1. The conclusion that the corporate appellants and certain
individual appellants agreed, conspired, and combined to
monopolize, and did restrain and monopolize, interstate and foreign
commerce by acquiring patents covering the manufacture of
glassmaking machinery and by excluding others from a fair
opportunity to engage in commerce in such machinery and in the
manufacture and distribution of glass products, in violation of the
antitrust laws, is supported by the findings and the evidence.
Sherman Act, §§ 1 and 2; Clayton Act, § 3. Pp.
323 U. S.
401-403.
(a) The conclusion that one of the corporate appellants had not
abandoned the unlawful conspiracy -- in view of its subsequent
conduct and its continuing to share in the fruits of the conspiracy
-- is supported by the evidence. P.
323 U. S.
407.
(b) The decree against four of the individual appellants, who
were directors and officers of a corporation as to which the
complaint was dismissed, must be reversed because the allegations
of the bill are insufficient to support a decree against them; the
findings do not support the decree as to them; the refusal of
findings requested by the Government exculpates them of
participation in the conspiracy, and the proofs fail to connect
them with the conspiracy. P.
323 U. S.
403.
(c) Use by the corporate appellants of their joint patent
position to allocate fields of manufacture and to maintain prices
of unpatented glassware violated the antitrust laws. P.
323 U. S.
406.
Page 323 U. S. 387
2. Upon consideration of objections to provisions of the decree
of the District Court enjoining violations of the antitrust laws,
the decree is vacated and the cause is remanded for further
proceeding's in conformity with the opinion of this Court. Pp.
323 U. S. 408,
323 U. S.
435.
(a) A decree enjoining violations of the antitrust laws may not
impose penalties in the guise of preventing future violations. P.
323 U. S.
409.
(b) A decree of injunction against violations of the antitrust
laws must not be so vague as to put the whole conduct of the
defendants' business at the peril of a summons for contempt, must
not enjoin all possible breaches of the law, and must not withdraw
from the defendants the protection of the law of the land. P.
323 U. S.
410.
(c) The acts restrained by a decree of injunction must be
described specifically therein, and not by reference to the bill of
complaint. P.
323 U. S.
410.
(d) Though useful
pendente lite, the receivership and
the impounding of funds, ordered in the case of one of the
corporate appellants, were not necessary to the prescription of
appropriate relief. The receivership should be terminated, and the
impounded funds disposed of as herein directed. P.
323 U. S.
411.
(e) Out of the royalties paid in by lessees of one of the
corporate appellants, the latter should receive compensation on a
quantum meruit basis for services which it rendered to the
lessees. P.
323 U. S.
411.
(f) Provisions of the decree requiring each of the appellants to
abstain forever from leasing patented glassmaking machinery and
compelling each of them, if he desires to distribute patented
machinery, to sell the machine which embodies the patent to
everyone who applies at a price to be fixed by the court are
confiscatory in effect, and are unwarranted. P.
323 U. S.
412.
(g) Provisions of the decree enjoining each of the appellants
from engaging in the distribution of glassmaking machinery or in
the distribution of glassware in interstate commerce unless he
agrees (1) to grant royalty-free licenses under patents now owned;
(2) to grant licenses at reasonable royalties under after-acquired
patents, and (3) to make available to any licensee, at cost plus a
reasonable profit, all drawings and patterns relating to the
machinery or methods used in the manufacture of glassware embodied
in the licensed inventions are confiscatory in effect, and are
unwarranted. P.
323 U. S.
413.
(h) For violations of the Sherman Act arising from the use of
patent licenses, agreements, and leases, the decisions of this
Court in
Morton Salt Co. v. Suppiger Co., 314 U.
S. 488, and
B. B.
Chemical
Page 323 U. S. 388
Co. v. Ellis, 314 U. S. 495, do
not authorize forfeiture of the patents. P.
323 U. S.
415.
(i) A provision of the decree which is vague and would be
difficult of application, and which seems not to be addressed to
any practice indulged in or threatened by any of the appellants,
should be modified or eliminated. P.
323 U. S.
418.
(j) The corporate appellants should be enjoined from further
prosecution of infringement suits pending at the time this suit was
brought; any alleged infringers who are willing to take
nondiscriminatory and nonrestrictive licenses at standard royalties
should be released, and the patent owner should be denied damages
and profits which it might have claimed for past infringement. But
the decree should be without prejudice to future infringement suits
against persons refusing to take licenses after the date of the
decree. The decree should not forbid any defendant from seeking
recovery for infringement, occurring after the date of the final
decree, of patents not covering feeders, formers, stackers, lehrs
or processes or methods applicable to any of them. P.
323 U. S.
419.
(k) License agreements between the corporate appellants which
are consistent with the views here expressed should be allowed to
stand; those found to be inconsistent should be ordered reformed,
and the appellants should be enjoined from altering the agreements,
or any hereafter made in like terms, without the approval of the
court. P.
323 U. S.
420.
(l) The decree should permit any corporate appellant, acting
alone, to lease or sell patented machinery or license the use of
patents, if it so elects, provided always that no discrimination is
practiced and that no restrictive conditions be attached save with
the approval of the court. P.
323 U. S.
420.
(m) The decree should order dedication to the public of a patent
which one of the corporate appellants, to be free from the possible
threat of suit for infringement, had acquired by assignment from
another. P.
323 U. S.
421.
(n) A provision of the decree enjoining certain restrictive
provisions in license agreements should be amended to permit any
appellant, corporate or individual, to retain and refuse to
license, to use and refuse to license, or to license with
restrictions, any patent hereafter applied for or acquired, except
those applicable to feeders, formers, stackers, and lehrs and
processes and methods applicable thereto. P.
323 U. S.
424.
(o) A provision of the decree requiring court approval of "any
agreement between any of the defendants" and "of any license
Page 323 U. S. 389
agreement made pursuant to this judgment" is too broad. If
retained, it should be restricted to lease or license agreements
and agreements respecting patents and trade practices, production,
and trade relations. P.
323 U. S.
424.
(p) A provision of the decree enjoining individual appellants
from ownership of securities or evidence of indebtedness of more
than one corporation in the industry should be modified to prohibit
acquisition of stocks or bonds of any corporate appellant by any
other such appellant, and to prohibit any individual appellant from
acquiring a measure of control, through ownership of stocks or
bonds or otherwise, in a company competing with that with which he
is officially connected or in a subsidiary or affiliate of such
competing company. P.
323 U. S.
425.
(q) As to certain individual appellants who own substantial
amounts of stock of two of the corporate appellants, a period
longer than two years should be allowed for divestiture of the
stock of one or the other of the corporate appellants, and a
proviso depriving them of the right to vote the stock of one
company or the other, or to trustee the stock of one of the
corporations if both stocks are held longer than the term fixed,
would be appropriate. P.
323 U. S.
426.
(r) A provision of the decree enjoining individual appellants
from holding an office or directorship in more than one corporation
which manufactures and sells glassware or manufactures or
distributes glassmaking machinery should be limited to such
relationships in competing companies. P.
323 U. S.
426.
(s) Provisions of the decree enjoining acquisition by any of the
corporate appellants of the business or assets of any other
corporation (other than a subsidiary), and by any individual
appellant of the business or assets of corporations other than that
of which he is an officer or director, should be limited to
acquisition of the business or assets of competing companies. P.
323 U. S.
426.
(t) The appellant trade association, which had been an important
instrument of restraint and monopoly, should be ordered dissolved,
and the corporate defendants restrained for a period of five years
from forming or joining any such association. P.
323 U. S.
428.
(u) An injunction binding the corporate appellants, their
officers, agents, and employees is sufficient to constrain the
individual appellants so long as they remain in official relations,
and to bind their successors; it is unnecessary to enjoin the
individual appellants as individuals. P.
323 U. S.
428.
(v) A requirement that all trade information be given to the
public is disapproved. P.
323 U. S.
429.
Page 323 U. S. 390
(w) The injunction should permit, as here indicated, usual
business transactions not related to violations of the antitrust
laws. P.
323 U. S.
430.
(x) A provision of the decree which, in effect, prohibits the
acquisition by any appellant of any patent, or of a restricted
license under any patent, is inappropriate. P.
323 U. S.
431.
(y) The decree may properly restrain agreements and combinations
whereby patents are applied for and acquired to prevent others from
obtaining patents on improvements which might affect royalties on
basic patents, but the decree may not prohibit corporate appellants
from applying for patents covering their own inventions in the art
of glassmaking. P.
323 U. S.
432.
(z) A provision of the decree enjoining each of the appellants
from applying for a patent "with the intention of not making use of
the invention within four years" from date of issue cannot be
sustained. P.
323 U. S.
432.
(aa) The owner of a patent is under no obligation to use the
patent or to grant its use to others. P.
323 U. S.
432.
(bb) A provision of the decree requiring the corporate
appellants to submit to surveillance by the Department of Justice
and to furnish information with respect to their business should be
modified, as was a similar provision in
United States v. Bausch
& Lomb Co., 321 U. S. 707. P.
323 U. S.
433.
(cc) Where individual appellants have offended against the
antitrust laws by acting solely on behalf of, or in the name of, a
corporate appellant, the decree need not run against them as
individuals. P.
323 U. S.
434.
(dd) A provision of the decree requiring one of the corporate
appellants to cancel certain agreements which excluded the parties
named from entering the glass container business for a period of
years, which restrictions have already been released, is
unnecessary. P.
323 U. S.
435.
46 F.
Supp. 541 modified.
Appeals under the Expediting Act from a decree enjoining
violations of the antitrust laws.
Page 323 U. S. 392
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
These are appeals from a decree [
Footnote 1] awarding an injunction against violations of
§§ 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act, as amended, [
Footnote 2] and § 3 of the Clayton Act.
[
Footnote 3] Two questions are
presented. Were violations proved? If so, are the provisions of the
decree right?
The complaint named as defendants 12 corporations and 101
individuals associated with them as officers or directors. It was
dismissed as to 3 corporations and 40 individuals. The corporations
are the leaders in automatic glassmaking machinery and in the
glassware industry. The charge is that all the defendants agreed,
conspired, and combined to monopolize, and did monopolize and
restrain interstate and foreign commerce, by acquiring patents
covering the manufacture of glassmaking machinery and by excluding
others from a fair opportunity freely to engage in commerce in such
machinery and in the manufacture and distribution of glass
products. The gravamen of the case is that the defendants have
cooperated in obtaining and licensing patents covering glassmaking
machinery, have limited and restricted the use of the patented
machinery by a network of agreements, and have maintained prices
for unpatented glassware.
The trial lasted 112 days. The court filed an opinion of 160
pages, 628 findings of fact and 89 conclusions of law, and entered
a decree covering 46 printed pages and comprising 60 numbered
paragraphs. The printed record contains over 16,500 pages. An
opinion of reasonable length must deal in summary fashion with the
facts disclosed by the proofs, and leave much of the detailed
history
Page 323 U. S. 393
of the transactions to be gleaned from the opinion below.
In 1912, Hartford-Fairmont Company was organized to combine the
activities of two existing companies interested in glass
manufacture with those of a group of engineers who desired to
obtain and exploit patents for automatic glassmaking machinery. The
defendant Corning Glass Works was at that time engaged primarily in
the production and distribution of incandescent bulbs, sign and
optical ware, heat-resisting ware, and other specialty glassware.
Its field may be defined roughly as the pressed and blown field, or
the noncontainer field. It has not made, and does not now make,
containers, save a limited amount of tumblers. In 1909, persons
interested in Corning organized Empire Machine Company as a
patentholding and developing company.
The defendant Owens-Illinois Glass Company (hereafter called
Owens) is a large manufacturer of glass. Mr. Owens of that company
produced the first fully automatic machine for blowing bottles,
which is known as a suction type machine. He was interested in
companies engaged in developing and manufacturing this type of
machine and exercising the rights represented by the Owens and
related patents. From about 1904, the Owens group followed the
policy of granting exclusive licenses, in limited fields, for the
manufacture of glassware by the suction process. Owens itself was,
and is, mainly interested in what is known as narrow neck
containerware. Prior to the Owens inventions, glassmaking had been
largely a hand process. Thereafter, due to Owens' restrictive
licensing policy, many glass manufacturers were threatened with
extinction unless some other competing machine could be devised.
Ultimately, a process called suspended gob feeding was invented
which was more economical for certain ware than the suction
process, and could be
Page 323 U. S. 394
applied in the manufacture of diversified glassware. The
introduction of the gob feeder machine threatened Owens' domination
of the glass machinery field, and Owens, in self-protection,
obtained patents and patent rights on gob feeders and licensed some
companies for their use.
Hartford-Fairmont was interested in the development of the gob
feeder. It applied for some patents, and acquired others. In the
meantime, it licensed gob feeder machinery, as Owens had done with
the suction machine, by restricting its use to the manufacture of
specified ware. Empire owned certain patent applications which were
in interference with Hartford-Fairmont gob feeder applications.
June 30, 1916, Hartford-Fairmont and Empire made an agreement
whereby Empire was given an exclusive license to use
Hartford-Fairmont's patents for pressed and blown glassware and
Hartford-Fairmont was given an exclusive license to use Empire's
patents for production of containers. Thus, Corning obtained
exclusive rights, under the patents, for Corning's line of ware --
pressed and blown glass -- and Hartford obtained the patent rights
of both companies in respect of other glassware. Negotiations led
to agreements, October 6, 1922, whereby Hartford-Empire
(hereinafter called Hartford) was formed and took over all assets
of Hartford-Fairmont and of Empire relating to glass machinery.
Empire received 43% of the stock of the company, and Corning
retained approximately the same exclusive interest that Empire had
enjoyed under the 1916 agreement. Hartford retained approximately
the same rights it had obtained from Empire in 1916, subject to a
shop right in Corning which has not been exercised. Empire was
dissolved in 1941.
