A. B. Dick Co. v. Sherwood Letter File Co.

42 N.E. 440, 157 Ill. 325
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 42 N.E. 440 (A. B. Dick Co. v. Sherwood Letter File Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court 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. Sherwood Letter File Co., 42 N.E. 440, 157 Ill. 325 (Ill. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the court:

Complaint is made by appellant that at the hearing had at the time of the entry of the interlocutory decree the court received incompetent testimony, the tendency of which was to put a construction upon the contract that is inconsistent with its terms. "We deem it immaterial to inquire whether this is so or not, for the rule is, that on the hearing of a bill in equity the court will consider only such evidence as is competent, and that the admission of incompetent testimony at the hearing is no cause for reversal, provided the competent evidence in the record sustains the decree. (Kingman v. Higgins, 100 Ill. 319; Mix v. People, 116 id. 265.) It is, however, settled law that a court will construe a contract in the light of the circumstances surrounding the parties at the time of its execution, and of the objects that they evidently had in view. Robinson v. Stow, 39 Ill. 568; Chicago, Madison and Northern Railroad Co. v. National Elevator and Dock Co. 153 id. 70.

It is claimed that it was error for the courts below to hold, that by the terms of the contract appellant was required to account to appellee, not only for the sales of patented articles and devices, but also for the sales of articles and devices not patented which appellant manufactured and sold after the date of the agreement, and which were substantially the same articles and devices that appellee had manufactured and sold prior to that date. It is recited in the preamble of the contract, that appellee, party of the first part, is the owner of certain designated patents and also of a certain application for letters patent, and is engaged “in the manufacture and sale of the articles covered by the above mentioned letters patent and application, and other articles of office and banle furniture.” It is then therein next recited, that appellant, party of the second part, “desires to acquire the exclusive right to manufacture and sell all the articles now manufactured and sold by the party of the first part.” It is perfectly plain from these recitals that the articles manufactured and sold by the first party included “other articles of office and bank furniture” besides those covered by the patents and the application, and that appellant wanted to obtain the right to make and sell the articles not under the patents and application as well as those that were covered by them. Then follow the covenants and grants made by the party of the first part: “The said party of the first part hereby agrees to transfer and convey, and does by these presents hereby transfer and convey, to the said second party and its successors and assigns, the good-will and all the business hereinbefore mentioned, together with the sole and exclusive right and license to manufacture, and to grant to others the right to manufacture, all the articles covered by the above said letters patent and said application, and to sell and grant to others the right to sell said articles now owned or controlled by the said first party, together with any and all patents which may be obtained for improvement on same, or for office devices of a like character which may be intended to supersede the articles now being manufactured. It is also further agreed that should any of the present members of the party of the first part contrive, invent or produce any new article or articles of manufacture during the life of this contract, it or they shall be submitted to the party of the second part for purchase or manufacture on a royalty basis, and the said party of the second part shall have the option of accepting such inventions or product at the same price which m'ay be offered for the same by any disinterested party. It is also stipulated and agreed that the title to said letters patent and application above mentioned will be maintained and protected by the party of the first part.”

“All the business hereinbefore mentioned” is transferred and conveyed to the second party, and “all the business hereinbefore mentioned” is stated in the first preamble to be “the manufacture and sale of the articles covered by the above mentioned letters patent and applications, and other articles of office and bank furniture;” and' it is stated in the second preamble to be the manufacture and sale of “all the articles now manufactured and sold by the party of the first part.” And the expression “all the business hereinbefore mentioned,” can no more be limited to the articles covered by the patents and-application, than it can be limited to the other articles of office and bank furniture manufactured and sold by the party of the first part. The contract expressly conveys “the good will” in connection with “the business herein-before mentioned.” Good will connected with any trade or occupation is a valuable property right, and is the subject of barter and sale. (8 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 1370, and authorities cited in note 9.) And here it was sold and conveyed as an adjunct of the business of manufacturing and selling the articles of office and bank furniture that were not patented as well as those that were. The agreement also conveys to the said second party certain rights, licenses and privileges in respect to the patents and the application for a patent. And in connection with these transfers of property rights, the second party, appellant herein, agrees to pay to the first party, at the end of one year, “a sum equal to ten per cent of the net aggregate sales of the line of goods above mentioned, hereafter sold by the party of the second part, their licensees, agent or agents,” and a like percentage, annually, up to the time of the expiration of all the patents mentioned, — the percentage for the first and second years being limited not to exceed §1000 for each year, for the third year not to exceed §2000, for the fourth year not to exceed §3000, and for the fifth and each subsequent year not to exceed §4000. The percentage is thus based on “the net aggregate sales of the line of goods above mentioned.” The only line of goods that had been mentioned in the agreement was that class of articles of office and bank furniture that appellee was dealing in, whether covered by a patent or not. It must be presumed that if it had been' the intention of the parties to confine the percentage to either patented articles or to certain specific articles, then some such expression as “patented articles” would have been used in the contract or particular articles would have been specified therein. And in the latter part of the agreement, where an option is given to the second party to terminate and end the rights of the first party, under the contract, by paying to it the sum of §20,000, the language employed is, “all the right, title and interest of the said first party in and to the business above mentioned, and all its letters patent and applications for patents.’’ If appellee had no right and interest, after the date of the contract, in any of the articles to be sold other than those to be patented, then why say “the business above mentioned,” and thereby use language which can refer only to either a description which includes articles of office and bank furniture other than those patente'd, or to all the articles manufactured and sold by the first party at the time of the agreement ?

The circumstances of the case and of the parties indicate quite strongly that the view thus taken of the contract is in accord with what was the intention of the parties. Appellee had an established business of a peculiar kind, which it had built up and from which it was realizing an annual profit of §3000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 N.E. 440, 157 Ill. 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-b-dick-co-v-sherwood-letter-file-co-ill-1895.