Acme Chair & Metal Crafts Co. v. Northern Corrugating Co.

243 N.W. 415, 209 Wis. 8, 1932 Wisc. LEXIS 184
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 243 N.W. 415 (Acme Chair & Metal Crafts Co. v. Northern Corrugating Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Acme Chair & Metal Crafts Co. v. Northern Corrugating Co., 243 N.W. 415, 209 Wis. 8, 1932 Wisc. LEXIS 184 (Wis. 1932).

Opinions

The following opinion was filed June 20, 1932:

Owen, J.

This action was originally brought by one J. J. Schmitt to recover royalties alleged to be due him under the terms of a contract entered into by said Schmitt and the defendant Northern Corrugating Company, by the terms of which the said Schmitt guaranteed to Northern Corrugating Company the exclusive right to manufacture a folding chair which had been invented by said J. J. Schmitt and upon which Schmitt’s application for a patent was then pending in the patent office. Subsequent to the commencement of the action Schmitt assigned his claim to the Acme Chair and Metal Crafts Company, which thereafter was substituted as party plaintiff in this action.

It appears that Schmitt owned or was interested in a small manufacturing establishment at Algoma, Wisconsin. He invented a folding chair and made application to the United States patent office for a patent thereon February 26, 1929. His application set forth thirteen claims. After filing this application he concluded to proceed with the manufacture of the chair in his small manufacturing establishment at Algoma. It seemed convenient for him to have [10]*10some of the parts of this chair manufactured and delivered to him. Learning that Schmitt desired the manufacture of 100,000 backs and 100,000 lugs to enable him to produce the chair, the defendant Northern Corrugating Company of Green Bay sent its sales representative, one H. W. Ashton, to interview Schmitt at Algoma with a view of securing the contract. Upon examining the chair, Mr. Ashton was impressed with its sales appeal, and took up with the Northern Corrugating Company the question of securing the right from Mr. Schmitt to manufacture and market the chair. To this end negotiations with Mr. Schmitt were opened by the Northern Corrugating- Company. Mr. Ashton, and Mr. Krueger, the president of the company, made one or two trips to Algoma for the purpose of interviewing Mr. Schmitt, and Mr. Schmitt made two or three trips to Green Bay in pursuance of the same negotiations. These negotiations finally culminated in a written contract between the parties whereby Schmitt guaranteed to the Corrugating Company the exclusive right to manufacture the chair, without restriction, in consideration of certain royalties which the Corrugating Company agreed to pay Schmitt for the privilege. This contract recited that Schmitt had made application for patent on said chair, “and such application is now pending in the United States, patent office, being patent application No. 342708,” and that the party of the first part (Corrugating Company) “is desirous of obtaining the sole right to manufacture and sell such chair under the application pending, and under any patent hereinafter to be granted to the said Joseph J. Schmitt, his heirs or assigns, under such application, upon the terms and conditions hereinafter specified.”

The Northern Corrugating Company entered upon the manufacture and marketing of the chair and paid Mr. Schmitt royalties to the amount of $2,500. After about three months’ operation under the contract, the Corrugat[11]*11ing Company claimed that there were other chairs on the market with which their chair was coming into competition, embodying mechanical principles similar to the Schmitt chair. The Northern Corrugating Company then notified Mr. Schmitt of such situation and told him to take action to protect them, and they paid no further royalties, although they proceeded with the manufacture of the chair and, at the time of the trial, in October, 1931, had marketed at least 350,000 chairs.

As stated, this action was brought to recover royalties due Mr. Schmitt or his assignees under the terms of the contract. The defense was that the Northern Corrugating Company was induced to enter into the contract by virtue of the false and fraudulent representations made by Schmitt that his claim for a patent had been allowed by the patent office prior to the consummation of the written contract and that Mr. Schmitt was able to give to the Northern Corrugating Company the exclusive right to manufacture folding chairs embodying the mechanical principles upon which the Schmitt folding chair was based. The trial court found that the Northern Corrugating Company was induced to enter into the contract by reason of such false and fraudulent representations, that the contract was, accordingly, void, and denied the plaintiff any recovery.

Appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the finding that the Northern Corrugating Company was induced to enter into the contract upon which the action is based by reason of the false and fraudulent representations made by Schmitt that his application for patent upon the chair had been allowed by the patent office, and this challenge imposes upon us the duty of investigating the record to ascertain whether the findings are supported by the evidence. We enter upon this undertaking with the principle in mind that the finding of the trial court upon this question cannot be disturbed unless it is against the great [12]*12weight and fair preponderance of the evidence. It will assist in weighing the evidence if we have in mind certain of the general and conceded facts in the case.

The Northern Corrugating Company has been in the sheet-metal business for thirty years and, according to the president of the company, has had experience in regard to patents and obtaining patents., and in regard to the effect of a patent when obtained. Mr. Krueger, the president, showed familiarity with practices obtaining in the patent office, as revealed by the following question and answer:

“Q. Now in your previous experience with the application for and issuance of patents, did you at that time know that one stage of that proceeding was the allowance of the claims ?
“A. Well, that’s understood, that as soon as the claims are allowed the patents of course will be issued very shortly afterwards. It is a matter of routine in the patent office,— after the claims are allowed they are just as good as issued. The remainder of the process to my knowledge was simply the clerical routine matter.”

This sufficiently indicates that the Northern Corrugating Company was negotiating in a field in which it had considerable familiarity and that it was not the easy victim of fraud and misrepresentation within that field. Its long business ■ experience and its familiarity with patents, patent rights, and the practices of the United States patent office placed it in a position where it was able to deal at arms’ length with Mr. Schmitt.

It further appears that Mr. Schmitt was not the moving party in bringing about the final consummation of the written contract between the parties. Mr. Schmitt had concluded to manufacture and market the chair himself. When Mr. Ashton saw the chair he was immediately impressed with its sales possibilities. He laid the matter before the officers of the company, and the evidence conclusively shows that the Corrugating Company was the aggressor in the matter of [13]*13pressing negotiations looking to the acquirement of such rights as Mr. Schmitt had to market the chair. As already stated, Mr. Schmitt’s application for a patent was filed February 9, 1929. His application set forth thirteen claims for a patent. Now a folding chair in 1929 was not in and of itself a novelty. Folding chairs had been in general use prior to that time, and it must be assumed that the defendant knew of this fact. It would be most unusual to secure a patent on a folding chair as an entity.

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Bluebook (online)
243 N.W. 415, 209 Wis. 8, 1932 Wisc. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/acme-chair-metal-crafts-co-v-northern-corrugating-co-wis-1932.