In
Diamond Rubber Co. v. Consolidated Rubber Tire Co.,
220 U. S. 428, the
Grant tire patent was sustained as a patentable combination, not as
a mere aggregation of elements, but as a new combination of parts
co-acting so as to produce a new and useful result; nor did the
patentability depend on the novelty of any of the elements entering
into it.
Where the combination is protected by such a patent, one
manufacturing it by assembling the various elements and effecting
the combination is not entitled to immunity from prosecution for
infringing because he purchases one element from a party who is
immune under a provision in a decree permitting it to sell the
patented article itself.
Kessler v. Eldred, 206 U.
S. 285, distinguished.
In this case,
held that the immunity given by a
provision in a decree to a specified party manufacturing and
selling an article as a patentable
Page 232 U. S. 414
combination producing new result is not transferable, and such
party, although immune himself, cannot enjoin the prosecution of
suit against another as an infringer because the later purchases
from him one of the element used in manufacturing the article.
183 F. 978 reversed.
The facts, which involve the construction of a decree in a
patent case and the extent and effect of the immunity granted
thereunder to manufacture the patented article and the several
elements thereof, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioners are the owners of the Grant patent (No. 554,675)
issued February 18, 1896, for an improvement in rubber-tired
wheels. In a suit for infringement brought by the petitioners
against the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company (the respondent), it
was held by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit that
the patent was void for want of novelty.
Goodyear Tire &
Rubber Co. v. Rubber Tire Wheel Co., 116 F. 363. Upon the
basis of the decree entered upon that decision, the respondent
instituted the present suit in the Southern District of Ohio to
restrain the petitioners from prosecuting suits for infringement
against the respondent's customers. The circuit court granted a
preliminary injunction. Upon appeal, the Circuit Court of Appeals
for the Sixth Circuit sustained the injunction so far as it applied
to the prosecution of a suit which the petitioners had brought
against John Doherty in the Circuit Court for the Southern District
of New York. 183 F. 978. This writ of certiorari was then
granted.
Page 232 U. S. 415
The Grant tire is composed of three elements: (1) a channel or
groove with tapered or inclined sides, (2) a rubber tire with a
described shape, adapted to fit into the channel, and (3) a
fastening device consisting of independent retaining wires, which
pass through the rubber tire and are placed in a particular
position. It was held in the Sixth Circuit that both the elements
and the results were old, and hence patentability was denied.
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Rubber Tire Wheel Co. supra;
Rubber-Tire Wheel Co. v. Victor Rubber-Tire Co., 123 F. 85. In
the Second Circuit, and in the Circuit Court for the Northern
District of Georgia, the patent was sustained.
Rubber Tire
Wheel Co. v. Columbia Pneumatic Wagon Wheel Co., 91 F. 978;
Consolidated Rubber Tire Co. v. Finley Rubber Tire Co.,
116 F. 629;
Consolidated Rubber Tire Co. v. Firestone Tire
& Rubber Co., 147 F. 739, 151 F. 237;
Consolidated
Rubber Tire Co. v. Diamond Rubber Co., 157 F. 677,162 F. 892.
The controversy came to this Court upon certiorari to review the
decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in
the case last mentioned, and it was finally determined that the
patent was valid.
Diamond Rubber Co. v. Consolidated Rubber
Tire Co., 220 U. S. 428. The
patented structure was held to be not a mere aggregation of
elements, but a new combination of parts, co-acting so as to
produce a new and useful result. It was found that the Grant tire
possessed a distinctive characteristic -- that is, a "tipping and
reseating power." This, said this Court,
"is the result of something more than each element acting
separately. It is not the result alone of the iron channel, with
diverging sides, nor alone of the retaining bands or the rubber.
They each have uses and perform them to an end different from the
effect of either, and they must have been designed to such end,
contrived to exactly produce it. There can be no other deduction
from their careful relation. The adaptation of the rubber to
Page 232 U. S. 416
the flaring channel, the shape of that permitting lateral
movement and compression, the retaining band, holding and yielding,
placed in such precise adjustment and correlation with the other
parts, producing a tire that 'when compressed and bent sidewise
shall not escape from the channel, and shall not be cut on the
flange of the channel,' and yet shall 'be mobile in the
channel.'"
220 U.S. p.
220 U. S. 443.
There was thus a patentable combination, the patentability of which
did not depend on the novelty of any of the elements entering into
it, whether rubber, iron, or wires.
Doherty, against whom suit was enjoined, had a shop in New York
City where he was engaged in the business of applying rubber tires
to vehicle wheels. It appeared that having purchased the rubber
from the respondent, and the wire and channel from other parties,
he combined these elements and fitted them to a carriage wheel,
thus constructing a complete tire. This we may assume to be a
typical case.
It is at once apparent that the decree in favor of the Goodyear
Company in the former suit does not work an estoppel in favor of
Doherty, so as to afford him a defense against the charge of
infringement in making the patented structure. He was not a party
to the suit in which that decree was rendered; nor, at least with
respect to tires made by him, can he be regarded as a privy to that
decree. We may lay on one side the question as to the rights of one
purchasing from the respondent the completed article. Doherty did
not purchase it; he made it himself, assembling its various
elements for that purpose and effecting the combination. On no
possible theory can it be said that, if the tire thus constructed
was covered by the patent, Doherty was entitled to immunity simply
because he bought one element of the time from the Goodyear
Company.
