1. A suit by an exclusive licensee under a patent to protect his
rights against infringement by a stranger, without joining the
patent owner as plaintiff, does not arise under the patent laws
(Rev.Stats. § 4921), but is based merely on contract rights,
and is not maintainable in the federal court in the absence of
diversity of citizenship. P.
269 U. S.
466.
2. An exclusive licensee may bring suit under Rev.Stats. §
4921 by joining the patent owner as a co-plaintiff when the latter
is out of the jurisdiction and declines to join and when such suit
is
Page 269 U. S. 460
necessary to protect the rights of the licensee against an
infringer, so that a failure of justice might result if such
joinder were not allowed. Pp.
269 U. S. 467,
269 U. S.
472.
3. This is analogous to the right of the licensee to bring an
action on the case for damages in the patent owner's name under
Rev.Stats. § 4919, which is
in pari materia with
§ 4921. Pp.
269 U. S. 464,
269 U. S.
472.
4. A patent owner is under an equitable obligation to allow the
use of his name and title to protect lawful exclusive licensees
against infringers. P.
269 U. S.
473.
5. A patent owner cannot thus be made a co-plaintiff in equity
without having first been requested to become such voluntarily. P.
269 U. S.
473.
6. When a patent owner, though requested, declines to permit the
use of his name in a proper case by an exclusive licensee in a suit
against an infringer, but is nevertheless joined as co-plaintiff
and duly notified of the suit, he will be bound by the decree. P.
269 U. S.
474.
297 F. 521 affirmed.
Certiorari to a decree of the circuit court of appeals which
reversed a decree of the district court dismissing on motion the
bill in a suit to enjoin infringement of a patent, and for an
accounting of profits and for damages.
See 297 F. 518.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Radio Corporation, a corporation of Delaware, filed a bill
in equity in the Southern district of New York, joining with itself
the De Forest Radio Telephone & Telegraph Company, also of
Delaware, as co-plaintiff, against the Independent Wireless
Telegraph Company of Delaware and the American Telephone &
Telegraph Company of New York. The case made in the bill was
this:
Page 269 U. S. 461
Lee De Forest invented and received patents Nos. 841,387 and
879,532, dated in 1908 and 1909, for devices for amplifying feeble
electric currents and certain new and useful improvements in space
telegraphy. After giving limited licenses of the American Telephone
& Telegraph Company, he assigned the patents to the De Forest
Radio Telephone & Telegraph Company. On March 16, 1917, the De
Forest Company, by writing duly recorded, gave an exclusive license
to make, use, and sell the devices for the life of the patents to
the Western Electric Company, reserving to itself nonexclusive,
nontransferable, and personal rights to make, use, and sell them
for defined purposes. The Western Electric Company then assigned
all that it thus received from the De Forest Company to the
American Telephone Company. The American Telephone Company, on July
1, 1920, made a contract with the General Electric Company by which
they exchanged rights in various patents owned or controlled by
each, including these rights in the De Forest patents. Some seven
months prior, on November 20, 1919, the General Electric Company
had granted to the Radio Corporation, the plaintiff, an exclusive
license to use and sell for "radio purposes" --
i.e., "for
transmission or reception of communication by what are known as
electric magnetic waves except by wire" -- all inventions owned by
the General Electric Company or thereafter acquired by it. The
American Telephone Company subsequently confirmed in the Radio
Corporation these after-acquired rights in the De Forest patents.
Thus, there came from the De Forest Company to the Radio
Corporation exclusive rights to use and sell in the United States,
for radio purposes, apparatus for transmission of messages, and
especially for use between ship and shore for pay.
The defendant, the Independent Wireless Company, has bought the
same apparatus, with the lawful right to use it in the amateur and
experimental field only. The
Page 269 U. S. 462
apparatus thus bought bears a label with such a limitation on
its use. The charge in the bill is that the Independent Company is
using the apparatus, or the part of it called "radio tubes," in the
commercial radio field between ship and shore for pay, and thus is
violating the Radio Corporation's rights in this field. An
injunction is prayed, and an accounting of profits and all damages
to the plaintiffs and the American Telephone Company, as their
interests shall appear.
