Rousso v. Barber

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from an order of the District Court denying a motion for preliminary inj miction in a patent-case. The suit is based on Letters Patent No. 1,157,046 to Rousso. for a towel cabinet. The error charged to the trial court was its refusal to be controlled in the exercise of its discretion by prior adjudications sustaining the validity of the patent and by what is claimed to be palpable infringement. Philadelphia Trust Co. v. Edison E. L. Co., 65 Fed. 551, 13 C. C. A. 40; Elite Pottery Co. v. Dececo Co., 150 Fed. 581, 80 C. C. A. 567; Sherman-Clay & Co. v. Searchlight Horn Co., 214 Fed. 99, 130 C. C. A. 575.

[1, 2j Obviously, the “sound discretion” which the law requires of a judge in granting or refusing an application for a preliminary injunction in an infringement suit is not a mere personal whim, but is a judicial discretion based on some valid matter moving the court to its judgment. One of the matters to which the jtrdge’s mind is almost always directed is whether, in granting an injunction, an injustice might be inflicted upon the defendant greater than any benefit that might accrue to the complainant. Winchester Repeating Arms Co. v. Olmsted, 203 Fed. 493, 494, 121 C. C. A. 615. Another matter is whether in refusing an injunction, the injury which the complainant might sustain is one which a subsequent decree might not repair. Pullman v. Railway (C. C.) 5 Fed. 72, 73. Still another is the fact of obvious infringement, made more controlling when the infringement is of a patent which has been sustained by prior adjudications. But in this case it appears that the learned trial judge in denying the injunction did not yield to a mere personal notion nor lightly regarded the interests of the parties, but on the conlrary based his action on several valid considerations: First, the lack of evidence showing irreparable injury to the complainant if an injunction were denied; and second, the presence of evidence showing some injury to one of the defendants if an injunction were granted.

[3, 4] Barber made the alleged infringing towel cabinets and Edith Oliver Rea placed them in the lavatories of her office building for public use. Barber had made only about sixty of the cabinets and had ceased manufacturing them several years ago. New York Grape Sugar Co. v. American Grape Sugar Co. (C. C.) 10 Fed. 837. Edith Oliver Rea is financially responsible for any damages resulting from her infringement as an user. However this may be, the pertinent matter by which the learned trial judge was evidently controlled in the exercise of his discretion is the fact that the alleged infringing towel cabinets were made under a patent to Barber; that the complainant’s patent, though several times held valid, has not been adjudicated (so far as we are informed by the reported cases) with reference to Barber’s invention ; that both Rousso’s application for a patent and Barber’s application were pending in the Patent Office at the same time; that no interference was order between the co-pending applications; that Barber’s patent has the Patent Office presumption of patentable difference and *554of validity; and that, in consequence, his manufacture of towel cabinets under his patent was not such a palpable infringement as would sway the mind of a judge on an application for preliminary injunction. Brush Electric Co. v. Electric Storage Battery Co. (C. C.) 64 Fed. 775; Bailey Ringing Machine Co. v. Adams, Fed. Cas. No. 752. As the trial, judge was not bound, at this stage of the cáse, to decide the issue between the contesting patents, we cannot say that he abused his discretion.

The decree below is affirmed.