After 1916, Hartford-Fairmont (and its successor Hartford) and
Owens were competitors in the gob feeding field; their applications
were in interference in the Patent Office with each other and with
those of other applicants, and
Page 323 U. S. 395
they were in litigation. As a result of negotiations for a
settlement of their disputes, they entered into an agreement, April
9, 1924, whereby Owens granted Hartford an exclusive license under
Owens' patents for gob feeder and forming machines and Hartford
granted Owens a nonexclusive, nonassignable, and nondivisible
license to make and use machines and methods embodying patents then
or thereafter owned or acquired by Hartford for the manufacture of
glassware, but Owens was not to sell or license gob feeding
machinery and was excluded from the pressed and blown field
previously reserved to Corning. Owens was to receive one-half of
Hartford's divisible income from licenses over and above $600,000
per annum. Owens retained a veto power on Hartford's granting new
licenses on machines embodying Owens' inventions. This provision
was eliminated in 1931. The agreement left Owens in full control of
its patented suction process.
As soon as the agreement had been made, Hartford and Owens
combined to get control of all other feeder patents . In this
endeavor, they pooled the efforts of their legal staffs and
contributed equally to the purchase of patents and the expenses of
litigation.
While patent claims upon applications controlled by Hartford and
Owens were pending in the Patent Office, Hartford purchased, under
the joint arrangement, certain feeder patents and applications
belonging to outsiders, and persons to whom feeders had been sold
or licensed by such outsiders were persuaded to take licenses from
Hartford. As a result of Hartford's and Owens' joint efforts in
connection with patent applications and purchases of applications
and patents of others, Hartford obtained what it considered
controlling patents on gob feeders in 1926.
Hazel-Atlas Glass Company (hereinafter called Hazel) was second
to Owens in the manufacture and sale of glass containers. It had
been using feeders of its own design
Page 323 U. S. 396
and manufacture. To build up further patent control, to
discourage use of machinery not covered by their patents, and to
influence glassmakers to take licenses under Hartford's inventions,
Hartford and Owens desired that Hazel should become a
partner-licensee. In 1924, they negotiated with Hazel to this end,
and offered to return to Hazel a substantial portion of any
royalties it would have to pay as a licensee. No agreement was
reached, and Hartford brought infringement suits against Hazel and
its subsidiaries. One Circuit Court of Appeals decided favorably to
Hazel,
Shawkee Mfg. Co. v. Hartford-Empire Co., 68 F.2d
726, another favorably to Hartford.
Hartford-Empire Co. v.
Hazel-Atlas Glass Co., 59 F.2d 399. Shortly after the latter
decision, Hartford and Owens, in order to buttress the patent
situation, persuaded Hazel to make a settlement.
As of June 1, 1932, Hartford, Owens, and Hazel executed a series
of agreements. Hartford licensed Hazel under Hartford's patents,
excluding from the license the pressed and blown field reserved to
Corning and with restrictions against sale or license by Hazel to
anyone else. Hazel licensed Hartford under all its glass machinery
patents, present and future, to January 3, 1945. Hazel paid
Hartford $1,000,000 and agreed to pay Hartford royalties, and
Hartford agreed that Hazel and Owens should each receive one-third
of Hartford's net income from royalties and license fees over and
above $850,000 per annum. Hartford and Owens readjusted their
contractual status to conform it to the agreements with Hazel.
Owens maintained control of its own suction inventions. It
confirmed to Hazel its existing rights under earlier agreements to
use these. Owens obtained an option either to purchase or to become
licensee of any suction inventions controlled by Hartford, and
agreed, in event of such acquisition, to permit Hazel to use them.
Owens and Hazel had the option, on notice, to terminate their
contracts with Hartford, but agreed mutually to protect each other
in such event. The result of this combination was that
Page 323 U. S. 397
resistance to Hartford's licensing campaign disappeared, and
practically the entire industry took licenses from Hartford.
Thatcher Manufacturing Company, a large manufacturer of milk
bottles, early obtained an exclusive license to manufacture them on
the Owens suction machine. In 1920, Thatcher secured the exclusive
right to manufacture milk bottles on Hartford's paddle needle
feeder and milk bottle forming machine. It pressed for like rights
under Hartford's later device, the single feeder. Though refusing
the grant, Hartford assured Thatcher that it would be given every
consideration in the grant of further licenses. By a supplemental
agreement of December 1, 1925, Hartford, in view of its "moral
obligation" to Thatcher, agreed to pay, and, until January 1, 1936,
allowed Thatcher a rebate on a certain portion of Thatcher's
production and, in 1928, agreed to give Thatcher the refusal of any
exclusive license on feeders and formers for production of milk
bottles. In 1936, a new agreement was made whereby Hartford agreed
that, so long as Thatcher manufactured 750,000 gross per annum,
Hartford would grant no other license for manufacture of milk
bottles.
Ball Brothers, the largest manufacturer of domestic fruit jars,
had used machines of its own design, as well as the Owens suction
machines under license, but had never taken any license from
Hartford. In 1933, Ball took a license from Hartford, obtaining all
the residual rights of Hartford for the manufacture of fruit jars,
and,
inter alia, granted Hartford an option to take
licenses on all Ball's patents for glass machinery then owned or
thereafter acquired. After discussion as to the rights of Hazel and
Owens to manufacture fruit jars, it was proposed that they be
limited by written agreement, Hazel to 300,000 gross and Owens to
100,000 gross annually. It was decided not to have a written
agreement, but both have generally kept within these limits. When
the complaint
Page 323 U. S. 398
was filed, Ball Brothers manufactured approximately 54.5% of all
the fruit jars manufactured and sold in the United States, Hazel
17.6%, Owens 6.4%, and an outsider, using a machine on which the
patents had expired, 21.5%.
In granting licenses under the pooled patents, Hartford always
reserved the rights within Corning's field. Further, it not only
limited its licensees to certain portions of the container field,
but, in many instances, limited the amount of glassware which might
be produced by the licensee, and, in numerous instances, as a
result of conferences with Owens, Hazel, Thatcher, and Ball,
refused licenses to prevent overstocking the glassware market and
to "stabilize" the prices at which such ware was sold.
In the automatic manufacture of glassware, other machines are
used in connection with the feeders. These are known as forming
machines, stackers, and lehrs. The purpose of Hartford and Owens,
participated in by the other three large manufacturers mentioned,
was that there should be gathered into the pool patents covering
and monopolizing these adjunct machines, so that automatic glass
manufacture, without consent of the parties to the pool, would
become difficult, if not impossible.
Several forming machines not covered by Hartford patents were on
the market. Without going into detail, it is sufficient to say
that, by purchases of patents and manufacturing plants, and by an
agreement with Hartford's principal competitor, Lynch Manufacturing
Company, the field was divided between Hartford and Lynch under
restrictions which gave Hartford control. In the upshot, it became
impossible to use Hartford feeders with any other forming machine
than one licensed by Hartford or used by its consent, and, as
respects stackers and lehrs, Hartford attained a similar dominant
status.
In 1935, certain new agreements were made. Though the 1932
agreement between Hartford and Hazel was substantially
Page 323 U. S. 399
unaffected, the contract relationships between Hartford and
Owens were altered. The latter surrendered its right to one-third
of Hartford's divisible royalty and license income in consideration
of Hartford's promise to pay $2,500,000 in quarterly instalments.
Owens extended the term of Hartford's license under certain Owens
inventions, and Hartford granted Owens a royalty-free, nonexclusive
license under all Hartford's suction patents for the life of the
patents, excluding, however, glassware in Corning's field. Other
unimportant changes were made in existing contracts. Owens and
Hazel thereupon amended their agreements so as to protect Hazel in
event the contract relations between Owens and Hartford should be
altered.
Owens insists that, by the 1935 agreements, it terminated all
its relations with others which could violate the antitrust
statutes. But the 1935 agreements left Hartford in undisputed
control of the gob feeder field, and Owens in like control of the
suction field. And they evidently relied on the situation which had
been built up, their mutual interests, and other factors as
sufficient to guarantee continuance of existing restraints and
monopolies without the necessity of formal contracts. The district
court found Owens did not abandon the conspiracy in 1935, and there
is evidence to support the conclusion.
In 1919, the Glass Container Association of America was formed.
Prior to 1933, its members produced 82% of the glass containers
made in the United States, and since have produced 92%. Since 1931
(except while the National Industrial Recovery Act, 48 Stat. 195,
was in force), the Association has had a statistical committee of
seven, on which Owens, Hazel, Thatcher, and, since 1933, Ball were
represented. These appellants also were represented in the Board of
Directors. Hartford, though not a member, has closely cooperated
with the officers of the association in efforts to discourage
outsiders from increasing production
Page 323 U. S. 400
of glassware, and newcomers from entering the field. The court
below, on sufficient evidence, has found that the association,
through its statistical committee, assigned production quotas to
its members, and that they and Hartford were zealous in seeing that
these were observed.
In summary, the situation brought about in the glass industry,
and existing in 1938, was this: Hartford, with the technical and
financial aid of others in the conspiracy, had acquired, by issue
to it or assignment from the owners, more than 600 patents. These,
with over 100 Corning controlled patents, over 60 Owens patents,
over 70 Hazel patents, and some 12 Lynch patents, had been, by
cross-licensing agreements, merged into a pool which effectually
controlled the industry. This control was exercised to allot
production in Corning's field to Corning, and that in restricted
classes within the general container field to Owens, Hazel,
Thatcher, Ball, and such other smaller manufacturers as the group
agreed should be licensed. The result was that 94% of the glass
containers manufactured in this country on feeders and formers were
made on machinery licensed under the pooled patents.
The district court found that invention of glassmaking machinery
had been discouraged, that competition in the manufacture and sale
or licensing of such machinery had been suppressed, and that the
system of restricted licensing had been employed to suppress
competition in the manufacture of unpatented glassware and to
maintain prices of the manufactured product. The findings are full
and adequate, and are supported by evidence, much of it
contemporary writings of corporate defendants or their officers and
agents.
In 1938, the Temporary National Economic Committee investigated
the glassmaking industry. Many of the facts disclosed in this
record were developed. Subsequently, this suit was brought and, in
pretrial conferences, the Government stated its view as to the
terms of agreements
Page 323 U. S. 401
and the practices it deemed illegal. The principal corporate
appellants had made some alterations in their arrangements, and,
after institution of suit -- and, on occasions, up to submission of
the case on the proofs -- made further modifications on their own
responsibility, and without concurrence of the appellee or the
judge, in an effort to remedy alleged illegal conditions.
As a consequence, when the case stood for decision, the
situation was as follows: the restrictions in the 1935 agreement
between Hartford and Owens were removed, the exclusive provision,
and the exclusions of the manufacture of certain glassware embodied
in the 1935 agreements between Owens and Hazel were waived by
Owens. Ball had surrendered its residual exclusive right for fruit
jars and released a claim against Hartford thereunder for $425,000
in consideration of Hartford's surrendering its option to acquire
any Ball feeder inventions. Hartford withdrew the exclusive
features of all its licenses of glass machinery. Hartford retained
dominance of the gob feeder field. Owens, although its basic patent
had expired, continued, by virtue of improvement patents, to
dominate the suction field. Owens, Lynch, and Hartford were the
leaders, if not altogether dominant, in the forming machine
field.
In July, 1939, the Association changed the nature of its
statistical reports, which the court found were in reality
assignments of quotas, and professed to have abandoned a voluntary
exchange of statistical data which had previously taken place at
committee or general meetings. It then adopted a form of
statistical statement eliminating all forecasts and confined its
reports to past performances of the members.
We affirm the District Court's findings and conclusions that the
corporate appellants combined in violation of the Sherman Act, that
Hartford and Lynch contracted in violation of the Clayton Act, and
that the individual appellants,
Page 323 U. S. 402
with exceptions to be noted, participated in the violations in
their capacities as officers and directors of the corporations.
Certain individual appellants insist that the finding that they
were parties to the conspiracy must be set aside. In No. 10, Isaac
J. Collins appeals from that portion of the decree which adjudges
him a party to the conspiracy and grants relief against him, and,
in No. 11, Fulton, Fisher and Dilworth challenge their inclusion in
the decree.
When suit was instituted, Collins was president of, and Fulton,
Fisher, and Dil-worth were officially connected with, Anchor
Hocking Glass Company. All had been officers, directors, and
stockholders of companies which Anchor Hocking absorbed. Anchor
Hocking is, and its predecessors were, manufacturers of glassware.
None was a holder of machine patents, or in the glass machine
business. In the bill of complaint, the charges against individuals
were made by alleging that a company, and certain individual
defendants connected with it, had become parties to the conspiracy.
The bill charged that, in 1937, Anchor Hocking and certain
defendants, being its officers and directors, joined the
conspiracy. The appellants in question were named as amongst these
Anchor Hocking defendants, and were not elsewhere in the bill
specifically charged with otherwise participating in the
conspiracy.
At the close of the Government's case, motions were made to
dismiss the bill as to Anchor Hocking and all the directors and
officers of that company, including Collins, Fulton, Fisher, and
Dilworth, on the ground that the Government had failed to prove any
participation by them in the alleged conspiracy. The court granted
the motion with respect to all of them except Collins. Thereupon
these defendants withdrew, and did not participate further in the
trial. Some months later, on a motion of the Government for
rehearing of the order of
Page 323 U. S. 403
dismissal, the court refused to alter its order with respect to
Anchor Hocking or the defendants associated with it, save only
Fulton, Fisher, and Dilworth. As to them, it granted rehearings and
restored them as defendants of record. When the findings and
conclusions were entered, these appellants were named as
participants in the conspiracy and were included in the injunctions
embodied in various sections of the decree.
We think the decree against them must be reversed for want of
allegations in the bill sufficient to support a decree against
them; because the findings made do not support the decree as to
them; because the refusal of findings requested by the Government
exculpates them of participation in the conspiracy; and, finally,
because the proofs fail to connect them with it.
Fulton, Fisher, and Dilworth each hold stock of Hartford with
they acquired many years ago. A company in which they were
interested owned Hartford stock and pledged it under a mortgage.
The company got into difficulties, the mortgage was in default, and
they and others took over the pledged Hartford stock for cash so as
to put the company in funds to refinance its mortgage.