The twenty-fifth averment of the bill is:
"That the plaintiff, the De Forest Radio Telephone &
Telegraph Company, as hereinbefore alleged, has certain rights in
the patents in suit herein; that, before filing this bill of
complaint, said De Forest Radio Telephone & Telegraph Company
was requested to consent to join as a co-plaintiff, herein, but
declined; that said De Forest Radio Telephone & Telegraph
Company is not within the jurisdiction of the court, and therefore
cannot be made a defendant herein, and that therefore, to prevent a
failure of justice and to enable the plaintiff Radio Corporation of
America to protect its exclusive rights under the patents in suit,
said De Forest Radio Telephone & Telegraph Company is made a
plaintiff herein without its consent."
After securing an order for a bill of particulars, compliance
with which disclosed the various agreements referred to in the bill
and and facts relevant thereto, the Independent Wireless Telegraph
Company, defendant, moved that the court dismiss the bill of
complaint, upon the following ground:
"That the De Forest Radio Telephone & Telegraph Company, the
owner of the patent in suit, has not joined in this litigation as a
party plaintiff by duly signing and verifying the bill of complaint
herein, and the plaintiff Radio Corporation of America is not such
a licensee under the patents as to permit it to sue alone in its
own name, in the name of the owner of the patents in suit, or
to
Page 269 U. S. 463
sue in the name of the owner of the patents, joining itself as a
licensee under the patents."
The district court sustained the motion and dismissed the bill
in the view that it was bound by decisions of this Court to hold
that the De Forest Company was the owner of the patent and an
indispensable party, and, being out of the jurisdiction, could not
be made a party defendant by service or joined as a party plaintiff
against its will. 297 F. 518. The circuit court of appeals, on
appeal, reversed the district court, held that the De Forest
Company was properly made co-plaintiff by the Radio Corporation,
and remanded the case for further proceedings. 297 F. 521. We have
brought the case here on certiorari. Section 240, Judicial
Code.
The respondent, in its argument to sustain the ruling of the
circuit court of appeals, presses two points. The first is that, by
the contract between the De Forest Company and the Western Electric
Company, title to the patent was vested in the Western Electric
Company, and from it by assignment in the American Telephone &
Telegraph Company; that the latter is a party defendant, having
declined to be a plaintiff, and so satisfies the requirement of the
presence in such a suit as a party of the owner of the patent. The
difficulty the respondent meets in this suggestion is that its bill
avers that what the American Telephone Company acquired from the De
Forest Company was a license, so called in the contract creating
it, and the making of the De Forest Company a party plaintiff to
the bill was necessarily on the theory that it, and not the
American Telephone Company, is the owner of the patent. The
contracts between the corporations involved in the transfer of
rights under the patent are long and complicated, and, in order to
be fully understood, require some knowledge of the new radio field.
The court is loath to depart, if it could, from the theory on which
the bill was framed and both courts have acted unless required to
do so.
Page 269 U. S. 464
The question for our consideration, then, is: can the Radio
Company make the De Forest Company a co-plaintiff against its will
under the circumstances of the case?
Section 4919, R.S., is as follows:
"Damages for the infringement of any patent may be recovered by
action on the case, in the name of the party interested, either as
patentee, assignee, or grantee. And whenever in any such action a
verdict is rendered for the plaintiff, the court may enter judgment
thereon for any sum above the amount found by the verdict as the
actual damages sustained, according to the circumstances of the
case, not exceeding three times the amount of such verdict,
together with the costs."
