A patent owner sued for infringement in two circuits, the
defendants being, in one case, a corporation which manufactured the
articles complained of, and, in the other, a second corporation
whose shares were owned, and whose conduct was controlled, by the
first, and which, with its manager (joined with it as codefendant),
was acting as the selling agent of the first corporation under its
authority and in its interest. The subject matter and relief prayed
were the same in both suits.
Held that there was such
privity between the defendants that a judgment against the
plaintiff rendered by the circuit court of appeals in the suit
against the manufacturer was
res judicata as to the other
suit, then pending before the circuit court of appeals for the
other circuit.
A decree against the plaintiff in a patent infringement suit was
affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
while its appeal
Page 244 U. S. 295
from a like decree in another suit involving the same
controversy was pending unheard before the Circuit Court of Appeals
for the Seventh Circuit.
Held that a motion for an
affirmance, seasonably made to the latter court and supported by
certified copies of the record and journal entries in the other
case establishing legal identity of the subject matter and privity
of the parties was a proper means of interposing the defense of
res judicata, and that the motion should have been
granted.
222 F. 261 reversed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE delivered the opinion of the court:
This suit is here on certiorari to review the decision of the
Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit.
On December 9, 1908, the respondent herein, the Railroad Supply
Company, as owner of three United States patents,
viz.,
Nos. 538,809, 691,332, and 721,644, filed a bill in the District
Court for the Northern District of Illinois against the Hart Steel
Company and Guilford S. Wood, praying that the defendants be
restrained from infringing certain designated claims of its
patents, which are described in their specifications as covering
new and useful improvements in railway tie plates. This case will
be hereinafter referred to as the first case.
Three months later, on March 26, 1909, the same plaintiff
commenced a second suit against the Elyria Iron & Steel Company
in the District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, praying
for the same relief with respect to the same claim of the same
patents as in the first case.
Page 244 U. S. 296
The two bills differed only as to the parties defendant. The
Elyria Iron & Steel Company, the defendant in the second case,
was a manufacturing corporation and was the owner of all of the
capital stock of the Hart Steel Company, the defendant in the first
case, which was the selling agent of the Elyria Company, and Wood
was its manager.
The same defenses being relied upon in the two cases, the
evidence was taken in the first one, and, by stipulation, a carbon
copy of it was filed in the second, and the same exhibits were used
in the two.
The claimed infringement consisted in the manufacture of a
single order of tie plates by the Elyria Company and the sale of
them by the Hart Company, with Wood as its manager, to the
Atchison, Topeka, & Santa Fe Railroad Company.
Such proceedings were had in the first case that, on December
18, 1911, the Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illinois
decided that the construction or device sold by the defendants did
not infringe the claims of the plaintiff's patents relied upon, and
dismissed the bill for want of equity.
In the second case, such proceedings were had that, on March 4,
1912, the District Court for the Northern District of Ohio entered
precisely the same decree as was entered in the first case.
Each case was appealed to the appropriate circuit court of
appeals, and, on April 7, 1914, that court for the Sixth Circuit,
in a carefully considered opinion, found the claims of the patents
relied upon void for want of novelty and invention, and affirmed
the decision of the district court. A petition for rehearing was
denied on the 30th day of the following June.
On the 6th day of October, 1914, the first day of the next
ensuing term of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh
Circuit, the defendants in the first suit, which
Page 244 U. S. 297
was still pending undetermined, filed a motion praying that
court to affirm the decree of the circuit court upon the ground
that all of the issues in the case had been fully and finally
determined and adjudicated by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the
Sixth Circuit in the second case between the plaintiff and the
Elyria Iron & Steel Company, with which the moving defendants,
the Hart Steel Company and Guilford S. Wood, were in privity. In
support of this motion, a copy of the record and journal entries in
the second case was filed which showed that the two records were
"identical."
The record shows that this motion to affirm the decree of the
circuit court was argued orally on October 6, 1914, and was on the
same day denied, but no reason appears in the record for such
denial.