The three appellants are amongst the two hundred or more
stockholders of Hartford. The bill does not, and could not, charge
them, in their capacity as stockholders of Hartford, as parties to
the conspiracy, and they are not to be enjoined by reason of their
stock holdings in Hartford.
As we have said, they were officers and directors of certain
predecessor companies taken over by Anchor Hocking, which were not
charged in the bill as participants in the conspiracy. Anchor
Hocking was so charged, and these appellants and other individuals
were charged in the bill to have been, and then to be, officers and
directors participating in the direction and management of Anchor
Hocking. The complaint adds:
"Such individual defendants
Page 323 U. S. 404
have approved, authorized, ordered, and done some or all the
acts herein alleged to have been performed by defendant Anchor
Hocking."
They are not otherwise specifically charged with participation
in the conspiracy. It would seem, therefore, that, when Anchor
Hocking was found not to have participated, the only basis for
charging them disappeared. Moreover, the Government's proofs went
no father than to show that these appellants acted in the business
affairs of Anchor Hocking. There is no proof that they conspired or
cooperated with other companies parties to the conspiracy, or with
other individuals who were officers and directors of such
corporations. The only findings as to all are to the effect that
they have been officers and directors of Anchor Hocking and its
predecessors, and stockholders of Hartford, and, as to one, that,
in addition, as a Hartford-Fairmont stockholder, he signed the
agreement in 1922 for the formation of Hartford-Empire. The
Government requested the court to find, with respect to them, a
number of facts which, if found, would have connected them with the
conspiracy. The court refused the requests. Nowhere in the findings
or in the opinion is any reason given why these appellants should
be included in the injunction. As to them, the decree must be
reversed.
Anchor Hocking was a licensee of Hartford machinery. The
appellant Collins thought the royalty charged was excessive, and
complained repeatedly about it; and, believing that his company was
free to make glass of any character on any kind of machinery, he
complained about the exclusive features of the license. He
repeatedly aroused the resentment of Hartford and some of the other
participants in the conspiracy by his assertion of the purpose to
use machinery and to manufacture glassware in ways they thought
contrary to his company's rights as a licensee. There were even
discussions as to
Page 323 U. S. 405
whether the company should be sued. This evidence is
uncontradicted.
Collins is a stockholder of Hartford. He acquired his original
stock interest in the same way that Fulton, Fisher, and Dilworth
did. In 1926, he was elected a director, and remained such until
1937, when he resigned. This was prior to the T.N.E.C. hearing in
which the Hartford licensing system was investigated, and prior to
the institution of suit. There is no evidence or finding of any
reasonable likelihood that he will resume the directorship.
Moreover, the bill charges that Anchor Hocking and the individuals
connected with it entered the conspiracy in 1937.
The bill does not charge Collins with any act as officer or
director of, or as participant in the direction and management of,
Hartford. The only charge against him is in respect of his
connection with Anchor Hocking. The evidence is that Collins was an
irregular attendant at directors' meetings of Hartford; that he was
not on any committee of the board which had direct contact with the
management and patent affairs of Hartford; that he did not know of
the preferred terms under which Owens and Hazel were licensed by
Hartford until the matter was disclosed in the T.N.E.C. hearings,
and then criticized the arrangement. There is no evidence that, as
a director of Hartford, he knew, approved, or voted in favor of any
of the actions taken pursuant to the conspiracy. On the contrary,
the evidence is uncontradicted that he repeatedly advocated more
liberal licensing by Hartford. and thought its royalties too high.
As in the case of the other appellants mentioned, the Government
requested findings of fact which, if made, would have spelled out a
connection between Collins and the other conspirators, but these
were refused by the judge. Collins is found to have been, and still
to be, a member of the Association's
Page 323 U. S. 406
statistical committee, but the bill does not charge him
individually with any conduct in that relation. Of course, any
injunction against the Association and its officers and agents will
bind him so long as he remains in that relationship. Two other
findings as to his activities as a director of Hartford, and as
president of General Glass Company, touch matters as to which the
bill of complaint is silent and concerning which the evidence is
not persuasive of participation in any conspiracy charged or
proved. We are of opinion that, as to Collins, the bill should be
dismissed.
I. Little need be said concerning the legal principles which
vindicate the District Court's findings and conclusions as to the
corporate appellants and the individual appellants who as officers
or directors participated in the corporate acts which forwarded the
objects of the conspiracy. As was said in
Standard Sanitary
Mfg. Co. v. United States, 226 U. S. 20,
226 U. S.
49:
"Rights conferred by patents are indeed very definite and
extensive, but they do not give any more than other rights a
universal license against positive prohibitions. The Sherman law is
a limitation of rights -- rights which may be pushed to evil
consequences, and therefore restrained."
The difference between legitimate use and prohibited abuse of
the restrictions incident to the ownership of patents by the
pooling of them is discussed in
Standard Oil Co. v. United
States, 283 U. S. 163.
Application of the tests there announced sustains the District
Court's decision. It is clear that, by cooperative arrangements and
binding agreements, the appellant corporations, over a period of
years, regulated and suppressed competition in the use of
glassmaking machinery and employed their
Page 323 U. S. 407
joint patent position to allocate fields of manufacture and to
maintain prices of unpatented glassware.
The explanations offered by the appellants are unconvincing. It
is said on behalf of Hartford that its business, in its inception,
was lawful and within the patent laws, and that, in order to
protect its legitimate interests as holder of patents for automatic
glass machinery, it was justified in buying up and fencing off
improvement patents, the grant of which, while leaving the
fundamental inventions untouched, would hamper their use unless
tribute were paid to the owners of the so-called improvements
which, of themselves, had only a nuisance value.
The explanation fails to account for the offensive and defensive
alliance of patent owners with its concomitant stifling of
initiative, invention, and competition.
Nor can Owens' contention prevail that it long ago abandoned any
cooperation with the other corporate defendants, and has been free
of any trammel to unrestricted competition either in the machinery
or glass field. Owens remained active in the association. It
remained dominant in the suction field. It continued in close touch
with Hartford and with other large manufacturers of glassware who
were parties to the conspiracy. The District Court was justified in
finding that the mere cancellation of the written word was not
enough, in the light of subsequent conduct, to acquit Owens of
further participation in the conspiracy.
Individual appellants, except Collins, Fulton, Fisher, and
Dilworth, who were officers or directors of corporate appellants
each did one or more acts, such as negotiating, voting for, or
executing agreements, which constituted steps in the progress of
the conspiracy. To this extent, they participated in violations of
the statutes. Some were more active and played a more responsible
rule than others.
Page 323 U. S. 408
II. The Government sought the dissolution of Hartford. The
court, however, decided that a continuance of certain of Hartford's
activities would be of advantage to the glass industry, and denied,
for the time being, that form of relief. The court was of opinion,
however, that the long series of transactions and the persistent
manifestations of a purpose to violate the antitrust statutes
required the entry of a decree which would preclude the resumption
of unlawful practices. It was faced, therefore, with the difficult
problem of awarding an injunction which would insure the desired
end without imposing punishments or other sanctions for past
misconduct, a problem especially difficult in view of the status
and relationship of the parties. At the trial, the Government
stated that, in this suit, it was not attacking the validity of any
patent or claiming any patent had been awarded an improper
priority.
At the time of the District Court's decision, Hartford had
reduced the royalties of all its licensees to its then schedule of
standard royalties so that all stood on an equal basis so far as
license fees were concerned. Government counsel did not assert or
attempt to prove that these royalties were not reasonable in
amount.
Owens, as respects suction invention licenses, had removed all
restrictive clauses; Hartford had done the same with respect to all
its glass machinery licenses, and so had Hartford and Lynch with
respect to forming machine licenses. At the moment, therefore, no
licensee was restricted either as to kind or quantity of glassware
it might manufacture by use of the patented machines, and no patent
owner was restricted by formal agreement as to the use or licensing
of its patents.
Just before the trial, Hartford conveyed three patents to
Corning, and complaint was made of this transaction.
Page 323 U. S. 409
Corning paid a substantial sum for the transfer, evidently to
prevent Hartford's obstructing Corning's free and untrammeled use
of its own patents. Two of the assigned patents have expired, and
Corning professes its willingness to dedicate the third to the
public.
The association had ceased to allot quotas amongst the glass
manufacturers or to furnish advance information or make
recommendations to its members. The licensing system of Hartford
remained that of leasing machinery built for it embodying the
patented inventions. Rentals consisted of standard royalties on
production. Under this system, Hartford rendered a service in the
repair, maintenance, and protection of the machines which is
valuable, if not essential, to the users. This was the status with
which the court had to deal.
The applicable principles are not doubtful. The Sherman Act
provides criminal penalties for its violation, and authorizes the
recovery of a penal sum in addition to damages in a civil suit by
one injured by violation. It also authorizes an injunction to
prevent continuing violations by those acting contrary to its
proscriptions. The present suit is in the last named category, and
we may not impose penalties [
Footnote 4] in the guise of preventing future violations.
This is not to say that a decree need deal only with the exact type
of acts found to have been committed [
Footnote 5] or that the court should not, in framing its
decree, resolve all doubts in favor of the Government, [
Footnote 6] or may not prohibit acts
which in another setting would be unobjectionable. But, even so,
the court may not create, as to the defendants, new duties,
prescription of which is the function of Congress, or place the
defendants, for the future, "in a different class than other
people," as the Government
Page 323 U. S. 410
has suggested. The decree must not be "so vague as to put the
whole conduct of the defendants' business at the peril of a summons
for contempt," enjoin "all possible breaches of the law," [
Footnote 7] or cause the defendants
hereafter not "to be under the protection of the law of the land."
[
Footnote 8] With these
principles in mind, we proceed to examine the terms of the decree
entered. No reference will be made to paragraphs as to which the
appellants do not object if any decree is to be entered, nor to
those concerning which we think objection is not well founded.
The decree must be modified to eliminate the appellants Collins,
Dilworth, Fulton, and Fisher.
Paragraph 1(D) should be modified to limit its coverage to the
United States, and clause (a) should be stricken as too indefinite
for enforcement.
The Government concedes that paragraph 5 should be modified to
confine to heat resistant ware the adjudication that Corning,
Hartford, and Empire, and the individual defendants associated with
each, have monopolized and attempted to monopolize trade in
violation of § 2 of the Sherman Act. This involves exclusion
from the paragraph of reference to laboratory, paste mold, and
electrical ware. To comport with the record, the phrase "ovenware"
should be substituted for "heat-resistant ware."
The Government also agrees to the elimination of paragraph 9,
which generally enjoins the appellants from violations "as charged
in the complaint." This concession is required by statute, by the
Rules of Civil Procedure, and by our decisions. [
Footnote 9]
Page 323 U. S. 411
The court appointed a receiver for Hartford
pendente
lite. By paragraphs 10 to 20 of the final decree, it continued
him in office and gave directions as to his administration of
Hartford's affairs, including certain actions to be taken to
effectuate features of the decree affecting Hartford's business and
licenses, which will later be described, and meantime to continue
the receipt of royalties under existing licenses, these to be
repaid to the licensees on the decree becoming final. The court
also ordered the impounding of the sums payable by Hazel to
Hartford, and by Hartford to Hazel, under the 1932 agreement, until
the decree should become final. Ball Brothers was ordered to pay
into court the $425,000 received from Hartford pursuant to the
amendment, August 1, 1940, of Ball's feeder license agreement, but
no disposition of the fund was directed (Paragraph 44). Corning was
directed to pay into court the moneys received by it from Hartford
in connection with the amending agreements of September 23 and
December 1, 1940, and that fund is held by the clerk pending the
further order of the court (Paragraph 45-A).
While useful for the preservation of rights pending the
determination of this litigation, in the light of what is hereafter
said as to the substantive provisions of the decree, the
receivership and the impounding of funds were not necessary to the
prescription of appropriate relief. The receivership should be
wound up, and the business returned to Hartford. The royalties paid
to the receiver by Hartford's lessees may, unless the District
Court finds that Hartford has, since the entry of the receivership
decree, violated the antitrust laws or acted contrary to the terms
of the final decree as modified by this opinion, be paid over to
Hartford. In any event, Hartford should receive out of these
royalties compensation on a
quantum meruit basis for
services rendered to lessees. The other funds paid into court and
impounded in the registry should be repaid to those who paid them
into court.
Page 323 U. S. 412
Paragraphs 21, 22, and 23 apply to the corporate defendants and
to any of the individual defendants who shall hereafter engage in
the business of distributing glassware machinery. They forbid any
disposition or transfer of possession of such machinery by any
means other than an outright sale, and require Hartford to offer in
writing to sell each of the present lessees all the machinery now
under lease to such lessee at a reasonable price to be fixed in
consideration of the fees and royalties heretofore paid, any
dispute as to price to be settled by the court. All of the
corporate defendants and the individual defendants are required, if
they engage in the business of distributing glassmaking machinery,
to file a writing with the court agreeing to offer, and to continue
to offer, to sell any machinery used in the manufacture of
glassware to any applicant at reasonable and equal prices and upon
reasonable and equal terms and conditions.
All of the appellants attack these provisions. A common ground
is that this court has held that the lease of a patented machine is
a lawful method of exercising the exclusive patent right of
practicing or using the invention, [
Footnote 10] and that effective relief may be afforded
without destroying the appellants' property rights in the patents
they own.
Hazel, Thatcher, and Ball object to the injunction directed to
them on the ground that none of them has ever been in the business
of selling, licensing, or distributing such machinery. The
Government replies that the injunction is intended only to prevent
them from again
Page 323 U. S. 413
setting up a patent pool and monopolizing the patented
inventions. The decree should enjoin the defendants from setting up
such a pool or combining or hereafter agreeing to monopolize the
glass machinery or the glassware industry, as we think it does in
other paragraphs. But the decree as entered requires that each of
the defendants must hereafter forever abstain from leasing a
patented machine, no matter what the date of the invention, and
compels each of them, if he desires to distribute patented
machinery, to sell the machine which embodies the patent to
everyone who applies at a price to be fixed by the court. The
injunction, as drawn, is not directed at any combination,
agreement, or conspiracy. It binds every defendant forever,
irrespective of his connection with any other or of the
independence of his action.