In
Goodyear v. Bishop, 10 Fed.Cas. 642, No. 5558, a
suit for damages for infringement had been brought in the name of
the patentee by a licensee under the fourteenth section of the
Patent Act of 1836, c. 357, 5 Stat. 357, which contained language
similar to § 4919. The defendant moved with the consent of the
patentee to discontinue the suit. It was contended that, as the
patentee had stipulated with the licensee to sue infringers, his
remedy was on the covenant. Mr. Justice Nelson, at the circuit,
denied the motion. He said that a suit at law to protect the patent
right was properly brought in the name of the patentee, that the
license was sufficient to give the protection sought, and that the
covenant by the patentee did not take from the licensee the remedy
by use of the patentee's name to proceed directly against the
wrongdoer. The same ruling was made in
Goodyear v.
McBurney, 10 Fed.Cas. 699, No. 5574.
These cases were decided in 1860 by a Justice of this Court, and
no case is cited to us questioning their authority. Indeed, the
cases have been since referred to a number of times with approval
by distinguished patent judges.
Page 269 U. S. 465
Mr. Justice Blatchford, while Circuit Judge, in
Nelson v.
McMann, 17 Fed.Cas. 1325, 1329, No. 10109; Mr. Justice Gray,
while Chief Justice of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts,
in
Jackson v. Allen, 120 Mass. 64, 77; Judge Lowell, in
Wilson v. Chickering, 14 F. 917, 918; Judge Shipman, in
Brush-Swan Co. v. Thomson Co., 48 F. 224, 226. The term
"action on the case" and the phrase "in the name of the party
interested, either as patentee, assignee, or grantee" in §
4919 were evidently construed to constitute a remedy at law like
the suit at common law on a chose in action in the name of the
assignor in which the assignment gave the assignee the right as
attorney of the assignor to use the latter's name. Lectures on
Legal History, Ames, 213.
See also Eastman v. Wright, 6
Pick. 316;
Pickford v. Ewington, 4 Dowling P.C. 458;
McKinney v. Alvis, 14 Ill. 33.
But § 4919 applied, by its terms, only to actions on the
case at law to which the licensee was not a necessary and hardly a
proper party. This is a bill in equity. The remedy for violation of
an exclusive licensee's interest in equity under the patent laws is
found in § 4921, R.S., which is as follows:
"The several courts vested with jurisdiction of cases arising
under the patent laws shall have power to grant injunctions
according to the course and principles of courts of equity, to
prevent the violation of any right secured by patent, on such terms
as the court may deem reasonable, and upon a decree being rendered
in any such case for an infringement, the complainant shall be
entitled to recover, in addition to the profits to be accounted for
by the defendant, the damages the complainant has sustained
thereby, and the court shall assess the same or cause the same to
be assessed under its direction. And the court shall have the same
power to increase such damages, in its discretion, as is given to
increase the damages
Page 269 U. S. 466
found by verdicts in actions in the nature of actions of
trespass upon the case.
*"
There is no express authority given to the licensee to use the
name of the patent owner in equity as we have seen that he can
under § 4919 in suits at law. The presence of the patentee or
his assignee in the equity suit, however, it has been held, is just
as essential to obtaining an injunction, or an accounting of
profits or damages, under the patent laws, as it is in an action on
the case for damages at law. Indeed, both the owner and the
exclusive licensee are generally necessary parties in the action in
equity.
Waterman v. Mackenzie, 138 U.
S. 252;
Littlefield v.
Perry, 21 Wall. 205,
88 U. S. 223;
Paper Bag Cases, 105 U. S. 766;
Birdsell v. Shaliol, 112 U. S. 485,
112 U. S.
486.
It is urged on behalf of the respondent that in equity the real
party in interest, the exclusive licensee whose contract rights are
being trespassed upon by the infringer, should be able without the
presence of the owner of the patent to obtain an injunction and
damages directly against the infringer. We recognize that there is
a tendency in courts of equity to enjoin the violation of contract
rights which are invaded by strangers in a direct action by the
party injured, instead of compelling a roundabout resort to a
remedy through the covenant, express or implied, of the other
contracting party. But such a short cut, however desirable, is not
possible in a case like this. A suit without the owner of the
patent as a plaintiff, if maintainable, would not be a suit under
§ 4921 of the patent laws, but only an action in equity, based
on the contract rights of the licensee under the license and a
Page 269 U. S. 467
stranger's violation of them. There would be no jurisdiction in
courts of the United States to entertain it unless by reason of
diverse citizenship of the parties, which does not exist in this
case.