Subsequently, the case was argued on its merits, and, on January
5th, 1915, the Circuit Court of Appeals for the seventh circuit
found the plaintiff's patents valid and infringed, and, reversing
the decision of the circuit court (then the district court),
remanded the case with an order for an accounting.
The Hart Steel Company and Wood, as petitioners in this Court,
assign as error the overruling by the circuit Court of Appeals of
the Seventh Circuit of their motion to affirm the decision of the
circuit court in their favor.
It is apparent from the foregoing statement that the question
presented to the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Seventh Circuit by
the petitioners' motion to affirm was whether or not the decree of
the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Sixth Circuit was a final
determination of the issues presented in the case pending and not
yet argued in the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Seventh Circuit
so as to be
res judicata and binding on that court because
of the identity of the subject matter and the claims and because of
the privity of the parties.
The doctrine of
res judicata is fully applicable to
cases
Page 244 U. S. 298
of patent infringement, Robinson, Patents, § 983; Walker,
Patents, § 468, and, while the record does not show the
grounds upon which the motion to affirm was overruled, it does show
that the motion was argued, was considered by the court, and
denied. If authority be needed to the point that the claim thus
made for the effect of the judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals
of the Sixth Circuit was presented properly and in time, it may be
found in
Stout v. Lye, 103 U. S. 66;
Sheldon v. Patterson, 55 Ill. 507;
Howard v.
Mitchell, 14 Mass. 241.
There can be no doubt from the record before us that the Elyria
Company owned all of the capital stock of the Hart Company, that
the latter company was a mere sales agent of the former, that Wood
was the salaried manager of the latter, that both the Hart Company
and Wood were agents, subject to the control of the Elyria Company,
and that, in selling the tie plates and as defendants in the
litigation, they acted wholly under the authority and in the
interest of their principal. Identity of interest could not be
clearer or closer than it was between the defendants in the two
cases -- they represented precisely the same single interest, and
the Hart Company and Wood, as agents of the Elyria Company, were
obviously and necessarily privies to the judgment rendered in its
favor in the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit.
Bank of Kentucky v. Stone, 88 F. 383,
aff'd in
Kentucky Bank Tax Cases, 174 U. S. 408;
Emery v. Fowler, 39 Me. 329;
Castle v. Noyes, 14
N.Y. 326;
Emma Silver Mining Co. v. Emma Silver Mining
Co., 7 F. 401.
With the identity of the subject matter and issues of the two
cases admitted, the privity of parties to them clear, and the
question of the ruling effect of the decree of the Circuit Court of
Appeals for the Sixth Circuit presented in an appropriate manner to
the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Seventh Circuit, a court of
coordinate jurisdiction,
Page 244 U. S. 299
we cannot doubt that the latter court fell into error in not
sustaining the motion of the petitioners to affirm the decision of
the circuit court. The defendants should not have been put to
further expense, delay, and trouble after the motion was presented.
The question is ruled by
Kessler v. Eldred, 206 U.
S. 285;
Brill v. Washington Ry. & Elec.
Co., 215 U. S. 527, and
Russell v. Place, 94 U. S. 606.
This doctrine of
res judicata is not a mere matter of
practice or procedure inherited from a more technical time than
ours. It is a rule of fundamental and substantial justice, "of
public policy and of private peace," which should be cordially
regarded and enforced by the courts to the end that rights, once
established by the final judgment of a court of competent
jurisdiction, shall be recognized by those who are bound by it in
every way, wherever the judgment is entitled to respect.
Kessler v. Eldred, supra.
The conclusion which we have reached in the second case,
Railroad Supply Co. v. Elyria Iron & Steel Co., this
day decided,
ante, 244 U. S. 285,
with respect to the merits of the patents involved in this
litigation, is such that it leaves our decision in this case
uncomplicated by the one in that. The decree of the circuit court
of appeals is
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE DAY did not take any part in the decision of this
case.