Paragraph 24 enjoins each of the corporate and individual
appellants from engaging in the distribution of machinery used in
glass manufacture or in the distribution of glassware in interstate
commerce unless each files with the court an agreement (a) to
license, without royalty or charge of any kind, and for the life of
all patents, any applicant to make, to have made for it, and to use
any number of machines and methods embodied in inventions covered
by any patent or patent application now owned or controlled by such
defendant; (b) to license at a reasonable royalty (to be fixed by
the court, in case of dispute) any applicant to make, have made for
it, and to use any number of machines and methods in the
manufacture of glassware embodying inventions covered by patents
hereafter applied for or owned or controlled by any defendant; (c)
to make available to any licensee, under "(a)" and "(b)," at cost
plus a reasonable profit, all drawings and patterns "relating to
the machinery or methods used in the manufacture of glassware"
embodied
Page 323 U. S. 414
in the licensed inventions (with immaterial exceptions).
Since the provisions of paragraphs 21 to 24, inclusive, in
effect confiscate considerable portions of the appellants'
property, we think they go beyond what is required to dissolve the
combination and prevent future combinations of like character. It
is to be borne in mind that the Government has not, in this
litigation, attacked the validity of any patent or the priority
ascribed to any by the patent office, nor has it attacked, as
excessive or unreasonable, the standard royalties heretofore
exacted by Hartford. Hartford has reduced all of its royalties to a
uniform scale, and has waived and abolished and agreed to waive and
abolish all restrictions and limitations in its outstanding leases,
so that every licensee shall be at liberty to use the machinery for
the manufacture of any kind or quantity of glassware comprehended
within the decree. Moreover, if licenses or assignments by any one
of the corporate defendants to any other still contain any
offensive provision, such provision can, by appropriate injunction,
be cancelled, so that the owner of each patent will have
unrestricted freedom to use and to license, and every licensee
equally with every other will be free of restriction as to the use
of the leased or licensed machinery, method or process, or the
articles manufactured thereon or thereunder.
It is suggested that there is not confiscation, since Hartford
might, with the later consent of the court, sell its patents. Under
the decree as entered below, nothing can be obtained by Hartford
for the use of its patents, and we cannot speculate as to what
might be the ultimate adjustments made by the trial court in the
decree.
If, as suggested, some of Hartford's patents were improperly
obtained, or if some of them were awarded a priority to which the
invention was not entitled, avenues
Page 323 U. S. 415
are open to the Government to raise these questions and to have
the patents cancelled. But if, as we must assume on this record, a
defendant owns valid patents, it is difficult to say that, however
much in the past such defendant has abused the rights thereby
conferred, it must now dedicate them to the public.
That a patent is property, protected against appropriation both
by individuals and by government, has long been settled. [
Footnote 11] In recognition of this
quality of a patent, the courts, in enjoining violations of the
Sherman Act arising from the use of patent license, agreements, and
leases, have abstained from action which amounted to a forfeiture
of the patents. [
Footnote
12]
The Government urges that such forfeiture is justified by our
recent decisions in
Morton Salt Co. v. G.S. Suppiger Co.,
314 U. S. 488, and
B.B. Chemical Co. v. Ellis, 314 U.
S. 495. But those cases merely apply the doctrine that,
so long as the patent owner is using his patent in violation of the
antitrust laws, he cannot restrain infringement of it by others. We
were not there concerned with the problem whether, when a violation
of the antitrust laws was to be restrained and discontinued, the
court could, as part of the relief, forfeit the patents of those
who had been guilty of the violation. Lower federal courts
Page 323 U. S. 416
have rightly refused to extend the doctrine of those cases to
antitrust decrees by inserting forfeiture provisions. [
Footnote 13]
Legislative history is also enlightening upon this point.
Repeatedly since 1908, legislation has been proposed in Congress to
give the courts power to cancel a patent which has been used as an
instrument to violate antitrust laws. [
Footnote 14] Congress has not adopted such
legislation. The Temporary National Economic Committee recommended
imposition of such a penalty for violation of antitrust laws.
[
Footnote 15] But its
recommendation was not adopted by Congress.
The Government suggests that certain earlier decisions under the
Sherman Act, by analogy, support these portions of the decree.
[
Footnote 16] The cases
cited, however, do not sustain the suggestion. In all of them, the
court refrained from ordering compulsory dealing with the assets of
the defendant without compensation and, in most of them, the
decrees merely called for rearrangement of ownership, not for its
destruction.
Page 323 U. S. 417
Under paragraph 24(b), a defendant hereafter acquiring a patent
cannot set the price for its use by others, elect to use it himself
and refuse to license it, or to retain it and neither use nor
license it. These are options patent owners have always enjoyed.
[
Footnote 17]
Congress was asked as early as 1877, and frequently since, to
adopt a system of compulsory licensing of patents. [
Footnote 18] It has failed to enact these
proposals into law. It has also rejected the proposal that a
patentee found guilty of violation of the antitrust laws should be
compelled, as a penalty, to license all his future inventions at
reasonable royalties. [
Footnote
19] The Temporary National Economic Committee recommended
congressional adoption of such a system, [
Footnote 20] but Congress took no action to that
end.
Paragraph 24(a) of the decree should be modified to permit the
reservation of reasonable royalties, and its provisions should be
restricted to feeders, formers, stackers, and lehrs, and patents
covering these or improvements of them or methods or processes used
in connection with them.
Paragraph 24(b) should be limited in respect of future
applications and resulting patents or patents hereafter acquired by
assignment, to those covering feeders, formers, stackers, and
lehrs, or parts thereof or improvements thereon, the methods and
processes involved in their construction
Page 323 U. S. 418
and operation. For example, if Ball or Thatcher should procure a
patent on a bottle-capping machine or for a composition of glass,
there is no reason to compel a license to Hartford or Hazel or
anyone else. Other paragraphs of the decree preclude a misuse of
the patent in violation of the antitrust laws.
Paragraph 24(c) should be deleted.
Paragraph 25 restrains all the corporate and individual
appellants, whenever regularly engaged in the manufacture of
glassware for interstate commerce, from discrimination "by means of
wholly exclusive or partially exclusive requirement contracts" "or
otherwise" against any such manufacture, present or prospective; or
in the filling of orders for machinery on the basis of the size of
the order or credit rating of the customer, if he is willing to pay
cash, his standing in the industry or otherwise, and from
conspiring with any other person or corporation to obstruct or
delay the furnishing of any such machinery.
The earlier portion of the paragraph is vague, and would be
difficult of application. It seems not to be addressed to any
practice indulged in or threatened by any of the appellants. It
should therefore be modified or eliminated. The last five lines of
the paragraph are appropriate, although the matters covered by them
are apparently embraced in other portions of the decree.
Thatcher and Ball insist that no such injunction should be
directed to them, for the reason that they are not now, and never
have been, in the business of owning machinery patents or selling
or licensing glassmaking machinery. We think, however, in view of
the fact that they have been found to have conspired with Hartford
and the other appellants in denying and obstructing competitors
from obtaining machinery, the injunction, modified as suggested,
may stand against them.
Paragraph 26 enjoins all of the corporate appellants, and all of
the individuals associated with them, until the
Page 323 U. S. 419
entry of a finding by the court on the petition of any defendant
that the consequences of the conduct of the defendants in violation
of the antitrust laws have been fully dissipated, from the
following acts: (a) bringing, maintaining, or taking any action in
any suit for infringement of any patent owned or controlled or
hereafter issued on pending applications covering glassware
machinery; (b) attempting to interfere, by suit or otherwise, with
the possession of any machinery owned, or claimed to be owned, by
any appellant which is in the possession of any licensee except
sale to the licensee pursuant to paragraph 21; (c) attempting to
collect royalties or license fees for the use of any inventions
covered by existing patents or applications for patents for
glassware machinery.
Since paragraphs 21 to 24(a), inclusive, are to be eliminated,
this paragraph, which is ancillary to them, should also be deleted
from the decree, but, in view of the nature of the conspiracy
found, an injunction should go against the further prosecution of
all infringement suits pending at the date this suit was brought.
Hartford and the other corporate defendants mentioned in paragraph
24 should be required to lease or license glassmaking machinery of
the classes each now manufactures to any who may desire to take
licenses (under patents on such machinery or on improvements,
methods or processes applicable thereto), at standard royalties and
without discrimination or restriction, and if, at the time of entry
of the decree, there are any alleged infringers who are willing to
take such licenses, they should be released, and the patent owner
deprived of all damages and profits which it might have claimed for
past infringement. The decree should, however, be without prejudice
to the future institution of any suit or suits for asserted
infringements against persons refusing to take licenses under any
of the presently licensed inventions arising out of their use after
the date of the decree. The decree should not forbid any
Page 323 U. S. 420
defendant from seeking recovery for infringement, occurring
after the date of the final decree, of patents not covering
feeders, formers, stackers, lehrs, or processes or methods
applicable to any of them.
Paragraph 27 cancels all outstanding agreements between
corporate appellants, including all modifications made prior to or
pending trial. This is consonant with the terms of the earlier
paragraphs, which require corporate appellants to license all
inventions involved, royalty free, and to sell machines embodying
such inventions.
In view of what we have already said about these earlier
paragraphs, the license agreements, as modified by the parties and
in accordance with the views here expressed, should be allowed to
stand. As has been noted, these are all at uniform royalties, and
all without restrictions or discriminatory features. We do not
understand that, as modified, any of these agreements is attacked
as containing improper or unlawful provisions. If, however, any of
them is found still to embody provisions inconsistent with the form
of relief we have outlined, its reformation should be decreed. The
appellants should be enjoined from hereafter altering these
agreements, or any hereafter made in like terms, without the
approval of the court. If the existing royalties are excessive,
these may be reduced to a fair and reasonable basis. The decree
should permit any corporate appellant, acting alone, to lease or
sell patented machinery or license the use of patents, if it so
elects, provided always that no discrimination be practiced and
that no restrictive conditions be attached (except as stated in
connection with paragraph 29) save with the approval of the
court.
A word should be said with respect to the effect of this
paragraph in cancelling the agreement of September 23, 1940,
between Hartford-Empire and Corning, and the assignment of three
patents to Corning pursuant thereto.
Page 323 U. S. 421
It will be recalled that, prior to the trial, Corning and
Hartford cancelled the 1916 and 1922 agreements which the court
found illegal and which the decree ordered cancelled
notwithstanding the parties' prior action. Further, Corning was
given an unrestricted license by Hartford which will require the
payment of increased royalties by Corning for use of Hartford's
inventions. In consideration of the cancellation of the agreements,
Hartford agreed to pay Corning $1,125,000, in installments, and to
transfer to Corning three patents owned by Hartford. The decree
orders these payments impounded, but makes no disposition of the
impounded fund. It also requires Corning to reassign the patents to
Hartford.
Two of the patents have expired. The reason for Corning's desire
to obtain title to the patents was that two of them were alleged to
conflict with certain features of Corning's ribbon machine,
[
Footnote 21] although the
claim was always contested and never established. These are the two
expired patents. The third was alleged to infringe upon a feature
of a Corning patented machine known as a turret chain machine.
Continued ownership of the patent by Hartford would constitute a
threat against the use by Corning of the machine. The assigned
patent will expire six years before Corning's patent on the turret
chain machine. Naturally, Corning desired to be free from the
possible threat of infringement suits. It does not appear that the
ownership of this patent by Corning would tend to perpetuate or
create any improper monopoly or patent pool. In any event, Corning
has agreed, if such danger is found to exist, to dedicate the
patent to the public, since all it desires is to be free of
restraint on the part of Hartford in the use of its turret chain
machine. Such dedication should be ordered.
Page 323 U. S. 422
In the light of these facts, the settlement made by Hartford and
Corning ought not to be set aside nor ought the payment to be made
by Hartford to Corning thereunder be enjoined. The money paid into
court by Corning should be returned to it.
The paragraph orders cancellation of the agreements of June 30,
1916, between Hartford-Fairmont and Empire, and that of October 26,
1922, between Hartford, Corning and others. These have been
cancelled, but the decree should enjoin their reinstatement, or the
making of like contracts in the future.
Paragraph 28 orders cancellation of all Hartford machinery
leases now outstanding and requires that each lessee be offered a
new license (without royalty, pursuant to paragraph 24) and offered
the right to purchase all of the machinery now held under lease (as
required by paragraph 23). In view of what has been said this
provision should not stand.
Paragraph 29 enjoins the insertion or enforcement of any
provision in any agreement heretofore or hereafter made by any of
the appellants which (a) directly or indirectly limits or restricts
(1) the type or kind of product, whether glassware or any other,
which can be produced on machines or equipment or by processes
embodying inventions licensed under patents or patent applications,
(2) the use of the product so produced, (3) the character, weight,
color, capacity, or composition of the product, (4) the quantity,
(5) the market, either as to territory or customers in or to which
the product may be sold or distributed, (6) the price or terms of
sale or other disposition of the product, or (7) the use of the
machinery or equipment distributed or the inventions licensed in
connection with any other machinery or equipment, or the use of it
in any specified plant or locality; (b) authorizes termination of
the license for unauthorized use; (c) provides that the licensee
shall not contest the validity of
Page 323 U. S. 423
any patent or patents of the licensor; (d) provides that
improvements by the licensee on machinery leased and sold shall
become the property of the lessor; (e) provides that rights to
improvements and inventions covering licensed machinery or
processes or methods shall become the exclusive property of the
lessor or vendor; or (f) grants to any licensee a preferential
position by lower rates of royalty, by different provisions of
licensing, leasing, or sale, by exclusive licensing, rebate,
discounts or requiring a share in net or gross income, or by any
other means.
The paragraph now covers every kind of invention and every
patent, present or future, in any field if owned or controlled or
distributed by an appellant.
The injunction will stop all inventions or acquirement of
patents in any field by any appellant unless for its own use in its
business, for it sets such limitations upon the reward of a patent
as to make it practically worthless except for use by the owner. It
is unlimited in time. It is not limited to any joint action or
conspiracy violative of the antitrust laws; it covers inventions in
every conceivable field.
