A. B. Dick Co. v. Fuller

6 F.2d 393, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 974
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 24, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 F.2d 393 (A. B. Dick Co. v. Fuller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. B. Dick Co. v. Fuller, 6 F.2d 393, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 974 (S.D.N.Y. 1923).

Opinion

AUGUSTUS N. HAND,

District Judge. By a contract dated May 12, .1911, between the defendant and others and A. B. Dick Company, it was agreed by Fuller and his associates that they should disclose “promptly” and “without further consideration” to the A. B. Dick Company any inventions thereafter acquired “in or relating to stencil paper and processes or methods for preparing, producing, and using the same,” and if desired should assign any such inventions or applications to the A. B. Dick Company.

A suit was brought by A. B. Dick Company for the specific performance of this contract, and a decree entered, after a trial before Judge Hunt, directing the defendant herein specifically tp perform, the contract and disclose to A. B. Dick Company in writing, within 30 days, all inventions and improvements in or relating to stencil paper and processes or methods for preparing, producing, and using the same. By said decree an injunction was ordered, and thereafter issued, enjoining said defendant, during the operation of the contract of May 12, 1911, from engaging in the manufacture, use, or sale of material or processes of the class or character illustrated by the said several inventions. A. B. Dick Co. v. Fuller (D. C.) 213 F. 98.

There can be no doubt that the defendant has sold 1,600 stencil sheets of the general type referred to in the foregoing contract to various customers and has received payment therefor. He claims that he has not violated the contract, and that this proceeding will not lie, because: (1) The injunction granted by Judge Hunt is indefinite in meaning and direction; (2) the complainant is a different corporation from the one with which he contracted; (3) because such a contract was in violation of the Clayton Act; (4) the agreement to assign has been rescinded; (5) the complainant has been guilty of laches and is barred from seeking equitable relief.

A motion was made to refer to a master the question whether the defendant has since Judge Hunt’s decree violated section 8 of the contract of May 12, 1911, providing for disclosure and assignment of future inventions relating to stencil paper, and whether he has violated the injunction granted by such decree. The matter was referred to William Parkin, Esq., as special master, who reported that the defendant had made an invention relating to stencil paper, had refused to disclose the same without further compensation, and had violated the injunction by selling about 1,600 'sheets of such paper to various parties other than the complainant.

It is not questioned that the JL B. Dick Company, which was the complainant in the suit before Judge Hunt, assigned all its property, patents, and good will to the complainant in this suit, which 'is a different corporation of the, same name and with the same stock interests.. Such an assignment entitles this complainant to enforce the rights adjudicated in the former suit and to recover damages for any infringements of the provisions of the former decree. American Shipbuilding Co. v. Commonwealth S. S. Co., 215 F. 304, 131 C. C. A. 604. Moreover, the contract was not personal and might be validly assigned. Quinn v. Whitney, 204 N. Y. 363, 97 N. E. 724.

While the decree of Judge Hunt and the injunction issued in accordance therewith might have been more detailed, the injunction order restraining the defendant from “directly or indirectly engaging or becoming interested, during the operation of said contract of May 12, 1911, in the manufacture, use, or sale of material or processes of the class or character illustrated by the said several inventions, * s' * ” when preceded earlier in the writ of injunction by the words “relating to stencil paper or processes or methods for preparing, producing, or using the same,” would seem to sufficiently inform the defendant as to what he ought to do. I think the complainant’s counsel is correct in saying that the life of the contract is limited to that of the original patent granted June 23, 1914. If there is any doubt about this, the defendant should have taken steps to have some definition of the time limit of the, operation of Judge Hunt’s decree inserted therein. He cannot properly excuse the disregard of an injunction granted in a suit where the eourt had jurisdiction of the parties and the subject-matter by making the [395]*395claim that it should have been limited in time.

I can see no ground for contending that the contract or injunction granted" by Judge Hunt is in violation of’ the Clayton Act (38 Stat. 730). In the first place, the date of the injunction was more than six months prior to the passage of that act. As I have already stated in my opinion, the life of the contract is limited to the life of the original patent, No. 1,101,268, which was granted June 23, 1914. Inventions during the lifetime of that patent, or until June 23, 1931, are assignable and must be disclosed. ' My attention is called to no ease holding an assignment of a patent or application therefor accompanied by an agreement to transfer inventions relating to the same subject-matter made during the lifetime of the original patent has been held illegal. Inventions in ink or other .things outside of the direet subject-matter of the patent may not lawfully come within the contract.

The principal attack upon complainant’s position has been made upon the the-' ory that the right to an assignment of the invention in stencil sheets has been terminated by a recission of the agreement or barred by laches. I have examined the correspondence upon which this contention is based. The alleged information in February, 1915, that the defendant had invented stencil paper was negatived by defendant’s letter of February 18, 1915, where he says he does not think" the invention comes within the terms of the contract, and that it is of “a stencil sheet and not * * * stencil paper.”

After a cessation of the correspondence for over a year, defendant again, on May 3, 1916, wrote the Dick Company, complaining of the fact that it had taken no action in regard to his communications, beyond “making request that I disclose the invention to you in accordance with the terms of an alleged contract with you,” and concluded with the statement: “If I do not hear from you immediately, I shall take such action as the exigencies of the ease seem to me to determine, and I shall assume that you do not intend to take any action.” This letter was not answered by the Dick Company, and on May 10, defendant wrote them again, saying: “I will say that I will construe your silence as meaning that you do not intend to do anything about my inventions.”

To this letter Dick Company replied, on May 12, 1916, stating: “Our position is, as we believe you fully understand, that we are entitled under the terms of our contract with you, as above mentioned, to a disclosure of your invention, as well, at our election, as your co-operation in the application for letters patent thereon. Manifestly, until you disclose, it will be impossible for us to determine what further steps we wish to take with regard to the invention in question.”

On June 8, 1916, the defendant wrote the Dick Company, stating that the contract between the parties of May 12, 1911, was a part of a conspiracy to monopolize and control the stencil paper and duplicating machine business, and that in his belief the contract was illegal. He added: “As I have already told you, I have made an invention of a dry process stencil sheet and have also made other inventions which it is likely relate to stencil paper. I offer to disclose these inventions to your company and to sign any papers that in your judgment are necessary to vest these inventions in your company.

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Bluebook (online)
6 F.2d 393, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-b-dick-co-v-fuller-nysd-1923.