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Leitch Manufacturing Co. v. Barber Co.

Leitch Manufacturing Co. v. Barber Co., 302 U.S. 458 (1938), is a 1938 decision of the United States Supreme Court extending the tie-in patent misuse doctrine to cases in which the patentee does not use an explicit tie-in license but instead relies on grants of implied licenses to only those who buy a necessary supply from it.[1]

Leitch Manufacturing Co. v. Barber Co.
Argued December 14, 1937
Decided January 3, 1938
Full case nameLeitch Manufacturing Co. v. Barber Company
Citations302 U.S. 458 (more)
58 S. Ct. 288; 82 L. Ed. 371; 1938 U.S. LEXIS 76; 36 U.S.P.Q. 35
Case history
PriorBarber Asphalt Co. v. Stulz-Sickles Co., 89 F.2d 960 (3d Cir. 1937)
Court membership
Chief Justice
Charles E. Hughes
Associate Justices
James C. McReynolds · Louis Brandeis
George Sutherland · Pierce Butler
Harlan F. Stone · Owen Roberts
Benjamin N. Cardozo · Hugo Black
Case opinion
MajorityBrandeis, joined by Hughes, McReynolds, Sutherland, Butler, Stone, Roberts, Black
Cardozo took no part in the consideration or decision of the case.

Background edit

Facts edit

Barber Asphalt Company acquired Hayden U.S. Patent No. 1,684,671, covering a "Method of preventing evaporation from concrete during curing." The patent describes a process for improving the curing of concrete by retarding the evaporation of water from poured concrete, as in a roadway. The process involves preparing a mixture of bitumen, soap, and water, which forms bituminous emulsion, and spraying this on freshly laid concrete. This forms an insoluble film on the surface of the concrete and by keeping the water in the concrete mixture from evaporating, facilitates a chemical reaction in which water molecules react with calcium hydroxide and other ingredients to form calcium-silicate hydrate. The result is reduced cracking and stronger concrete.[2]

Barber made and sold bituminous emulsion. The product was long known and not patented, and it has many uses besides the patented process. Leitch Manufacturing Company also made and sold bituminous emulsion. Barber's method of exploiting the patent was to sell bituminous emulsion for road building use. It did not make road builders pay a royalty for employing the patented method. It does not grant to road builders a written license to use the process, nor require them to agree to use only Barber's bituminous emulsion when practicing the process. Under U.S. patent law, when a patent owner sells supplies to customers with the understanding that they will use the supplies to practice the patent, the customers get an implied license to use the patent. " On the other hand, the Barber Company sues as a contributory infringer a competing manufacturer of this unpatented material who sells it to a road builder for such use."[3]

Leitch used Stulz-Sickles Company as a jobber to sell bituminous emulsion to the Standard Bitulithic Company, which used the patented process in road construction, and Barber and Stulz-Sickles knew that Standard would so use it.[4]

Lower court rulings edit

Barber sued Leitch and Stulz-Sickles. The district court found the patent invalid as anticipated by prior art.[5] On appeal, the Third Circuit reversed (2-1). It found the patent valid and rejected the defense that Barber committed patent misuse by engaging in a tie-in of unpatented supplies, in violation of the rule set out in Carbice Corporation v. American Patents Development Corporation. One judge dissented: "The appellant seeks to restrain the sale of an unpatented ingredient used by it in its process. No patent could have been obtained for bituminous emulsion, a staple article of commerce, and the fact that it is used in the patented process does not entitled the appellant to a monopoly therein. Carbice."[6]

Ruling of Supreme Court edit

 
Justice Brandeis

Justice Brandeis delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court, reversing the Third Circuit. The first sentence of the opinion telegraphed the result: " The question for decision is whether the owner of a process patent may by suit for contributory infringement suppress competition in the sale of unpatented material to be used in practicing the process."[7]

Brandeis recognized that Barber did not grant licenses on the process subject to a condition that the licensee buy bit3em from Barber. " But it adopts a method of doing the business which is the practical equivalent of granting a written license with a condition that the patented method may be practiced only with emulsion purchased from it. . . . Thus, the sole purpose to which the patent is put is thereby to suppress competition in the production and sale of staple unpatented material for this use in road building.[8]

The case was settled by Carbice, irrespective of the absence of a formal tie-in condition: "That the patent did not confer upon the Barber Company the right to be free from competition in supplying unpatented material to be used in practicing the invention was settled by the rule declared in the Carbice case."[9]