The Government now agrees that this injunction should be limited
to glassmaking machinery and glassware as defined in paragraph 1 of
the decree of the District Court.
The corporate appellants have amended, or agreed to amend,
existing leases and licenses to remove all such restrictions as are
enjoined. [
Footnote 22] We
have already said that the decree should enforce conformity of all
lease and license agreements to this standard, and forbid the
reinstatement or embodiment of any such restrictions in
existing
Page 323 U. S. 424
or future agreements relating to the machinery, methods, or
processes respecting feeders, formers, stackers, or lehrs or
involved in their use, covered by patents now owned or applied for
or those hereafter acquired by any corporate appellant.
Paragraph 29 should be amended to permit any appellant,
corporate or individual, to retain and refuse to license, to use
and refuse to license, or to license with restrictions, any patent
hereafter applied for or acquired except those applicable to
feeders, formers, stackers, and lehrs, and processes and methods
applicable thereto. Its restraints should be limited as we have
indicated those of paragraph 24(b) should be limited.
Paragraph 30 applies all the terms of paragraph 29 to agreements
hereafter made between any of the defendants. This should be
modified to conform to the alterations to be made in paragraph
29.
Paragraph 31 requires court approval of "any agreement between
any of the defendants" and "of any license agreement made pursuant
to this judgment." This is too sweeping. The provision is without
limit of time and not terminable upon fulfillment of any condition.
Many of the individual defendants are employees of one of the
corporate defendants. An employment contract could not be made with
such an one without court approval. Nor can any defendant enter
into the most innocent and usual business transaction with any
other, however unrelated to the conspiracy, without similar
approval. This paragraph, if retained, should be restricted in
application to lease or license agreements and agreements
respecting patents and trade practices, production, and trade
relations.
By paragraph 33, each of the individual defendants is enjoined
from
"holding, controlling, directly or indirectly, or through
corporations, agents, trustees, representatives, or nominees, any
of the issued and outstanding capital stock, bonds or other
evidences of indebtedness of more
Page 323 U. S. 425
than one corporation engaged either in the manufacture and sale
of glassware or in the manufacture or distribution of machinery
used in the manufacture of glassware or in both. . . ."
The individual defendants thus enjoined are officers and
directors of the corporate defendants. The purpose of dealing with
stock ownership is to prevent aggregation of control to the end of
establishing a monopoly or stifling competition. The ownership of a
few, or even a few hundred, shares of stock of a glass
manufacturing company not in competition with the company of which
a defendant happens to be a director or officer can have no
tendency towards such a result. Many food packers and makers of
proprietary articles manufacture part or all of the glassware in
which the goods are sold. The decree would require all of the
defendants, at their peril, to part with any stock which they own
in such a concern and to refrain from buying any. Owens is in the
glass container business. It has never manufactured pressed or
blown ware or light bulbs, yet the decree would forbid any
defendant connected with Owens from investing in any concern
manufacturing these articles. It is unnecessary to multiply
instances of the broad sweep of the paragraph.
Moreover, the injunction is against ownership of bonds of any
such company. It is difficult to see how such ownership, in any
reasonable amount by any of the individuals in question, could tend
towards a violation of the Sherman Act. The phrase "evidence of
indebtedness" is also used. This would indicate complete
prohibition against making a loan, however reasonable or however
proper the purpose, evidenced by a promissory note.
The decree should be modified to prohibit acquisition of stocks
or bonds of any corporate appellant by any other such appellant,
and to prohibit only the acquisition of a measure of control
through ownership of stocks or bonds or otherwise, by any
individual in a company competing
Page 323 U. S. 426
with that with which he is officially connected or a subsidiary
or affiliate of such competing company.
The appellants Falck, Houghton, Houghton Jr., and Levis own
substantial amounts of stock of Corning and of Hartford. By the
decree, they are required to divest themselves of their stock in
the one or the other within two years from the date of the
judgment. In view of the effect of the decree on Hartford, it may
prove difficult for these defendants to comply within the period
stated without severe loss. We are of opinion that a longer time
should be allowed and that an alternative provision would be
appropriate depriving these defendants of the right to vote the
stock of one company or the other or to trustee the stock of one of
the corporations if both stocks are held longer than the term
fixed.
Paragraph 34, which deals with present holdings of individual
appellants, should be revised to comport with the views expressed
as to paragraph 33.
Paragraph 35 enjoins each individual defendant from holding at
the same time an office or directorship in more than one
corporation which manufactures and sells glassware or manufactures
or distributes glassmaking machinery. The injunction is not limited
to directorships in more than one of the defendant corporations.
The same comment applies as has been made with respect to paragraph
33. There may be many instances when the normal freedom to act as a
director of more than one company will in no wise conflict with the
policies of the antitrust laws or tend to the fostering of
practices which those laws forbid. The same considerations apply to
paragraphs 36-A and 36-B, which should be limited to the
acquisition of the business or assets of a competing corporation by
a corporate defendant, and by any officer of a corporate defendant,
of the business or all the assets of a competing concern, unless
the acquisition is approved by the court.
Page 323 U. S. 427
Paragraphs 37 to 39 are directed at the glass container
association, its officers, directors, employees and members. The
District Court has found that, from 1928 to 1937, the Association,
through the instrumentality of its statistical committee, on which
the principal corporate defendants were represented, furnished
forecasts of probable future production of each of the glass
manufacturers concerned, and that these forecasts were communicated
at meetings of the association by one manufacturer to another so
that there was general knowledge amongst the members of the
forecasted future production of each of them. These forecasts, the
court found, were treated by the corporate appellants and their
officers as, in fact, quotas, deviation from such quotas was
discouraged, and it was the general understanding that each
manufacturer should restrict his production to accord with his
quota. The court further found that the association, working in
close cooperation with Hartford, which was not a member, endeavored
to discourage expansion of the industry and to prevent increased
competition through the entry of new units into the various fields
of manufacture of glass containers.
The court, in its opinion, indicates that it does not find it
necessary to dissolve the association, and further indicates that
it may serve a valuable purpose to the industry "as a statistical
and research body" and in the promotion of better methods of
manufacture and distribution.
The injunctions entered in paragraphs 37 to 39, inclusive,
compel the association to abolish its statistical committee and to
refrain from establishing any committee with similar functions;
enjoin it from retaining any of its present officers or board of
directors who are defendants and also directors, officers or
employees of any defendant corporation, and order it to submit to
the Attorney General and to the court the names of directors or
officers to be elected or appointed to succeed present incumbents.
The association is enjoined from electing,
Page 323 U. S. 428
employing, or continuing in office or employment anyone who is
at the time an officer, director, agent, or employee of the
corporate appellants, and is required to amend its charter and
bylaws to prevent such employment.
We think the injunction as respects the association, while
leaving it in existence, practically destroys its functioning, even
as an innocent trade association for what have been held lawful
ends. [
Footnote 23] The
association has undoubtedly been an important instrument of
restraint and monopoly. It may be made such again, and detection
and prevention and punishment for such resumption of violations of
law may be difficult, if not impossible. In the light of the
record, we think it better to order its dissolution, and to provide
that the corporate defendants be restrained for a period of five
years from forming or joining any such trade association, and that
thereafter they may apply for leave to do so, and have such leave
on showing to the court that the purposes and activities of the
proposed body will not be violative of law.
Paragraph 40 is a general injunction against future conduct. It
is designed to prevent combinations in violation of the antitrust
statutes. It names each corporate defendant "and the individual
defendants associated therewith," meaning the officers and
directors of each who are found to have participated in the
conspiracy. But an injunction binding the corporate defendants,
their officers, agents, and employees is sufficient to constrain
the individual defendants so long as they remain in official
relation, and to bind their successors. It is unnecessary to enjoin
them personally when that relation is severed.
Page 323 U. S. 429
Sub-paragraph (1) prohibits combining with any other defendant
or with any other manufacturer or "seller" of glassware or glass
machinery. The appellants object to the inclusion of the word
"seller," claiming that the use of this term may preclude normal
business arrangements with agents and consignees. We shall later
indicate the proviso we think necessary in this connection. We are
of opinion that the sub-paragraph should be amended by exscinding
the phrase "its directors, officers and employees" in both clauses
and inserting the words "whether a natural person, partnership or
corporation" after the word glassware appearing in the last line of
the printed draft of the decree furnished this court by the
appellants.
Sub-paragraph (b) should be amended by inserting the word "a"
between "of" and manufacturer (which should be in the singular) in
the first line of the same draft, deleting the words "or effect
thereof" in the sixth line, and inserting in lieu thereof "of such
ascertainment, estimate or forecast" and by inserting in the next
line between the words "persuade" and "any" the words "or agree
with."
Sub-paragraph (c) should be amended to substitute in the sixth
line of the same draft for "or where" the word "with" and for "or
effect is" the words "or agreement."
Sub-paragraph (d) should be deleted. The requirement that all
trade information be given to the public would render the assembly
of it for the information of members useless, and indeed
detrimental to competition. The inclusion of such a provision in an
antitrust decree has been disapproved by this court.
Paragraph (2) should be modified by adding at the end "in the
distribution of glassware or machinery for the manufacture of
glassware."
Paragraph (3), which deals with distribution of data concerning
the business of glassmaking and glass machinery
Page 323 U. S. 430
distribution, is approved with these alterations: after the word
"otherwise" in the seventh line of the draft, there should be
inserted the words "pursuant to any agreement or understanding or
with the purpose or intent," and there should be deleted the words
"in such form or manner as to indicate;" after the word "machinery"
in the next to last line, the sentence should read, "shall limit
his or its output to any production quota or shall adhere or
conform to any price."
In order to permit usual business transactions not related to
violations of the antitrust statutes, there should be added at the
end of paragraph 40 a proviso that nothing in the paragraph is to
be construed to forbid normal business transactions of any of the
corporate defendants with its selling agents or consignees, persons
or corporations rendering services to it, or customers; or to
prohibit transactions with citizens or corporations of foreign
nations; or to prevent any defendant from availing of the benefits
of the Webb-Pomerene Act, the Small Business Mobilization Act or
(save as elsewhere in the decree provided) of the benefits of the
patent laws.
Paragraphs 41 and 42 are duplications of other provisions of the
decree. They should be deleted.
Paragraph 51 enjoins all defendants from directly or indirectly
acquiring, otherwise than through direct issue from the patent
office, any patent, patent application, or exclusive rights
thereunder covering any invention embodied or employed in a machine
or process used, or to be used, in glassware manufacture ("whether
or not the machine or process embodying or employing the invention
covered by the patent can be used without infringing another patent
or patents") which constitutes or employs, in whole or in part, a
method, means, or process to obtain results in the glassmaking art
which is identical with, similar, or alternative to, those obtained
or obtainable by the machinery, methods, or processes embodying
Page 323 U. S. 431
inventions covered by patents then owned or controlled by any
defendant, except nonexclusive rights or patents on inventions of
its or his employees or those of a subsidiary, made during the time
of employment.
The scope of the provision is not clear. Whether it applies to
an improvement upon an existing patented invention seems doubtful.
Perhaps it does not prevent an owner of a patent upon a feeder from
acquiring one upon a former, or an owner of a patent upon a stacker
from acquiring one upon a lehr, but, as the provision is framed,
this is not clear. The injunction seems, in effect, to forbid
acquisition by any defendant of any patent right in any glassmaking
field, for most of the corporate defendants, and perhaps some of
the individuals, now own some such patent.
It is clear, however, that the paragraph enjoins all acquisition
of patent rights other than nonexclusive licenses. In this respect,
it is the reverse of paragraph 29, which outlaws all grants except
unrestricted nonexclusive licenses. It will be noted that the
injunction runs against each defendant individually, and is not
applicable to joint acquisitions or to combinations or agreements
respecting acquisition. It seems to prohibit the acquisition of any
patent or of a restricted license under any patent by any
defendant. In this respect, the paragraph is inappropriate to
restrain future violations of the antitrust statutes. The paragraph
should be deleted.
Paragraph 52 deals with the problem of suppressed or unworked
patents. Much is said in the opinion below, and in the briefs,
about the practice of the appellants in applying for patents to
"block off" or "fence in" competing inventions. In the cooperative
effort of certain of the appellants to obtain dominance in the
field of patented glassmaking machinery, many patents were applied
for to prevent others from obtaining patents on improvements which
might, to some extent, limit the return in the way
Page 323 U. S. 432
of royalty on original or fundamental inventions. The decree
should restrain agreements and combinations with this object. But
it is another matter to restrain every defendant, for the
indefinite future, from attempting to patent improvements of
machines or processes previously patented and then owned by such
defendant. This paragraph is, in our judgment, too broad. In
effect, it prohibits several of the corporate defendants from
applying for patents covering their own inventions in the art of
glassmaking. For reasons elsewhere elaborated, it cannot be
sustained. It should be limited as we have suggested that
paragraphs 24(b) and 29 be limited. In addition, it enjoins every
defendant from applying for a patent "with the intention of not
making commercial use of the invention within four years" from
issue of the patent, and makes the failure commercially to use the
invention
prima facie proof of the absence (
sic)
of such intention. [
Footnote
24] This provision is also legislative, rather than remedial.
Unless we are to overturn settled principles, the paragraph in
question must be eliminated.
A patent owner is not in the position of a
quasi-trustee for the public, or under any obligation to
see that the public acquires the free right to use the invention.
He has no obligation either to use it or to grant its use to
others. If he discloses the invention in his application so that it
will come into the public domain at the end of the 17-year period
of exclusive right, he has fulfilled the only obligation imposed by
the statute. [
Footnote 25]
This has been settled doctrine
Page 323 U. S. 433
since at least 1896. Congress has repeatedly been asked, and has
refused, to change the statutory policy by imposing a forfeiture
[
Footnote 26] or by a
provision for compulsory licensing [
Footnote 27] if the patent is not used within a specified
time. The governing rule is quoted in
Chapman v.
Wintroath, 252 U. S. 126, at
252 U. S.
137:
"'A party seeking a right under the patent statutes may avail
himself of all their provisions, and the courts may not deny him
the benefit of a single one. These are questions not of natural,
but of purely statutory, right. Congress, instead of fixing
seventeen, had the power to fix 30 years as the life of a patent.