The respondent, however, is asserting its own right, and not
that of Doherty. It insists that, by virtue of the
Page 232 U. S. 417
decree in its favor in the infringement suit, it should have the
injunction in order to protect its trade. It contends that it has
an equitable right to this protection by restraining suits not only
against those who buy from it the structure which is the subject of
the patent, but also against those who buy its rubber and
themselves make the patented tire. In urging this contention, the
respondent relies upon the doctrine of
Kessler v. Eldred,
206 U. S. 285.
There, Kessler and Eldred were rival manufacturers of electric
cigar lighters. Eldred, being the owner of the Chambers patent,
sued Kessler in the Northern District of Indiana for infringement.
The circuit court, finding noninfringement, dismissed the bill, and
this decree was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the
Seventh Circuit. 106 F. 509. Subsequently, Eldred brought suit on
the same patent in the Northern District of New York against
Kirkland, who was selling a similar cigar lighter, but not of
Kessler's make. The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
held the Kirkland lighter to be an infringement. 130 F. 342. Eldred
then began a suit for infringement in the Western District of New
York against Breitwieser, a user of Kessler's lighters. Thereupon
Kessler filed his bill in the Circuit Court for the Northern
District of Illinois to enjoin Eldred from prosecuting suit against
anyone for alleged infringement of the Chambers patent by purchase,
use, or sale of any electric cigar lighter manufactured by Kessler,
and identical with the lighter before the court in the suit of
Eldred v. Kessler. Kessler, being defeated in the circuit
court, appealed to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh
Circuit. Answering questions certified by that court, this Court
held that the decree in the suit of
Eldred v. Kessler had
the effect of entitling Kessler to continue the business of
manufacturing and selling throughout the United States the same
lighter he had theretofore been manufacturing and selling, without
molestation by Eldred
Page 232 U. S. 418
through the patent which he held, and that the decree also had
the effect of making a suit by Eldred against any customer of
Kessler for the alleged infringement of the patent by use or sale
of Kessler's lighters a wrongful interference with Kessler's
business, with respect to which he was without adequate remedy at
law.
206 U. S. 206
U.S. 287,
206 U. S. 290.
It will be observed that the equity thus sustained sprang from
the decree in the former suit between the parties, and that the
decision went no further than to hold it to be a wrongful
interference with Kessler's business to sue his customers for using
and selling the lighter which Kessler had made and sold to them,
and which was the same as that passed upon by the court in the
previous suit. His right to make and sell the particular article,
the making of which Eldred had unsuccessfully challenged as an
infringement, was deemed to include the right to have others secure
in buying that article, and in its use and resale. But the present
question was in no way involved. It was not held that Kessler would
have been entitled to restrain Eldred from suing other
manufacturers of lighters who might buy from Kessler some of the
materials used in such manufacture.
The distinction is controlling. Under the doctrine of
Kessler v. Eldred, the respondent -- by reason of the
final adjudication in its favor -- was entitled to make and sell
the Grant structure, and to have those who bought that structure
from it unmolested in taking title and in enjoying the rights of
ownership. It may also be assumed that the respondent had the right
to make and sell its rubber without hindrance by the petitioners
claiming under the patent. The trade right of the respondent,
however, whether with respect to the complete structure or its
separate parts, is merely the right to have that which it lawfully
produces freely bought and sold without restraint or interference.
It is a right which attaches to its product -- to a particular
thing -- as an article of lawful commerce,
Page 232 U. S. 419
and it continues only so long as the commodity to which the
right applies retains its separate identity. If that commodity is
combined with other things in the process of the manufacture of a
new commodity, the trade right in the original part as an article
of commerce is necessarily gone. So that, when other persons become
manufacturers on their own behalf, assembling the various elements
and uniting them so as to produce the patented device -- a new
article -- it is manifest that the respondent cannot insist upon
their being protected from suit for infringement by reason merely
of its right to make and sell, and the fact of its having made and
sold, some component part of that article. It must be able to go
beyond a mere trade right in that element, and to show itself to be
entitled to have its customers manufacture the patented structure.
Thus, the fallacy in the respondent's contention becomes apparent.
The decree gave the respondent no right to have others make Grant
tires. It could make and sell them, and it could make and sell
rubber; it could demand protection for its trade rights in the
commodities it produced. But it had no transferable immunity in
manufacture. The decree gave it no privilege to demand that others
should be allowed to make and sell the patented structure in order
that it might have a market for its rubber.
The suit against Doherty was based upon his conduct in
constructing Grant tires. The fact that the respondent could not be
charged with liability as a participant in the infringement thus
alleged did not excuse him, and the petitioners, in bringing the
suit, did not violate any right of the respondent.
It is not necessary to consider the evidence bearing upon the
question whether Doherty had authority from the petitioners, as
that is a matter between him and them, and if the facts afford him
a defense, he is free to urge it.
The decree of the circuit court of appeals, in so far
Page 232 U. S. 420
as it affirmed the order of injunction granted by the Circuit
Court, is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the district
court, with instructions to enter an order denying the application
for injunction.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE DAY states that in his view the suit against Doherty
was properly enjoined upon the principles established in this Court
in
Kessler v. Eldred, 206 U. S. 285,
and, without repeating, agrees with the reasoning by which that
conclusion was reached in the opinion of Judge Warrington, speaking
for the circuit court of appeals in this case.