Where the plaintiff really makes a substantial claim under an
Act of Congress, the district court has jurisdiction whether the
claim ultimately be held good or bad.
The Fair v. Kohler Die
Co., 228 U. S. 22.
Jurisdiction is the power to consider and decide one way or the
other as the law may require; it is not to be declined because it
is not foreseen with certainty that the party invoking it may
succeed.
Where a bill includes several causes of action, some arising
under the patent laws and others on breach of contractual
relations, and one of the defendants is a corporation that cannot
be sued in the district without its consent, save in cases arising
under the patent laws, the rule in equity respecting joinder of
causes of action yields to the jurisdictional statute and, if the
designated defendant objects to the jurisdiction, the bill must be
dismissed, so far as that defendant is concerned, as to the causes
of action not arising under the patent laws.
Whether in such a case all the causes of action may be
maintained in a single bill as against the other defendants is a
question of general equity jurisdiction and practice, and is not
open to consideration on direct appeal to this Court under §
238, Judicial Code.
Bogart v. Southern Pacific Co.,
228 U. S. 137.
Page 238 U. S. 255
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of the district court
in cases arising under the patent laws of the United States, are
stated in the opinion.
Page 238 U. S. 257
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a direct appeal under Judicial Code, § 238, from a
decree dismissing a suit in equity for want of jurisdiction, the
question for decision being whether the bill presents a case
arising under the patent laws -- that is, a case asserting some
right or privilege under those laws which will be sustained by one
construction of them or defeated by another. Although not a model
of good pleading, the bill plainly shows, when all of its is
considered, that it is intended to charge the defendants (a) with
contributing to the infringement of letters patent belonging to the
plaintiff by wrongfully inducing and persuading designated
licensees of the plaintiff to make, use, and sell devices embodying
the inventions of the patents in circumstances not authorized or
permitted by their licenses, (b) with wrongfully procuring such
licensees to violate their license contracts in designated
particulars, some of which have no bearing on the charge of
infringement, and (c) with refusing to perform stipulations whereby
the defendants agreed to assign to the plaintiff certain other
letters patent. The prayer is for an injunction and accounting in
respect of the contributory infringement, for an injunction and
damages in respect of the procured breach of the licensees'
contractual obligations, and for the specific performance of the
stipulations to assign the other letters patent. The plaintiff is
described as a New York corporation, one of the defendants as a
West Virginia corporation, another as an Illinois corporation, and
the third as an individual citizen of the latter state. The West
Virginia company is alleged to have a regular and established place
of business in the Northern District of Illinois, and the acts of
infringement and contributory infringement are charged to have been
committed in that district. Then there is an allegation that the
suit is one "arising under the patent
Page 238 U. S. 258
laws of the United States, and also between citizens of
different states," and that the amount in controversy exceeds
$3,000, exclusive of interest and costs.
If the suit be one arising under the patent laws the district
court undoubtedly had jurisdiction, Jud.Code, § 24, par. 7 and
§§ 48 and 256, but if it be not such a suit, that court
was obviously without jurisdiction as respects the West Virginia
company unless it chose to waive its privilege of being sued only
in the district of its residence or that of the plaintiff. §
51. Appearing specially, that company objected that the suit was
not one arising under the patent laws, and insisted upon its
personal privilege. The objection was sustained. The other
defendants, likewise appearing specially, objected that the suit
did not arise under the patent laws, and could not proceed without
the presence of the West Virginia company because it was an
indispensable party. This objection also was sustained, and the
bill was then dismissed, the decree reciting that the dismissal was
for want of jurisdiction.
We think the bill plainly rests the first branch of the suit,
that relating to the alleged contributory infringement of the
plaintiff's patents, upon the patent laws, and asserts in effect,
if not in exact words, that the infringing acts charged against the
defendants constitute an invasion of the plaintiff's exclusive
rights under those laws and entitle it to relief thereunder by
injunction and a recovery of profits and damages. And we think it
cannot be said of this branch of the case that it is so
unsubstantial or devoid of merit as to make it frivolous, or to
bring it only nominally within the patent laws. On the contrary, we
think it presents a real question under them. Whether it shall
finally prevail or fail, it has enough of substance to entitle the
plaintiff to an adjudication of it as presented. Thus, it is within
the ruling in
The Fair v. Kohler Die & Specialty Co.,
228 U. S. 22,
228 U. S. 25,
that
"if the plaintiff really makes a substantial claim under an act
of Congress, there is jurisdiction
Page 238 U. S. 259
whether the claim ultimately be held good or bad."
Jurisdiction, as pointed out in that case, is the power to
consider and decide one way or the other, as the law may require,
and is not to be declined merely because it is not foreseen with
certainty that the outcome will help the plaintiff. Of like import
is
Healy v. Sea Gull Specialty Co., 237 U.
S. 479.
We therefore hold that so much of the bill as charges the
defendants with contributory infringement of the plaintiff's
letters patent, and seeks relief on that ground, presents a case
arising under the patent laws of which the district court should
have taken jurisdiction.
But the other portions of the bill stand upon a different
footing. The causes of action which they present -- those not
founded upon an unauthorized making, using, or selling of devices
embodying the inventions of the plaintiff's patents, but resting
only upon a breach of contractual obligations -- do not arise under
the patent laws.
New Marshall Engine Co. v. Marshall Engine
Co., 223 U. S. 473;
Henry v. A. B. Dick Co., 224 U. S. 1,
224 U. S. 14-15.
As to them, no federal court can take jurisdiction of a suit
against the West Virginia company without its consent, save in the
district of its residence or that of the plaintiff (Jud.Code,
§ 51), and it hardly needs statement that the jurisdiction as
limited and fixed by Congress cannot be enlarged or extended by
uniting in a single suit causes of action of which the court is
without jurisdiction with one of which it has jurisdiction. Upon
this point, the rule otherwise prevailing respecting the joinder of
causes of action in suits in equity must, of course, yield to the
jurisdictional statute. Thus, the West Virginia company's
objection, while not good as to the entire bill, was good as to the
causes of action not arising under the patent laws. Whether these
causes of action can be retained as against the other defendants,
after they are eliminated so far as the West Virginia company is
concerned, is not open to consideration now. It
Page 238 U. S. 260
is not a question of federal jurisdiction within the meaning of
§ 238, but only one of general equity jurisdiction and
practice applicable as well to state as to federal courts.
Bogart v. Southern Pacific Co., 228 U.
S. 137, and cases cited.
The decree of dismissal is reversed, and the cause is remanded
for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Decree reversed.