No court can disregard any statutory provisions in respect to these
matters on the ground that, in its judgment, they were unwise or
prejudicial to the interests of the public.'
United States v.
American Bell Telephone Co., 167 U. S. 224,
167 U. S.
247."
Paragraph 55 requires submission to certain investigations by
the Department of Justice and the furnishing of information with
respect to the business of the corporate defendants in the future.
It should be modified to accord with our opinion in
United
States v. Bausch & Lomb Optical Co., 321 U.
S. 707, which involved a similar provision.
A word should be said concerning the inclusion in many
paragraphs of the decree, and in many of the injunctions imposed,
of various individual defendants who in the past have acted as, and
who at present are, officers or directors of the corporate
defendants. They offended against
Page 323 U. S. 434
the antitrust laws by acting on behalf of, or in the name of, a
corporate defendant. There are no findings, and we assume there is
no evidence, that any of them have applied for, owned, dealt in,
and licensed patents appertaining to the glassware art. Nor is
there evidence or finding that, as individuals acting for their own
account, any of them, as a principal, has entered into any of the
arrangements found unlawful by the court. Despite these facts, in
practically every instance where a corporate defendant is
restrained from described action or conduct, these individuals, as
individuals, are likewise restrained. Any injunction addressed to a
corporate defendant may, as various sections of the decree do,
include its officers and agents. If the individual defendants are
officers or agents, they will be comprehended as such by the terms
of the injunction. If any of them ceases to be such, no reason is
apparent why he may not proceed, like other individuals, to
prosecute whatever lawful business he chooses free of the restraint
of an injunction. On the other hand, if new officers and directors
take the places of these defendants, such new agents will
automatically come under the terms of the injunction. There is no
apparent necessity for including them individually in each
paragraph of the decree which is applicable to the corporate
defendants whose agreements and cooperation constitute the gravamen
of the complaint. That these individuals may have rendered
themselves liable to prosecution [
Footnote 28] by virtue of the provisions of § 14 of
the Clayton Act [
Footnote
29] is beside the point,
Page 323 U. S. 435
since relief in equity is remedial, not penal. These
considerations, however, do not apply to the provisions of
paragraphs 3 to 7 and 33 to 35 inclusive, as the same are to be
modified.
Paragraph 42 requires Ball to cancel certain agreements with the
Knox Glass Bottle Company and Underwood, and with Brockway Machine
Bottle Company and Robert L. Warren, which excluded the parties
named from entering the glass container business for periods of
years. As it appears without contradiction that these restrictions
have already been released by Ball, the paragraph seems
unnecessary.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed as to the
appellants in Nos. 10 and 11; its decision that the appellants in
the other appeals have violated the antitrust laws and should be
enjoined from future similar violations is affirmed, but the decree
entered is vacated, and the cause is remanded for further
proceedings in conformity to this opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, MR. JUSTICE MURPHY and MR. JUSTICE JACKSON
took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
* Together with No. 3,
Corning Glass Works et al. v. United
States; No. 4,
Owens-Illinois Glass Co. et al. v. United
States; No. 5,
Hazel-Atlas Glass Co. et al. v. United
States; No. 6,
Thatcher Manufacturing Co. et al. v. United
States; No. 7,
Lynch Corporation et al. v. United
States; No. 8,
Ball Brothers Co. et al. v. United
States; No. 9,
Glass Container Association of America,
Inc. et al. v. United States; No. 10,
Collins v. United
States, and No. 11,
Fulton et al. v. United States,
also on appeals from the District Court of the United States for
the Northern District of Ohio.
[
Footnote 1]
46 F.
Supp. 541.
[
Footnote 2]
15 U.S.C. §§ 1 and 2.
[
Footnote 3]
15 U.S.C. § 14.
[
Footnote 4]
Standard Oil Co. v. United States, 221 U. S.
1,
221 U. S.
77-78.
[
Footnote 5]
Ethyl Gasoline Corp. v. United States, 309 U.
S. 436,
309 U. S. 461.
[
Footnote 6]
Local 167 v. United States, 291 U.
S. 293,
291 U. S.
299.
[
Footnote 7]
Swift & Co. v. United States, 196 U.
S. 375,
196 U. S. 396;
Labor Board v. Express Pub. Co., 312 U.
S. 426,
312 U. S. 433,
312 U. S.
435-436.
[
Footnote 8]
New York, N.H. & H. R. Co. v. Interstate Commerce
Comm'n, 200 U. S. 361,
200 U. S. 404;
Standard Oil Co. v. United States, supra, 221 U. S. 80.
[
Footnote 9]
Rule 65(d); § 19 of the Clayton Act, 38 Stat. 738, 28
U.S.C. § 383;
Swift & Co. v. United States,
196 U. S. 375,
196 U. S. 396,
196 U. S.
401.
[
Footnote 10]
United States v. United Shoe Machinery Co.,
247 U. S. 32;
United Shoe Machinery Corp. v. United States, 258 U.
S. 451,
258 U. S. 462.
In this case, the court divided on the question of the legality of
certain terms of the leases in question, but the dissenting
justices did not suggest that a lease was not an appropriate method
of exercising rights under the patent.
Cf. International
Business Machines Corp. v. United States, 298 U.
S. 131.
[
Footnote 11]
James v. Campbell, 104 U. S. 356,
104 U. S.
357-358;
Hollister v. Benedict & Burnham Mfg.
Co., 113 U. S. 59,
113 U. S. 67;
Wm. Cramp & Sons Ship & Engine Bldg. Co. v.
International Curtis Marine Turbine Co., 246 U. S.
28,
246 U. S. 39,
246 U. S. 40;
United States v. Dubilier Condenser Corp., 289 U.
S. 178,
289 U. S.
189.
[
Footnote 12]
See Standard Sanitary Mfg. Co. v. United States,
226 U. S. 20.
Decrees and Judgments in Federal Antitrust Cases (1918) p. 265;
United States v. Motion Picture Patents Co., 225 F. 800,
appeal dismissed, 247 U.S. 524. Decrees and Judgments in
Federal Antitrust Cases (1918) pp. 379-380;
United Shoe
Machinery Corp. v. United States, 258 U.
S. 451;
Ethyl Gasoline Corp. v. United States,
309 U. S. 436;
United States v. Univis Lens Co., 316 U.
S. 241.
[
Footnote 13]
American Lecithin Co. v. Warfield Co., 105 F.2d 207,
211;
Novadel-Agene Corp. v. Penn, 119 F.2d 764, 766, 767;
Sylvania Industrial Corp. v. Visking Corp., 132 F.2d 947,
958;
Universal Sewer Pipe Corp. v. General Const.
Co., 42 F. Supp.
132, 134;
American Lecithin Co. v. Warfield
Co., 42 F. Supp.
270, 272.
[
Footnote 14]
H.R. 20388, 60th Cong., 1st Sess. (1908); H.R. 11796, 61st
Cong., 1st Sess. (1909); H.R. 2930, 62d Cong., 1st Sess. (1911);
H.R. 16828, 62d Cong., 2d Sess. (1912); H.R. 23417, as amended, 62d
Cong., 2d Sess. (1912); H.R. 1700, 63d Cong., 1st Sess. (1913);
H.R. 14865, 63d Cong., 2d Sess. (1914); S. 2738, 70th Cong., 2d
Sess. (1928); S. 2491, 77th Cong., 2d Sess. (1942).
[
Footnote 15]
Final Report and Recommendations of the Temporary National
Economic Committee, Sen.Doc. No. 35, pp. 36-7 (1941), 77th Cong.,
1st Sess.
See also Preliminary Report Sen.Doc. No. 95, pp.
16-17 (1939), 76th Cong., 1st Sess.
[
Footnote 16]
United States v. American Tobacco Co., 221 U.
S. 106;
United States v. Terminal Railroad
Association, 224 U. S. 383;
United States v. Great Lakes Towing Co., 217 F. 656,
appeal dismissed, 245 U.S. 675;
United States v. New
England Fish Exchange, 258 F. 732;
United States v.
Pullman Co., 50 F. Supp.
123.
[
Footnote 17]
Paper Bag Patent Case, 210 U.
S. 405,
210 U. S. 424;
Motion Picture Patents Co. v. Universal Film Mfg. Co.,
243 U. S. 502,
243 U. S. 510,
243 U. S. 514;
Crown Die & Tool Co. v. Nye Tool & Machine Works,
261 U. S. 24,
261 U. S.
34-35.
[
Footnote 18]
H.R. 8776, 62d Cong., 1st Sess. (1911); S. 2116, 62d Cong., 1st
Sess. (1911); H.R. 26185, 62d Cong., 2d Sess. (1912); S. 2303, 77th
Cong., 2d Sess. (1942); S. 2730, 77th Cong., 2d Sess. (1942); H.R.
1371, 78th Cong., 1st Sess. (1943);
cf. S. 300, 45th
Cong., 1st Sess. (1877).
[
Footnote 19]
S. 2783, 70th Cong., 2d Sess. (1928).
[
Footnote 20]
Final Report and Recommendations of the Temporary National
Economic Committee, Senate Doc. No. 35, pp. 36-7 (1941), 77th
Cong., 1st Sess.
[
Footnote 21]
There is no claim that the ribbon machine patent was ever part
of a combination of patents.
[
Footnote 22]
The Government calls attention to findings which show that,
though Hartford advised certain licensees of the removal of
restrictions in their licenses, these licensees have not formally
accepted the more liberal terms. Hartford can be enjoined from
enforcing the restrictions if that is found necessary.
[
Footnote 23]
See Maple Flooring Manufacturers Association v. United
States, 268 U. S. 563,
268 U. S.
582-583;
Cement Manufactures Protective Association
v. United States, 268 U. S. 588,
268 U. S. 606;
Appalachian Coals, Inc. v. United States, 288 U.
S. 344,
288 U. S. 374;
Sugar Institute, Inc. v. United States, 297 U.
S. 553,
297 U. S.
598.
[
Footnote 24]
The Government suggests that the paragraph should be revised to
read:
"with the intention of never making commercial use of the
inventions covered thereby, provided that failure to make such use
within four years from the date of issuance of patents thereon
shall be deemed
prima facie proof of the presence of such
intention at the time of the filing or prosecution of such
applications."
[
Footnote 25]
United States v. American Bell Telephone Co.,
167 U. S. 224,
167 U. S. 249;
Continental Paper Bag Co. v. Eastern Paper Bag Co.,
210 U. S. 405,
210 U. S. 424,
210 U. S.
429-430.
[
Footnote 26]
H.R. 13876, 62d Cong., 1st Sess. (1911); H.R. 22203, 62d Cong.,
2d Sess. (1912); S. 3297, 67th Cong., 2d Sess. (1922); H.R. 6864,
75th Cong., 1st Sess. (1937).
[
Footnote 27]
S. 3325, 67th Cong., 2d Sess. (1922); S. 3474, 69th Cong., 1st
Sess. (1926); S. 705, 70th Cong., 1st Sess. (1927); S. 203, 71st
Cong., 1st Sess. (1929); S. 22, 72d Cong., 1st Sess. (1931); S.
290, 73d Cong., 1st Sess. (1933); S. 383, 74th Cong., 1st Sess.
(1935); S. 2491, 77th Cong., 2d Sess. (1942).
[
Footnote 28]
United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., 23 F. Supp.
937,
aff'd, 310 U. S. 310 U.S.
150.
[
Footnote 29]
38 Stat. 736, 15 U.S.C. § 24.
"That, whenever a corporation shall violate any of the penal
provisions of the antitrust laws, such violation shall be deemed to
be also that of the individual directors, officers, or agents of
such corporation, who shall have authorized, ordered, or done any
of the acts constituting in whole or in part such violation, and
such violation shall be deemed a misdemeanor. . . ."
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, dissenting in part.
I agree with the Court's judgment insofar as it sustains the
decree of the District Judge.
I cannot, however, agree to many of the modifications of that
decree. These appellants have violated the antitrust laws. The
District Court's decree, taken as a whole, is an effective remedy,
admirably suited to neutralize the consequences of such violations,
to guard against repetition of similar illegal activities, and to
dissipate the unlawful aggregate of economic power which arose out
of, and fed upon, monopolization and restraints.
United States
v. Crescent Amusement Co., 323 U. S. 173.
Many
Page 323 U. S. 436
of this Court's modifications seriously impair the decree and
frustrate its purposes.
It would probably serve no useful purpose to state at length the
reasons which justify the District Court's decree, since they are
set forth clearly and well in its opinion. In particular, however,
it is my belief that any reasonable assurance that these appellants
will not continue to violate the antitrust law requires that we
leave intact the District Court's decree insofar as it (1) provides
for appointment of a receiver and the impounding of Hartford's
royalties (Paragraphs 10-20 of the Decree); (2) requires that
glassware machines should be disposed of by outright sale, rather
than by leases (Paragraphs 21, 22, 23); (3) requires that patents
already owned be licensed royalty free; (4) prohibits the
restrictive licensing practices which the appellants so effectively
used to create and maintain their monopoly (Paragraph 29); (5)
enjoins the appellants from the practice of obtaining patents for
the purpose of "fencing in" and "blocking off" new inventions
(Paragraph 52).
The District Court's opinion, in my judgment, laid a careful and
well reasoned foundation establishing the necessity for every one
of these Paragraphs. It would be difficult to add to what the court
there said. It is sufficient for me to say only a few words.
The District Court found that these defendants started out in
1916 to acquire a monopoly on a large segment of the glass
industry. Their efforts were rewarded by complete success. They
have become absolute masters of that domain of our public economy.
They achieved this result largely through the manipulation of
patents and licensing agreements. They obtained patents for the
express purpose of furthering their monopoly. They utilized various
types of restrictions in connection with leasing those patents so
as to retain their dominance in that industry. The history of this
country has perhaps never witnessed a more completely successful
economic tyranny
Page 323 U. S. 437
over any field of industry than that accomplished by these
appellants. They planned their monopolistic program on the basis of
getting and keeping and using patents which they dedicated to the
destruction of free competition in the glass container industry.