Barber argued that Carbice and Motion Picture Patents were inapplicable "because it has not entered into any contract or agreement aimed at expansion of the patent monopoly" while in those cases:

the attempt to secure the "partial monopoly of an unpatented material, outside of and apart from the patent monopoly" was made by contract or notice, whereas the Barber Company has made no attempt, "by contract, notice or otherwise, to expand its patent monopoly by limitations, or to reserve or create any monopoly in emulsion outside of, and apart from, its patent monopoly," that "its customers for emulsion have no more than the unconditional license to use implied by law and are under no restriction," and that neither the defendant nor its customers "has any relation with the patent owner."[10]

The Court said, "The distinction upon which the Barber Company . .  rests is without legal significance," because "every use of a patent as a means of obtaining a limited monopoly of unpatented material is prohibited. . . . It applies whatever the nature of the device by which the owner of the patent seeks to effect such unauthorized extension of the monopoly."[11]

Subsequent developments edit

La Fera Greco case edit

In Barber Asphalt Co. v. La Fera Grecco Contracting Co.,[12] the Third Circuit held that when Barber sold bituminous emulsion to purchasers for a royalty of 2 cents per gallon over the market price, and gave the purchaser a right to use the patented process, while requiring the users of bituminous emulsion purchased from other sources to pay a royalty of 1 cent per square yard of concrete surface over which the bituminous emulsion is spread, the sales practice puts such a burden upon the user of bituminous emulsion purchased from other sources as to prevent free competition. The theory was thatr it was impossible for customers to equalize the royalty of 2 cents per gallon paid by the purchasers from Barber and that required for the use of the patented process by those who purchased the bituminous emulsion elsewhere; this was because a gallon of the bituminous emulsion might be spread over a surface varying from 5 to 20 square yards in practicing the patented process. Consequently, if the product purchased from others were used economically by the purchaser so as to cover 15 or 20 years of concrete, the license fee required would be so great that he could not afford to purchase the product from anyone other than the patentee. The Third Circuit said: "The contractor who does not purchase his emulsions through the Johnson-March Thompson middleman channel is faced with the economic anomaly that upon spreading his emulsions sparingly his cost is increased; thickly, the cost is reduced."

Dehydrators case edit

In Dehydrators, Ltd. v. Petrolite Corp.,[13] the owner of a process patent supplied an unpatented product called Tret-O-Lite Turkey Red Oil at a single price that combined a charge for the use of the process and a charge for the product supplied. The patentee ran afoul of the Leitch case, even though it had publicly offered to any persons who preferred to procure the unpatented product elsewhere the alternative of an unrestricted license to practice the process, upon payment of a royalty based on the difference between the cost of the unpatented product on the open market and the patentee's sale price for the same unpatented product. The court said:

If the appellee had been more interested in promoting or exploiting its patent than in selling its Tret-O-Lite it would have been a very simple matter to fix a royalty fee of so many cents per gallon whether purchased from the appellee or from outsiders. Indeed, no other course on the part of a patentee who is selling a commercial product to use in the patented process he owns would seem to quite meet the claim that the practice of combining the price of a royalty and of the product in the same unit without separation tends to promote a monopoly in the product if the patent monopoly is not waived.[14]

References edit

The citations in this article are written in Bluebook style. Please see the talk page for more information.

  1. ^ Leitch Mfg. Co. v. Barber Co., 302 U.S. 458 (1938).
  2. ^ See Concrete#Curing.
  3. ^ 302 U.S. at 460-61.
  4. ^ Barber Asphalt Co. v. Stulz-Sickles Co., 89 F.2d 960, 964 (3d Cir. 1937).
  5. ^ Barber Asphalt Co. v. Stulz-Sickles Co., 14 F. Supp. 212 (D.N.J. 1936).
  6. ^ Barber Asphalt Co., 89 F.2d at 965.
  7. ^ 302 U.S. at 459.
  8. ^ 302 U.S. at 460-61.
  9. ^ 302 U.S. at 461.
  10. ^ 302 U.S. at 462-63.
  11. ^ 302 U.S. at 463.
  12. ^ Barber Asphalt Co. v. La Fera Grecco Contracting Co., 116 F.2d 211 (3d Cir. 1940).
  13. ^ Dehydrators, Ltd. v. Petrolite Corp., 117 F.2d 183 (9th Cir. 1941).
  14. ^ Dehydrators, 117 F.2d at 187.