Hill v. Whitcomb, 12 Fed.Cas. 182, 185, No. 6,502;
Wilson v.
Sandford, 10 How 99,
51 U. S. 101;
Albright v. Texas, 106 U. S. 613, and
cases cited.
What remedies, then, can equity afford in a case like this?
Waterman v. Mackenzie, 138 U. S. 252,
involved the question whether a grant from the owner of the patent
of the exclusive right to make and sell, but not to use, was an
assignment under the statute, entitling the grantee in his own name
to sue an infringer in equity, and it was held that it was not. Mr.
Justice Gray, speaking for the court at
138 U. S. 255,
said:
"In equity, as at law, when the transfer amounts to a license
only, the title remains in the owner of the patent, and suit must
be brought in his name, and never in the name of the licensee
alone, unless that is necessary to prevent an absolute failure of
justice, as where the patentee is the infringer, and cannot sue
himself. Any rights of the licensee must be enforced through or in
the name of the owner of the patent, and perhaps, if necessary to
protect the rights of all parties, joining the licensee with him as
a plaintiff. R.S. § 4921;
Littlefield v. Perry, 21
Wall. 205,
88 U. S. 223;
Paper Bag
Cases, 105 U. S. 766,
105 U. S.
771;
Birdsell v. Shaliol,
112 U. S.
485-487.
And see Renard v. Levinstein, 2 Hem.
& Mil. 628."
Littlefield v.
Perry, 21 Wall. 205, was a suit for infringement by
one to whom was granted an exclusive right to make, use, and vend
by the patent owner. The Court held that it was an assignment under
the statute, but further held that, even if it were only an
exclusive license, the suit might be maintained under the patent
laws, because the patentee, who had been privy to the alleged
Page 269 U. S. 468
infringement, had been made a party defendant with the
infringer. This Court said at
88 U. S.
223:
"A mere licensee cannot sue strangers who infringe. In such
case, redress is obtained through or in the name of the patentee or
his assignee. Here, however, the patentee is the infringer, and, as
he cannot sue himself, the licensee is powerless, so far as the
courts of the United States are concerned, unless he can sue in his
own name. A court of equity looks to substance, rather than form.
When it has jurisdiction of parties, it grants the appropriate
relief without regard to whether they come as plaintiff or
defendant. In this case, the person who should have protected the
plaintiff against all infringements has become himself the
infringer. He held the legal title to his patent in trust for his
licensees. He has been faithless to his trust, and courts of equity
are always open for the redress of such a wrong. This wrong is an
infringement. Its redress involves a suit therefore arising under
the patent laws, and of that suit the circuit court has
jurisdiction."
The presence of the owner of the patent as a party is
indispensable not only to give jurisdiction under the patent laws,
but also in most cases to enable the alleged infringer to respond
in one action to all claims of infringement for his act, and thus
either to defeat all claims in the one action, or by satisfying one
adverse decree to bar all subsequent actions.
If the owner of a patent, being within the jurisdiction, refuses
or is unable to join an exclusive licensee as co-plaintiff, the
licensee may make him a party defendant by process, and he will be
lined up by the court in the party character which he should
assume. This is the necessary effect of the decision in
Littlefield v. Perry, supra. See also Brammer v.
Jones, 4 Fed.Cas. 11, No. 1806;
Gamewell Telegraph Co. v.
Brooklyn, 14 F. 255;
Waterman v. Shipman, 55 F. 982,
986;
Libbey Glass Co. v. McKee Glass Co., 216
Page 269 U. S. 469
F. 172,
aff'd, 220 F. 672;
Hurd v. Goold, 203
F. 998. This would seem to be in accord with general equity
practice.