Their declared object was "[t]o block the development of machines
which might be constructed by others . . . " and "[t]o secure
patents on possible improvements of competing machines so as to
"fence in" those and prevent their reaching an improved state."
These patents were the major weapons in the campaign to subjugate
the industry; they were also the fruits of appellant's victory. The
restoration of competition in the glass container industry demands
that appellants be deprived of these weapons. The most effective
way to accomplish this end is to require, as the District Court
did, that these patents be licensed royalty free.
The decree of the court below was well fashioned to prevent a
continuation of appellant's monopolistic practices. The decree as
modified leaves them free, in a large measure, to continue to
follow the competition-destroying methods by which they achieved
control of the industry. In fact, they have received much milder
treatment from this Court than they anticipated. This is shown by a
memorandum of one of Hartford's officers made in 1925. That
memorandum which discussed plans for suppression of a number of
competitors, with particular reference to possible prosecutions
under the Sherman Act, read in part as follows:
"Of course, the court might order that we transfer the entire
Federal licensing business to some other party and turn over to
that party the Federal patents. This, of course, would simply
restore to a certain extent the existing situation, and establish a
competitor. . . . I . . . do not see much danger of having any of
these deals upset. . . . If they are upset, I still believe that,
by that time, we will be in a better position even with such
dissolution than we would be otherwise, and I see no danger
whatsoever
Page 323 U. S. 438
of any criminal liability, because the cases are necessarily so
doubtful in the matter of law that they could never get any jury to
convict, and I doubt if any prosecuting officer would ever attempt
any criminal action. Criminal action in cases of this sort, so far,
has practically been nonexistent."
I would sustain the decree of the District Court, for the
reasons it gave, in all of the paragraphs mentioned.
MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE, dissenting in part.
With MR. JUSTICE BLACK, in whose opinion I join, I concur in the
Court's judgment to the extent that it sustains the District
Court's findings and decree. But, with two exceptions, I dissent
from the more important revisions made in the decree.
In antitrust injunction suits, the court's function is two-fold:
to determine liability and to fashion the remedy to fit the fault.
Perhaps, in some cases, the two things may be treated substantially
independently. More often, they are so interwoven that separation
becomes impossible if other than warped justice is done. This case
is of the latter sort. But the Court's modifications largely
disregard this fact.
The story involves a quarter of a century of Sherman Act
violation. [
Footnote 2/1]
Necessarily, it has been sketched here only in outline. The bare
bones of the history show, as rarely has been done, the
combination's expanding scope, the corresponding growth of design,
the varied but often devious and ruthless methods, as well as the
ultimate total
Page 323 U. S. 439
success of this long adventure in monopoly and unlawful
restraint of trade. [
Footnote 2/2]
Without the color supplied by detail, however, the excursion's true
character is hardly half revealed. The full effect cannot now be
given. It appears in the District Court's careful and restrained
opinion,
46 F.
Supp. 541, buttressed in every conclusion, nearly every page,
from writings accumulated, while the combination grew, in the files
of the principal participants [
Footnote
2/3] and in other published documents. [
Footnote 2/4]
Page 323 U. S. 440
This emphasis upon the complete picture, in color and detail, is
pertinent to liability. It bears even more directly on the quantity
and character of relief required to uproot the combination's
destructive and unlawful effects. Without this view, many of the
decree's provisions, cast in dry legal terms, denuded of the life
and history which brought them forth, seem drastic. With it, they
take a wholly different aspect.
One may start, with the Court, upon the basic idea that, in such
a proceeding, the decree's function is not to impose sheer
"punishment" for past misconduct, but is rather to devise effective
measures to prevent its repetition and dissipate its consequences.
This does not mean, however, that there is any clear, sharp line
which can be drawn on the crux of past and future between
punishment and prevention or dissipation, or that this difference
should be translated into the implicit assumptions which seem to
underlie the Court's extensive revisions of the decree, and thereby
strip it in great part of effectiveness. The assumptions relate to
the respective functions of trial and appellate courts in framing
the decree, as well as to the criteria by which are to be gauged
the quantity and quality of relief needed to be effective.
It seems to be implied from the number, character and detail of
the revisions that it is the business of this Court to rewrite the
decree, substituting its own judgment for that of the District
Court when there is difference concerning the wisdom or need of a
particular provision. A supporting notion, apparently, is that the
"equity" procedure to enforce the Act is hedged with the same
limitations nonstatutory equity has placed about its action as a
system of private remedial litigation. Both these ideas have
backing in a third misconception -- that men who have misused their
property, and acquired much of it, by violating the Sherman Act are
free for the future to continue using it as are other owners who
have committed no such
Page 323 U. S. 441
offense, and that consequently the appropriate relief affecting
such use is the least restriction which possibly will prevent
repetition of past violations.
Cf., however, United States v.
Union Pacific R. Co., 226 U. S. 470,
226 U. S. 477.
Except upon these assumptions, the Court's major revisions of the
decree cannot be justified.
Shortly, in my view, it is not this Court's business to fashion
or rewrite the decree. Where the trial court, with obvious care and
judgment, has devised measures it deems essential to protect the
public interest and we agree they may be sufficient, our
modifications by watering them down should stop with directions to
eliminate provisions contrary to law or those we can say amount to
an abuse of discretion.
United States v. Crescent Amusement
Co., 323 U. S. 173,
323 U. S. 185.
Changes imposing greater restrictions should be made only when the
decree is insufficient to accomplish the protection required.
Ibid. The reasons which thus ordinarily restrict the scope
of appellate review have magnified force in antitrust proceedings.
Their complex character usually requires, as in this case, months
or years for the trial court's consideration. With its maximum
attention, this Court cannot possibly attain the same detailed
familiarity with the cause. Nor can it frame at long distance, with
the same assurance, a decree adequate for the necessity.
The so-called equitable character of the proceeding does not
nullify this inherent limitation upon appellate judicial action.
Nor does it justify an attitude which would circumscribe the suit
or the relief with the limitations courts of equity traditionally
have put around their action in private litigation. The antitrust
injunction suit is, in form, "a proceeding in equity." In
substance, it is a public prosecution, with civil, rather than
criminal, sanctions, for vindication of public right and for
redress and prevention of public injury. To regard the fashioning
of appropriate relief in such a suit as identical with the same
Page 323 U. S. 442
function in private litigation is to disregard at once the
former's statutory origin, its public character, and the public
interest it protects. The equitable garb of the proceeding
therefore does not determine or conceal its true character. Nor
does it limit the required relief merely to what will prevent
repetition of the illegal conduct by which the combination has been
formed, its property acquired, and its dominating position
secured.
The contrary view ignores the momentum inherent in such a
combination. The power, and much of the property, now aggregated in
the combination's hands and those of its principal participants was
gathered by unlawful methods at the expense of the public and
competitors. [
Footnote 2/5]
Presumably neither power nor property could have been accumulated
by lawful means. Nor can they now together be transferred legally
to another. The loosened restrictions of this Court's revision may
be sufficient to prevent, for the future, further acts of the
character and having the effects of the past violations. But the
pool has acquired more than 800 patents, which control the
industry, of which Hartford alone holds more than 600. Its members,
including Hartford, are not compelled to disgorge any of these, or
prohibited to acquire others.
Page 323 U. S. 443
Many of the patents, and certainly the cherished "patent
position," [
Footnote 2/6] were
secured only by virtue of the illegal conduct. Whatever benefits
may flow from these patents and the patent position thus created
are inevitably the consequences of that conduct. [
Footnote 2/7] Merely to throw off the illegal
practices, such as restricted and discriminatory licensing, cannot
reach those consequences. Every dollar hereafter, as well as
heretofore, secured from licenses on the patents illegally
aggregated in the combination's hands is money to which the
participants are not entitled by virtue of the patent laws or
others. It is the immediate product of the conspiracy. To permit
these patents to remain in the guilty hands, as sources of
continuing lucrative revenue, not only does not deprive their
owners of the fruit of their misconduct. Rather, it secures to them
its continued benefits. The pool may no longer utilize illegal
methods. It, and the constituent members, will continue to enjoy
the preferred competitive position
Page 323 U. S. 444
which their conduct has given them, and to use both that
position and the ill gotten patents, together with the patent
position, to derive trade advantage over rivals and gain from the
public which the patent laws of themselves never contemplated and
the antitrust laws, in my opinion, forbid. [
Footnote 2/8]
These considerations were before the District Court's mind when
it devised the decree. Concluding its opinion, that court made a
"statement of the principles to be followed" in framing the decree
which throws light particularly upon its considered views of the
relief required. It stated, with undisputed evidence [
Footnote 2/9] to sustain its
conclusion:
"The court believes that no half-way measures will suffice.
There has been a deliberate violation of the law, and it is the
duty of the court to do what he can to make certain that these
violations of the law will cease and will not be resumed in the
future, and that competition will be restored in the industry. The
record discloses that some of the individual defendants anticipated
legal action by the Government, and went ahead in spite of that and
violated the law. They also tried to anticipate the remedies that
might be applied, and did what they could to forestall the effect
of such remedies and retain the benefits
Page 323 U. S. 445
of their unlawful actions. The court intends to make certain
that this does not occur. [
Footnote
2/10]"
(P. 620.) The Government had requested the dissolution of
Hartford, keystone of the combination. [
Footnote 2/11] In view of controlling authorities
relating to violations not less extensive or more clearly proved,
[
Footnote 2/12] it hardly could
be said -- and this Court's opinion does not say -- that, if
dissolution of Hartford had been ordered, this would have
constituted an abuse of discretion. The District Court did not deny
that remedy. Rather, it reserved the question for later
determination, undertaking meanwhile a milder remedy. In its own
words, referring to the Government's request for dissolution, the
opinion stated:
"The court, however, is
first going to make an attempt
to avoid that
if it is possible to do so and at the same
time restore competition to the industry.
If this cannot be
worked out to the satisfaction of the court,
dissolution
will be ordered."
(Emphasis added)
"The first step to be taken is the immediate appointment of a
receiver or receivers of Hartford. The court is going to deny any
stay from the appointment of such receivers. It is believed to be
absolutely necessary that the receivers take over the management of
Hartford forthwith."
(P. 620.)
Among the reasons assigned for this action were, first,
important changes made by Hartford without the court's
Page 323 U. S. 446
knowledge during pendency of the suit, involving heavy financial
obligations of Hartford "for the advancement of the interests of
the companies involved," including the transfer of three important
patents to Corning which the court felt was "for the obvious
purpose of continuing Corning's monopolies regardless of the
outcome of this suit;" [
Footnote
2/13] second, to prevent any further abuse of the patent
privileges of Hartford and any further violation of the law, since,
"under the circumstances disclosed by the evidence, the court feels
that this can only be done through court officers;" and, third, to
conserve the assets of Hartford and preserve the
status
quo. Pending appeal, therefore, and final determination of the
cause, the receivers were directed to take over Hartford's
management, continue operation under its existing contracts and
agreements for licensing and for leasing its machines, and to
receive, set aside, and earmark the funds received from licensees,
holding them for return to the licensees if the court's decree
should be affirmed. Finally, the receivers were to remain in
control
"until the court is satisfied that the abuses and violations of
the law have ceased, until the orders of the court have been
carried out, and until the court is satisfied that there no longer
remains a reasonable probability that these practices will be
resumed. If, after the expiration of a reasonable time, it
appears
Page 323 U. S. 447
to the court that the steps he is now taking are insufficient to
restore a free and competitive status to the industry, the
receivers shall be ordered to submit a plan or plans for the
dissolution of Hartford."
(P. 621.)
From this portion of the opinion, it is perfectly clear that the
District Court has made no final decision concerning the
dissolution of Hartford, as it was and still is entitled to do, and
that it regarded the receivership as a necessary alternative to
granting that relief at once. No other conclusion can be drawn than
that the Court, if compelled to choose between dissolution and
permitting Hartford then to continue under its own management,
unhesitatingly would have decreed its dissolution. The court in so
many words stated, with reasons to support its view, that
Hartford's management could not be trusted to carry out the terms
of its decree, to refrain from further patent abuses and violations
of the law, but, on the contrary, already had taken steps to
circumvent, in part, whatever remedy might be imposed. [
Footnote 2/14]
Receiverships generally are to be avoided, if possible. But
there are times when they remain essential. If in any circumstances
they are so, it would seem to be in these. Yet this Court's
judgment directing termination declares, in the face of the
District Court's findings and the evidence which clearly sustains
them, that the receivership, though useful to preserve the
status quo pending decision here, was "not necessary to
the prescription of appropriate relief," and should be wound up,
and that the business should be returned to Hartford. This is not
merely a decision that the receivership was not justified "in the
light of what is hereafter said as to the substantive provisions of
the decree." It is a substitution of this Court's judgment for that
of the District Court on the
Page 323 U. S. 448
question of dissolution of Hartford, which it reserved,
foreclosing it from decision. It is likewise a substitution of this
Court's judgment for that of the District Court on the question
whether "the abuses and violations of the law have ceased," also
reserved for future decision, and whether the management of
Hartford, in the face of the evidence and the findings, can be
trusted now to carry out the terms of the decree or were worthy of
that trust when the decree was entered. All this in advance of
determination of the facts, which this Court cannot ascertain, on
which the decision of these questions must turn.
Such an invasion of the trial court's function, it seems to me,
perverts both that function and our own. If that court's findings,
justifying the receivership and the reservation of decision on
dissolution, were contrary to the law or the evidence, that should
be demonstrated and declared. If they constituted an abuse of
judicial discretion, the nature and character of the abuse should
be pointed out. If they were neither, this Court goes beyond its
province by substituting its own long distance judgment for the
immediately informed view of the District Court, and in precluding
it from judgment, upon issues rightly to be determined by it in the
first instance, whatever the standard which governs review, and in
the circumstances rightly reserved by it for future decision. The
action of the District Court in appointing receivers should be
affirmed and, upon remand of the cause, its powers should be
unfettered to retain them pending its finding of the conditions
specified in its opinion and decree for restoring the business of
its owners or, in the alternative, to decree dissolution of
Hartford within a reasonable time.
