Dolan v. Jennings Kibbe/Opinion of the Court

These are appeals from final decrees rendered in the circuit court of the United States for the southern district of New York, awarding to Abraham G. Jennings and Warren P. Jennings, complainants, damages against Thomas Dolan, of Philadelphia, and Kibbe, Chaffee, Shreve & Co., of New York, for the infringement of letters patent No. 218,082, for lace purling. A design patent No. 10,448, for a design for fringed lace fabric, was also proceeded on in the bills of complaint, but was held not to have been infringed by defendants. Final decrees were rendered in each suit in favor of Abraham G. Jennings and Warren P. Jennings against Dolan and Kibbe et al., respectively, on the 12th of February, 1887. On the 25th of March, 1887, a petition for appeal was filed in each case on behalf of the defendants, entitled 'Abraham G. Jennings, survivor of Abraham G. Jennings and Warren P. Jennings,' and against Dolan and Kibbe et al., and the appeals were allowed. The bond in No. 265 was approved March 10, 1887, and entitled 'A. G. Jennings, surviving complainant in A. G. Jennings and W. P. Jennings v. Thomas Dolan,' and recited that Dolan and his sureties were 'held and firmly bound unto the above-named complainants in the sum of thirty-five hundred dollars, to be paid to the said complainants.' The citation ran 'to Abraham G. Jennings, surviving complainant,' etc., and was served March 24, 1887. In No. 266 the bond was entitled 'A. G. Jennings and W. P. Jennings v. in A. G. Jennings and W. P. Jennings v. Henry R. Kibbe' and the other defendants, and recited that the persons signing were 'held and firmly bound unto the above-named A. G. Jennings and W. P. Jennings in the sum of twenty-seven hundred dollars, to be paid to the said A. G. Jennings & W. P. Jennings.' This bond was filed March 10, 1887. The citation ran to 'Abraham G. Jennings, surviving complainant,' etc., and was served March 24th. The bills commenced 'Abraham G. Jennings and Warren P. Jennings, doing business at the city of New York, county and state of New York, and citizens of the state of New York,' and set up that Abraham G. Jennings and Warren P. Jennings were 'the sole and exclusive owners' of the patents in question. It nowhere appeared from the pleadings, proofs, proceedings, or decrees that the complainants claimed to own or did own the patents as partners, though there was some evidence that there was a firm styled A. G. Jennings & Son, or A. G. Jennings & Sons, or Jennings & Co. Sundry licenses were put in evidence, describing Abraham G. Jennings and Warren P. Jennings as the owners of the patents, and the granting of the licenses accordingly. The death of Warren P. Jennings was not suggested on the record by the appellants, except as the titles to the petitions for appeal, and the bonds on appeal, and the directions of the citations, might be considered as such; but we understand his death after decree to be conceded. No order was procured, directed to the proper representatives of the estate of Warren P. Jennings, or notifying them of the appeal, nor have they voluntarilly appeared. The proper course of proceeding upon this subject has been wholly disregarded. Rev. St. § 955; Act March 3, 1875, § 9, (18 St. 470;) Rule 15. So far as disclosed by these records, the cause of action did not, on the death of one of the complainants, survive to the other; nor could there have been, nor was there, any severance between Abraham G. Jennings and the legal representatives of Warren P. Jennings; nor do we think that the defect can now be cured. More than four years have elapsed since the final decrees were entered, and, as we have never had jurisdiction over the legal representatives of the deceasd c omplainant, it is impossible for us to obtain it now. In Insurance Co. v. Pendleton, 115 U.S. 339, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 74, after judgment had been rendered here reversing the judgment below, which had passed in favor of the plaintiffs below, the court discovered that the writ of error was sued out and citation directed and served against only one of those plaintiffs, and that the preliminary appeal-bond was made to him alone. The supersedeas bond was, however, executed to all the plaintiffs, and the subsequent proceedings generally bore a plural title. The special circumstances of the case were held to justify the amendment of the writ of error and the issue of a new citation. In Mason v. U.S., 136 U.S. 581, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1062, the application to amend being made more than two years after the entry of judgment, and the omitted parties being in no way in court, the application was denied, and the writ of error dismissed. Estis v. Trabue, 128 U.S. 225, 9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 58. We are compelled to hold the objection fatal to our jurisdiction, and the appeals must be dismissed.