External links edit

  • Text of Leitch Manufacturing Co. v. Barber Co., 302 U.S. 458 (1938) is available from: CourtListener  Google Scholar  Justia  Library of Congress 

leitch, manufacturing, barber, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this, article, adding, secondary, tertiary, sources, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, december, 2019, learn, when, remove, . This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Leitch Manufacturing Co v Barber Co news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Leitch Manufacturing Co v Barber Co 302 U S 458 1938 is a 1938 decision of the United States Supreme Court extending the tie in patent misuse doctrine to cases in which the patentee does not use an explicit tie in license but instead relies on grants of implied licenses to only those who buy a necessary supply from it 1 Leitch Manufacturing Co v Barber Co Supreme Court of the United StatesArgued December 14 1937Decided January 3 1938Full case nameLeitch Manufacturing Co v Barber CompanyCitations302 U S 458 more 58 S Ct 288 82 L Ed 371 1938 U S LEXIS 76 36 U S P Q 35Case historyPriorBarber Asphalt Co v Stulz Sickles Co 89 F 2d 960 3d Cir 1937 Court membershipChief Justice Charles E Hughes Associate Justices James C McReynolds Louis BrandeisGeorge Sutherland Pierce ButlerHarlan F Stone Owen RobertsBenjamin N Cardozo Hugo BlackCase opinionMajorityBrandeis joined by Hughes McReynolds Sutherland Butler Stone Roberts BlackCardozo took no part in the consideration or decision of the case Contents 1 Background 1 1 Facts 1 2 Lower court rulings 2 Ruling of Supreme Court 3 Subsequent developments 3 1 La Fera Greco case 3 2 Dehydrators case 4 References 5 External linksBackground editFacts edit Barber Asphalt Company acquired Hayden U S Patent No 1 684 671 covering a Method of preventing evaporation from concrete during curing The patent describes a process for improving the curing of concrete by retarding the evaporation of water from poured concrete as in a roadway The process involves preparing a mixture of bitumen soap and water which forms bituminous emulsion and spraying this on freshly laid concrete This forms an insoluble film on the surface of the concrete and by keeping the water in the concrete mixture from evaporating facilitates a chemical reaction in which water molecules react with calcium hydroxide and other ingredients to form calcium silicate hydrate The result is reduced cracking and stronger concrete 2 Barber made and sold bituminous emulsion The product was long known and not patented and it has many uses besides the patented process Leitch Manufacturing Company also made and sold bituminous emulsion Barber s method of exploiting the patent was to sell bituminous emulsion for road building use It did not make road builders pay a royalty for employing the patented method It does not grant to road builders a written license to use the process nor require them to agree to use only Barber s bituminous emulsion when practicing the process Under U S patent law when a patent owner sells supplies to customers with the understanding that they will use the supplies to practice the patent the customers get an implied license to use the patent On the other hand the Barber Company sues as a contributory infringer a competing manufacturer of this unpatented material who sells it to a road builder for such use 3 Leitch used Stulz Sickles Company as a jobber to sell bituminous emulsion to the Standard Bitulithic Company which used the patented process in road construction and Barber and Stulz Sickles knew that Standard would so use it 4 Lower court rulings edit Barber sued Leitch and Stulz Sickles The district court found the patent invalid as anticipated by prior art 5 On appeal the Third Circuit reversed 2 1 It found the patent valid and rejected the defense that Barber committed patent misuse by engaging in a tie in of unpatented supplies in violation of the rule set out in Carbice Corporation v American Patents Development Corporation One judge dissented The appellant seeks to restrain the sale of an unpatented ingredient used by it in its process No patent could have been obtained for bituminous emulsion a staple article of commerce and the fact that it is used in the patented process does not entitled the appellant to a monopoly therein Carbice 6 Ruling of Supreme Court edit nbsp Justice Brandeis Justice Brandeis delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court reversing the Third Circuit The first sentence of the opinion telegraphed the result The question for decision is whether the owner of a process patent may by suit for contributory infringement suppress competition in the sale of unpatented material to be used in practicing the process 7 Brandeis recognized that Barber did not grant licenses on the process subject to a condition that the licensee buy bit3em from Barber But it adopts a method of doing the business which is the practical equivalent of granting a written license with a condition that the patented method may be practiced only with emulsion purchased from it Thus the sole purpose to which the patent is put is thereby to suppress competition in the production and sale of staple unpatented