This Court's more important revisions of the "permanent steps"
taken by the District Court may be noticed shortly. The latter's
opinion declared (p. 621):
"The
Page 323 U. S. 449
most important question is with respect to the licensing and
lease system now used by Hartford. The court believes that this is
the greatest abuse. It is through the licensing and lease system
that Hartford retains control over and dominates the industry.
[
Footnote 2/15]"
The court stated its view that
"there will be further abuses in the future as long as there is
a semblance of that system remaining. It is the opinion of the
court that this entire system must be abolished."
Accordingly, it required for future distribution "outright sale
at reasonable prices" in place of the leasing of machines, with
that method's obvious danger of repossession in case the lessee
should fail to observe practices established by the lessors,
tacitly or otherwise. The court also required the licensing,
royalty free, of existing patents upon glassmaking machinery.
In my opinion, both measures were fully justified by the
findings and the evidence. The leasing of patented machinery or
instruments lends itself particularly to the creation and
maintenance of monopoly and to the extension of monopolistic
effects far beyond the life and scope of the controlling patent or
patents. [
Footnote 2/16] The
holder of a patent who observes the law is entitled to exercise his
rights of ownership through lease, as well as sale. When, however,
he uses his patent right, by the device of leasing, to acquire a
monopolistic position stronger than the patent allows, and, on
being called to halt, is not compelled to dispose of the patent, he
subjects himself to whatever
Page 323 U. S. 450
measures are required to prevent continuance of the practice in
the future and to uproot the illegal position and advantage he thus
obtains. In my opinion, the District Court's finding that further
abuses would continue, especially in view of the dangers inherent
in the right of repossession, justified its prohibition of the
further use of the leasing system.
The requirement of licensing of existing patents, royalty free,
would present greater difficulty if the violation had not been so
gross and so long continued. But because it was both, and because
the evidence shows a long course of using patents and patent
position illegally to acquire other patents and consolidate still
stronger positions, it is impossible now to determine what patents
members of the combination may have acquired illegally. The
certainty is however that many were so acquired. [
Footnote 2/17] Since the pool and its members are
not required to dispose of the patents, any revenues now received
by them from the existing patents are the result, and inevitably
will continue to be the result, of the owners' violation of the
law. To permit the continued collection of royalties would be to
perpetuate, for the lives of the patents, the illegal consequences
of the violations. That the court is bound, in equity and by the
statute, not to do.
It is said, however, that the Government has not asked in this
suit for cancellation of the existing patents, and that this
provision of the decree amounts to that. The defendants, it is
true, cannot derive royalties from them under the terms of the
decree if they continue to distribute machinery and glassware in
interstate commerce. If this is drastic, it is because the
violation was drastic, and there is no other way now, short of
dissolution or cancellation,
Page 323 U. S. 451
to cut off its continuing effects of disadvantage to the public
and the industry or of benefit to the violators. The court, seeking
to avoid dissolution, had the duty to apply a remedy equally
adequate.
United States v. Terminal Railroad Association,
224 U. S. 383,
224 U. S. 409.
It could not do this if the pool were left a continuing source of
revenue to the violators and of burden to the public. Accordingly,
it required the agreement for license, royalty free. Since
cancellation was not required in terms, it does not follow merely
from the royalty free provision that the effect will be the same or
that the defendants will not have the benefit of other incidents of
ownership which may be exercised without perpetuating the unlawful
consequences of the past misuse, such as realizing the value of the
patents by sale, made upon proper application with the court's
approval. [
Footnote 2/18]
This Court's revisions of the decree in these respects load upon
the industry and the consuming public continuing charges in favor
of those who have violated both the antitrust statutes and the
patent laws, a burden which will not end until the last of the
illegally aggregated patents has expired, if then. They both
foreclose dissolution and forbid the only other remedies equally
adequate. So to perpetuate the unlawful consequences of violation
will not discourage -- it can only encourage -- setting the law at
naught.
From what has been said, it follows, of course, that the court
properly impounded Hartford's revenues from leasing and licensing
arrangements, and that these should now be returned to the sources
whence received. Again,
Page 323 U. S. 452
contrary to the Court's implicit assumption, the mere fact that,
during this period, there were no new violations does not mean
there were not continuing effects of former ones.
The modifications made in paragraph 29, relating to restrictive
licensing, should not go beyond restricting the paragraph to glass
products and glass machinery, as the Government now concedes should
be done. The provisions of the decree concerning the "fencing" and
"blocking" of patents should stand in view of the proven abuses in
applying for patents merely to prevent others from obtaining them.
Other revisions are too numerous to mention specifically, except
two. I concur in the elimination of the individual defendants,
Collins, Fulton, Fisher, and Dilworth, from the restrictions of the
decree for the reasons stated in the Court's opinion. I concur also
in the modification which requires the dissolution of the Glass
Container Association, since the terms of the decree substantially
accomplish this and the District Court expressly found the
association had been "a breeding place for many of the illegal
practices established herein."
The case presents again the fundamental problem of accommodating
the provisions of the patent laws to those of the antitrust
statutes. Basically these are opposed in policy -- the one granting
rights of monopoly, the other forbidding monopolistic activities.
The patent legislation presents a special case, the antitrust
legislation the nation's general policy. Whether the one or the
other is wise is not for us to determine. But their accommodation
is one we must make, within the limits allowed to the judicial
function, when the issue is presented.
The general policy has been to restrict the right of the
patentholder rigidly within the terms of his grant and, when he
overreaches its boundary, to deny him the usual protections of the
holder of property. That this ordinarily
Page 323 U. S. 453
has been done in infringement suits [
Footnote 2/19] or suits for cancellation does not
qualify the fact or the policy. On the other hand, the antitrust
statutes have received a broad construction and corresponding
enforcement where violation has been clearly shown. When the
patentholder so far overreaches his privilege as to intrude upon
the rights of others and the public protected by the antitrust
legislation, and does this in such a way that he cannot further
exercise the privilege without also trespassing upon the rights
thus protected, either his right or the other person's, and the
public right, must give way. It is wholly incongruous in such
circumstances to say that the privilege of the trespasser shall be
preserved, and the rights of all others which he has transgressed
shall continue to give way to the consequences of his
wrongdoing.
This is substantially what the defendants have sought in this
proceeding, and this Court's revision of the decree has granted in
large measure. So inverted an idea of equity or of the law cannot
stand. In a machine age, dominated so widely by patents, the effect
can be no other than largely to nullify the antitrust laws. There
may be instances in which a patent holder, guilty of violating
those statutes, can so separate his violation and its continuing
effects from further full exercise of his patent right that he may
become entitled to a form of relief which will permit this. Unless
we are to disregard entirely the findings and conclusions of the
District Court, supported by overwhelming evidence, this is not
such a case.
The Court's major modifications, in my opinion, emasculate the
decree.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK joins in this dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The District Court found
". . . that there has not only been a violation of the antitrust
laws, beginning with the first agreement between Hartford and
Empire in 1916, but I am convinced that this violation of the laws
was as deliberate as any that I can find in a review of antitrust
cases."
46 F.
Supp. 541, 552, 553. Hartford and Lynch were also found guilty
of contracting in violation of the Clayton Act.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Sixteen pages of the trial court's opinion are given to a
summary of manifestations of conscious guilt. The instance cited in
the opinion of MR. JUSTICE BLACK is illustrative.
See also
text
infra at
323
U.S. 386fn2/10|>note 10. The methods employed ranged from
suggestions for "cooperation" to the division of fields within the
industry and the squeeze-out of rivals, ruthlessly and constantly
through the system of licensing and leasing which the court found
was "the greatest abuse."
Cf. text
infra at
323
U.S. 386fn2/15|>note 15. Hazel-Atlas was a hold-out until
the "three-way partnership" agreement of 1932. The long story
showing how that company finally was brought "within the family" is
particularly interesting in disclosing the methods used in bringing
a rival to book.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Characterizing the case as "primarily documentary," though also
noting the
"reticence of some of the key witnesses to disclose what plainly
was within their knowledge as principal actors in the main
conferences that occurred over a period of time,"
the court stated:
". . . in this case, the men who planned and directed the
proceedings under scrutiny, from 1916 down to the time of the
filing of the complaint herein, left behind them numerous exchanges
of letters and many memoranda executed contemporaneously with the
happening of the main events and designed for the information of
their contemporaries, their boards of directors, or for their
successors in office. It is hard to imagine a case in which a court
would have more first-hand information of what the parties did and
intended than in the case at bar."
46 F. Supp. at 552, 553.
[
Footnote 2/4]
See the reports of the Temporary National Economic
Committee, the disclosures of which were largely responsible for
the institution of this proceeding. Investigation of Concentration
of Economic Power, Sen.Doc. No. 95, 76th Cong., 1st Sess. (1939);
ibid., Sen.Doc. No. 35, 77th Cong., 1st Sess. (1941);
ibid., Monograph No. 31, Hamilton, Patents and Free
Enterprise, 76th Cong., 3d Sess., Senate Committee Print
(1941).
[
Footnote 2/5]
Referring to the defendants' argument "that the price of
glassware to the consumer has not increased," the District Court's
opinion stated (46 F.Supp. at 620):
"But again this is not a good defense if there have been
violations of the law. Moreover, the history of the case shows the
great extent to which automatic machinery has come into use within
the past forty years. It is natural to assume that the cost of
production would decrease with the great influx of automatic
machinery. Evidently the defendants managed to retain this saving
in the cost of production by means of the conspiracy herein, which
is manifested by the large profits in the industry. The benefits
certainly were not passed on to the public."
Previously the court had found that
"[d]ominance over the entire industry is today so complete that,
at any time within the choice of Hartford and Owens, prices to the
consumer of glassware may arbitrarily be raised beyond all
reason."
(P. 619.)
[
Footnote 2/6]
Illustrative of the combination's purpose in this respect is
Levis' report to Owens' board of directors in November, 1929:
"Our negotiations with Hartford-Empire Company and others, so
far as our patent situation and royalty income is [
sic]
concerned, should be to attempt to secure a position whereby we pay
no royalty on any item we produce and we attempt to have all others
pay royalty on every item they produce, we participating with
anyone else in the royalties they receive."
[
Footnote 2/7]
With reference to the contention that the amendments made by the
defendants in their contract relations, without the court's
knowledge, between the filing of the complaint in 1939 and the
closing of testimony over two years later, the court said:
"Men cannot, by illegal means, erect an illegal structure -- a
structure of dominance and control over an industry vital to the
welfare of the public -- and then, by destroying the illegal means
by which the structure has been erected, take the position that
they have reformed, that they have adopted a new course of conduct,
and that they should go on their way unmolested by the law -- as
long as the illegal structure and its adverse effects upon the
public remain."
46 F. Supp. at 618.
[
Footnote 2/8]
Cf. notes
323
U.S. 386fn2/13|>13 and
323
U.S. 386fn2/17|>17,
infra.
[
Footnote 2/9]
Throughout the litigation, the facts have been substantially
undisputed in consequence of the documentary and conclusive
character of the proofs.
Cf. 323
U.S. 386fn2/3|>note 3,
supra. The dispute has been
primarily over the inferences to be drawn from the facts, the
defendants contending, in the words of the District Court (p. 615),
that "any control that may exist over the production and marketing
of unpatented glassware is but the result of a normal exercise of
the patent privilege," with like contention, of course, concerning
the production and licensing of glassmaking machinery. The
contention merely poses the basic question of law in the case.
[
Footnote 2/10]
Cf. notes
323
U.S. 386fn2/2|>2 and
323
U.S. 386fn2/13|>13.
[
Footnote 2/11]
Unless, in fact this were Corning, which, since 1922, has owned
or controlled 43 percent of Hartford's stock. According to the
District Court, Corning "in practical effect had sufficient control
over Hartford to dictate the policies of Hartford in accordance
with Corning's wishes." (P. 557.)
[
Footnote 2/12]
Standard Oil Co. v. United States, 221 U. S.
1;
United States v. American Tobacco Co.,
221 U. S. 106.
[
Footnote 2/13]
The trial court's conclusions concerning these changes,
cf. text
infra at
323
U.S. 386fn2/14|>note 14, may be considered in the light of
the other evidence showing consciousness of violation, with
anticipation of remedial action,
cf. 323
U.S. 386fn2/2|>note 2,
supra, and of practices by
which domination obtained under patents was maintained after they
had expired,
e.g., Hartford's refusal to license others
than Corning to make heat resistant ware and oven ware on its
feeders after Corning's patents on glass composition for these
wares had expired in 1936. (P. 556.)
Cf. also Owens'
continued domination of the suction field, noted in this Court's
opinion, by use of improvement patents after its basic patent had
expired.
[
Footnote 2/14]
Cf. 323
U.S. 386fn2/13|>note 13,
supra.
[
Footnote 2/15]
Cf. 323
U.S. 386fn2/2|>note 2,
supra.
[
Footnote 2/16]
Cf. the statement, in 1922, of V. M. Dorsey to A.D.
Falck, of Corning:
"F. G. Smith, in private, suggested to me the most revolutionary
theory, which he will no doubt talk to you about,
viz.,
putting out the feeders very much like telephones are installed --
that is, with an installation charge with a flat royalty plus
royalties on production above a given amount. I think it has much
to be commended. It would certainly put the pirates out of business
quickly."
[
Footnote 2/17]
Cf. 323
U.S. 386fn2/7|>note 7,
supra, and the instances
cited from Exhibit 76 in the District Court's opinion,
46 F.
Supp. 541, 604-606, which caused it to raise the question why
criminal prosecution had not been instituted.
[
Footnote 2/18]
Even a disposition so guarded would realize for the owner the
fruit of his wrongdoing in the case of patents illegally acquired
and integrated in the pool. But it would terminate the continuing
benefit to him and the possibility of his further misusing the
patent to the public harm.
[
Footnote 2/19]
Cf. Morton Salt Co. v. G. S. Suppiger Co., 314 U.
S. 488;
Mercoid Corp. v. Mid-Continent Inv.
Co., 320 U. S. 661.