of the patented combination; and also
of selling oval rolls of paper of their own manufacture to persons
who had previously purchased fixture and paper from the plaintiff,
with the knowledge and information that the paper so sold was to be
used in connection with plaintiff's fixtures. The court stated the
question to be whether, considering the combination of the oval
roll with the fixture to be a valid combination, the sale of one
element of
such (italic ours) a combination with the
intention that it should be used with the other elements was an
infringement. The answer was in the
Page 213 U. S. 335
negative. The court, however, stated, that there were cases to
the effect that the sale of one element of a combination with
intention that it should be used with another was an infringement,
but decided that they had no application to one where the element
made by the alleged infringer was
"an article of manufacture, perishable in its nature which it is
the object of the mechanism to deliver, and must be renewed
periodically whenever the device is put to use."
The case, therefore, is not a precedent for the decision of that
at bar. Not one of the determining factors there stated exist in
the case at bar. If the operative relation of the paper roll to the
mechanism was as illustrated (and the court left no doubt that it
was) -- that is, of the log to the saw in the mill, wheat to the
rollers which grind it, pins which are produced by a patent machine
-- in other words, in no more operative relation than a machine and
its product are -- the invalidity of the combination was hardly
questionable. And, besides, it was made a determining circumstance
that the paper perished by its use, and a periodical renewal was
indicated to be a renewal "whenever the device was put to use." The
case has no principle or reasoning applicable to the case at bar.
The combination in the case at bar is valid, as we have
unhesitatingly declared. The function it performs is the result of
the joint action of the disc and the stylus. The disc is not a mere
concomitant to the stylus -- it coacts with the stylus to produce
the result. Indeed, as we have seen, it is the distinction of the
invention, constituting, by its laterally undulating line of even
depth and the effect thereof, the advance upon the prior art. To
confound its active cooperation with the mere passivity of the
paper in the mechanism described in the
Morgan Envelope
Company is not only to confound essential distinctions made by
the patent laws, but essential distinctions between entirely
different things. Besides, the lower courts found that the discs
were not perishable. As said by the court of appeals, by Judge
Hough:
"Disc records are fragile,
i.e., brittle and easily
broken; but they are not perishable --
i.e., subject to
decay by their inherent qualities, or consumed by few uses
Page 213 U. S. 336
or a single use. Neither are they temporary --
i.e.,
not intended to endure; on the contrary, we find them capable of
remaining useful for an indefinite period, and believe that they
usually last as long as does the vogue of the sounds they
record."
Can petitioner find justification under the right of repair and
replacement as described in
Wilson v.
Simpson, 9 How. 109, and
Chaffee v.
Boston Belting Co., 22 How. 217? The court of
appeals, in passing on these cases, considered that there was no
essential difference between the meaning of the words "repair and
replacement." That they both meant restoration was recognized in
Wilson v. Simpson, supra, where it is said that the
language of the court in
Wilson v.
Rousseau, 4 How. 709, did not permit the assignee
of a patent to make other machines or reconstruct them in gross
upon the frame of machines which the assignee had in use,
"but it does comprehend and permit the resupply of the effective
ultimate tool of the invention, which is liable to be often worn
out or to become inoperative for its intended effect, which the
inventor contemplated would have to be frequently replaced anew,
during the time that the machine as a whole might last."
But there is no pretense in the case at bar of mending broken or
worn-out records, or of repairing or replacing "the operative
ultimate tool of the invention" which has deteriorated by use. The
sales of petitioner, as found by the courts below and as
established by the evidence, were not to furnish new records
identical with those originally offered by the Victor Company, but,
to use the language of Judge in the circuit court, "more frequently
in order to increase the repertory of tunes than as substituted for
worn-out records."
The right of substitution or "resupply" of an element depends
upon the same test. The license granted to a purchaser of a
patented combination is to preserve its fitness for use so far as
it may be affected by wear or breakage. Beyond this, there is no
license.
It is further contended by petitioner that the disc records,
Page 213 U. S. 337
being unpatented articles of commerce, which could be used upon
the mechanical feed-device machine or exported to foreign
countries, or concededly for repair of machines sold by respondent,
petitioner could legally sell the same. A detailed comment on this
contention or of the cases cited to support it we need not make.
The facts of the case exclude petitioner from the situation which
is the foundation of the contention. The injunction did not forbid
the use of the records, except in violation of Claims 5 and 35 of
respondent's patent. The judgment for contempt was based upon the
facts which we have detailed, and they show a sale of the records
for use in the Victor machine -- "an entirely voluntary and
intentional" (to use the language of Judge Lacombe) contributory
infringement.
We have seen that the circuit court of appeals assumed, for the
purposes of this cause, that the feed-device machine was not an
infringement of the machine of the patent. We may assume the same,
and we are relieved from reviewing the very long and complex
affidavits submitted by the petitioner to explain the same,
petitioner's relation to it, or its position in the art of sound
reproduction. Petitioner was found guilty of selling records which
constituted an element in the combination of the patent in suit,
and for that petitioner was punished. Upon whatever questions or
contentions may arise from the use of the feed-device machine we
reserve opinion.
We have not reviewed or commented on the other cases cited
respectively by petitioner and respondents in support of their
contentions, deeming those we have considered and the principles we
have announced sufficient for our decision.
Judgment affirmed.