Waldo v. Waldo, 52 Mich. 91, 94. A
cestui
que trust may make an unwilling trustee a defendant in a suit
to protect the subject of the trust.
Porter v. Sabin,
149 U. S. 473,
149 U. S. 478;
Brun v. Mann, 151 F. 145, 153;
Monmouth Co. v.
Means, 151 F. 159, 165;
Eastman v. Wright, 6 Pick.
312, 316.
It seems clear, then, on principle and authority, that the owner
of a patent who grants to another the exclusive right to make, use,
or vend the invention which does not constitute a statutory
assignment holds the title to the patent in trust for such a
licensee to the extent that he must allow the use of his name as
plaintiff in any action brought at the instance of the licensee in
law or in equity to obtain damages for the injury to his exclusive
right by an infringer, or to enjoin infringement of it. Such
exclusive licenses frequently contain express covenants by the
patent owner and licensor to sue infringers that expressly cast
upon the former the affirmative duty of initiating and bearing the
expense of the litigation. But, without such express covenants, the
implied obligation of the licensor to allow the use of his name is
indispensable to the enjoyment by the licensee of the monopoly
which by personal contract the licensor has given. Inconvenience
and possibly embarrassing adjudication in respect to the validity
of the licensor's patent rights as the result of suits begun in aid
of the licensee are only the equitable and inevitable sequence of
the licensor's contract, whether express or implied.
But suppose the patentee and licensor is hostile, and is out of
the jurisdiction where suit for infringement must be brought --
what remedy is open to the exclusive licensee? The matter has been
given attention by courts dealing with patent cases. In
Wilson
v. Chickering, supra at p. 918, an exclusive licensee brought
a bill in equity to
Page 269 U. S. 470
enjoin infringement without joining the owner of the patent. A
demurrer was sustained, with 30 days to amend. Judge Lowell, after
saying that a mere licensee cannot generally, in equity, sue in
equity without joining the patentee, said:
"I do not, however, intend to be understood that the plaintiff
will be without remedy if he cannot find the patentee, or if the
latter is hostile. The statute does not abridge the power of a
court of equity to do justice to the parties before it if others
who cannot be found are not absolutely necessary parties, as in
this case the patentee is not. At law, the plaintiff could use the
name of a patentee in an action, and perhaps he may have the right
in equity under some circumstances. The bill gives no explanation
of his absence; but it was said in argument that he is both out of
the jurisdiction and hostile. If so, no doubt there are methods
known to a court of equity by which the suit may proceed for the
benefit of the only person who is entitled to damages."
In
Renard v. Levinstein, 2 Hem. & Mil. 628, before
Vice Chancellor Page Wood, afterwards Lord Hatherly, an exclusive
licensee brought suit to enjoin infringement by a stranger, and
made the patentees who were a foreign firm co-plaintiffs. There was
no objection to this action. No specific authority for this
appeared, but it seems to have been implied from the relation of
the exclusive licensee and the owner of the patent. It has some
significance here in the fact that it was apparently referred to by
Mr. Justice Gray, in
Waterman v. Mackenzie, supra, as
indicating what could be done in an English court of equity to
enable the licensee to secure protection in the name of the owner
of the patent.
In the case of
Brush-Swan Electric Co. v.