material for this use in road building 8 The case was settled by Carbice irrespective of the absence of a formal tie in condition That the patent did not confer upon the Barber Company the right to be free from competition in supplying unpatented material to be used in practicing the invention was settled by the rule declared in the Carbice case 9 Barber argued that Carbice and Motion Picture Patents were inapplicable because it has not entered into any contract or agreement aimed at expansion of the patent monopoly while in those cases the attempt to secure the partial monopoly of an unpatented material outside of and apart from the patent monopoly was made by contract or notice whereas the Barber Company has made no attempt by contract notice or otherwise to expand its patent monopoly by limitations or to reserve or create any monopoly in emulsion outside of and apart from its patent monopoly that its customers for emulsion have no more than the unconditional license to use implied by law and are under no restriction and that neither the defendant nor its customers has any relation with the patent owner 10 The Court said The distinction upon which the Barber Company rests is without legal significance because every use of a patent as a means of obtaining a limited monopoly of unpatented material is prohibited It applies whatever the nature of the device by which the owner of the patent seeks to effect such unauthorized extension of the monopoly 11 Subsequent developments editLa Fera Greco case edit In Barber Asphalt Co v La Fera Grecco Contracting Co 12 the Third Circuit held that when Barber sold bituminous emulsion to purchasers for a royalty of 2 cents per gallon over the market price and gave the purchaser a right to use the patented process while requiring the users of bituminous emulsion purchased from other sources to pay a royalty of 1 cent per square yard of concrete surface over which the bituminous emulsion is spread the sales practice puts such a burden upon the user of bituminous emulsion purchased from other sources as to prevent free competition The theory was thatr it was impossible for customers to equalize the royalty of 2 cents per gallon paid by the purchasers from Barber and that required for the use of the patented process by those who purchased the bituminous emulsion elsewhere this was because a gallon of the bituminous emulsion might be spread over a surface varying from 5 to 20 square yards in practicing the patented process Consequently if the product purchased from others were used economically by the purchaser so as to cover 15 or 20 years of concrete the license fee required would be so great that he could not afford to purchase the product from anyone other than the patentee The Third Circuit said The contractor who does not purchase his emulsions through the Johnson March Thompson middleman channel is faced with the economic anomaly that upon spreading his emulsions sparingly his cost is increased thickly the cost is reduced Dehydrators case edit In Dehydrators Ltd v Petrolite Corp 13 the owner of a process patent supplied an unpatented product called Tret O Lite Turkey Red Oil at a single price that combined a charge for the use of the process and a charge for the product supplied The patentee ran afoul of the Leitch case even though it had publicly offered to any persons who preferred to procure the unpatented product elsewhere the alternative of an unrestricted license to practice the process upon payment of a royalty based on the difference between the cost of the unpatented product on the open market and the patentee s sale price for the same unpatented product The court said If the appellee had been more interested in promoting or exploiting its patent than in selling its Tret O Lite it would have been a very simple matter to fix a royalty fee of so many cents per gallon whether purchased from the appellee or from outsiders Indeed no other course on the part of a patentee who is selling a commercial product to use in the patented process he owns would seem to quite meet the claim that the practice of combining the price of a royalty and of the product in the same unit without separation tends to promote a monopoly in the product if the patent monopoly is not waived 14 References editThe citations in this article are written in Bluebook style Please see the talk page for more information Leitch Mfg Co v Barber Co 302 U S 458 1938 See Concrete Curing 302 U S at 460 61 Barber Asphalt Co v Stulz Sickles Co 89 F 2d 960 964 3d Cir 1937 Barber Asphalt Co v Stulz Sickles Co 14 F Supp 212 D N J 1936 Barber Asphalt Co 89 F 2d at 965 302 U S at 459 302 U S at 460 61 302 U S at 461 302 U S at 462 63 302 U S at 463 Barber Asphalt Co v La Fera Grecco Contracting Co 116 F 2d 211 3d Cir 1940 Dehydrators Ltd v Petrolite Corp 117 F 2d 183 9th Cir 1941 Dehydrators 117 F 2d at 187 External links editText of Leitch Manufacturing Co v Barber Co 302 U S 458 1938 is available from CourtListener Google Scholar Justia Library of Congress Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leitch Manufacturing Co v Barber Co amp oldid 1175144986, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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