Thomson-Houston, 48 F. 224, the Brush-Swan Company in
Connecticut sued the Thomson-Houston Company in equity for
infringing the former's rights as an exclusive
Page 269 U. S. 471
licensee for the sale of a device made under a patent owned by
the Brush Electric Company of Cleveland, Ohio. The Brush-Swan
Company made the Brush Electric Company a co-plaintiff. The
Cleveland company appeared for the purpose of asking that its name
be stricken out as a party complainant because the bill had been
filed without its consent. The motion to strike out the
co-plaintiff's name was denied by Judge Shipman on the ground that
as the patent owner, being without the jurisdiction, could not be
served with process, there would otherwise be absolute failure of
justice. The judge said that
prima facie there was an
implied power in the exclusive licensee under such circumstances to
make the patent owner a party plaintiff. The same conclusion was
approved by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in
Brush
Electric Co. v. California Electric Co., 52 F. 945, before
McKenna and Gilbert, circuit judges, and Knowles, the district
judge, affirming the same case in 49 F. 73, and by the same court
in
Excelsior Co. v. Allen, 104 F. 553, and in
Excelsior Co. v. The City of Seattle, 117 F. 140, 143,
144. In
Hurd v. Goold Co., 203 F. 998, before the Circuit
Court of Appeals of the Second Circuit (Lacombe, Coxe, and Noyes,
judges), Hurd, who was the exclusive licensee, joined with himself
two corporations who held the legal title to the patent. The
corporations had been enjoined in the Sixth Circuit from
maintaining suits for infringement. The Second Circuit Court of
Appeals held that Hurd was entitled to present his licensors --
that is, the owners of the patent -- as co-plaintiffs, even against
their will and in spite of their protests. This doctrine was
approved by the same court in
Radio Corp. v. Emerson, 296
F. 51, 54.
See also McKee Glass Co. v. Libbey Glass Co.,
220 F. 672 (3d C.C.A.),
aff'g same, 216 F. 172;
Chisholm v. Johnson, 106 F. 191, 212;
Owatonna Mfg.
Co. v. Fargo, 94 F. 519, 520.
Page 269 U. S. 472
It is objected to the relevancy of these authorities that not
one of them actually presents the case here. In all of them, it is
said the owner or patentee was within the jurisdiction of the court
and could be served, or else had come into the jurisdiction
voluntarily to move for leave to withdraw as a party. As the court
had the owner before it, and the owner was in duty bound to become
a party, the court could prevent the withdrawal. Here, the owner is
not in the jurisdiction and does not come in. It is the defendant,
the alleged infringer, which objects to using the name of the owner
as plaintiff without its consent.
We think the cases cited go beyond the defendant's
interpretation of them, and do hold that, if there is no other way
of securing justice to the exclusive licensee, the latter may make
the owner without the jurisdiction a co-plaintiff without his
consent in the bill against the infringer. Equity will not suffer a
wrong without a remedy. 1 Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence (4th ed.)
§§ 423, 424. While this maxim is, of course, not of
universal application, it justifies the short step needed to hold
that in an equity suit under § 4921, where otherwise justice
to the exclusive licensee would fail, he may make the owner of the
patent a co-plaintiff in his bill under § 4921, in analogy to
the remedy given him in an action on the case at law for damages
under § 4919, for the two sections are plainly
in pari
materia.
In so doing, equity does no more than courts of law did at one
period in their history, as we have seen, in implying in the
assignee of a chose in action a power of attorney to maintain an
action in the name of the assignor in order to assure to the
assignee the benefits of his assignment. Where the assignor
attempted to interfere with the exercise of the power of attorney
by collection of the assignee's claim, or where for any technical
reason the remedy through the exercise of implied power of
attorney
Page 269 U. S. 473
was unavailable, equity intervened to lend its aid to the
assignee and secure a recovery for his benefit.
See Lenox v.
Roberts, 2 Wheat. 373;
Hammond v.
Messenger, 9 Sim. 327;
Roberts v. Lloyd, 1 De G.
& J. 208;
Hodge v. Cole, 140 Mass. 116;
Hughes v.
Nelson, 29 N.J.Eq. 547;
Hayes v. Hayes, 45 N.J.Eq.
461.
The objection by the defendant that the name of the owner of the
patent is used as a plaintiff in this suit without authority is met
by the obligation the owner is under to allow the use of his name
and title to protect all lawful exclusive licensees and
sublicensees against infringers, and by the application of the
maxim that equity regards that as done which ought to be done.
Camp v. Boyd, 229 U. S. 530,
229 U. S. 559;
United States v. Colorado Anthracite Co., 225 U.
S. 219,
225 U. S. 223;
Craig v.
Leslie, 3 Wheat. 563,
16 U. S. 578.
The court should on these grounds refuse to strike out the name of
the owner as co-plaintiff, put in the bill under proper averment by
the exclusive licensee.
The owner beyond the reach of process may be made co-plaintiff
by the licensee, but not until after he has been requested to
become such voluntarily. If he declines to take any part in the
case, though he knows of its imminent pendency and of his
obligation to join, he will be bound by the decree which follows.
We think this result follows from the general principles of
res
judicata. In
American Bell Telephone Co. v. National
Telephone Co., 27 F. 663, heard before Judges Pardee and
Billings, the question was whether the National Telephone Company
was bound by a decree in favor of the Bell Company for infringement
against a Pittsburgh company claiming under a license from the
National Company. The National Company, under a contract upon
notice to defend its license, took control of the case, but,
becoming dissatisfied with a preliminary ruling of the court,
withdrew its counsel and evidence from the case. The National
Company was held bound on the authority
Page 269 U. S. 474
of the case of
Robbins v.
Chicago, 4 Wall. 657. When Robbins was building a
store in Chicago by an independent contractor, an areaway adjoining
the street was left open. A passer-by fell in and was injured. He
sued the city, and recovered judgment for $15,000. Robbins had been
previously warned by the city of the danger of the unprotected
area, and had notice of the accident and of the pendency of the
suit, but did not become a party. The city then sued Robbins, and
was given a judgment against him for the amount of the recovery
against the city. This Court, in sustaining the result, held that
parties bound by the judgment in such a case included all who were
directly interested in the subject matter, who had knowledge of the
pendency of the suit and a right to take part therein, even if they
refused or neglected to appear and avail themselves of this right.
Lovejoy v.
Murray, 3 Wall. 1,
70 U. S. 19;
Plumb v. Goodnow, 123 U. S. 560;
Robertson v. Hill, 20 Fed.Cas. 944, No. 11925;
Miller
v. Liggett, 7 F. 91.
By a request to the patent owner to join as co-plaintiff, by
notice of the suit after refusal and the making of the owner a
co-plaintiff, he is given a full opportunity, by taking part in the
cause, to protect himself against any abuse of the use of his name
as plaintiff, while, on the other hand, the defendant, charged with
infringement, will secure a decree saving him from multiplicity of
suits for infringement. Of course, a decree in such a case would
constitute an estoppel of record against the patent owner, if
challenged, only after evidence of the exclusive license, the
request to join as co-plaintiff, and the notice of the suit.
There is nothing in the case of
Crown Co. v. Nye Tool
Works, 261 U. S. 24, which
conflicts with this conclusion. That case was brought by the
plaintiff, a licensee, to establish as a principle of patent
practice that a transfer by an owner of a patent to another,
conferring only the right to sue a third for past and future
infringements
Page 269 U. S. 475
of the patent, without the right to make, use, and vend the
patented article, was an assignment of the patent under §
4898, R.S. We declined so to hold. There was no offer to make the
owner of the patent a party, nor were there any facts showing that
the owner would not join as co-plaintiff or was not in the
jurisdiction. The appellant stood solely upon his right to sue as
an assignee of the patent, and was defeated.
We hold that the De Forest Company was properly joined as a
co-plaintiff by the Radio Corporation upon the twenty-fifth
averment of the bill. This makes it unnecessary for us to consider
the argument on behalf of the appellee that the American Telephone
Company was the owner of the patent, instead of the De Forest
Company.
Decree affirmed.
* Section 4921 was amended by Act March 3, 1897, c. 391, §
6, 29 Stat. 694, adding a six-year limitation on actions under it,
and by Act Feb. 18, 1922, c. 58, § 8, 42 Stat. 392, allowing
expert evidence as to damages and requiring notice of litigation to
Commissioner of Patents for record by indorsement on file wrapper
of patents involved. The amendments do not affect the question
here.