Alexander v. . American Encaustic Tiling Co.

100 N.E. 809, 207 N.Y. 276, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1269
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 21, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 100 N.E. 809 (Alexander v. . American Encaustic Tiling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. . American Encaustic Tiling Co., 100 N.E. 809, 207 N.Y. 276, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1269 (N.Y. 1913).

Opinions

*279 Hiscock, J.

The respondents have recovered a judgment for royalties under an agreement permitting the appellant to make and sell tile for flooring and other purposes. The appellant claims that what it manufactured and sold was not covered by said agreement or by the patents on which said agreement rested.

The respondents became the owners by assignment or otherwise of two letters patent. The first of these was issued to cover an alleged new and useful design “ for a tile.” The specifications attached to said letters stated that the essential feature of the design consisted “in circular disks A (referred to in the design) embedded in the binding material B, and arranged one alongside the other, and with their peripheral surfaces in contact to form on the face of the tile triangular figures C, of the material B, between adjacent disks A.”

The second letters patent covered an alleged new and useful improvement in “tiling for floors, walls, ceilings, fire places, etc.” The specifications attached to said letters patent stated that the invention consisted “principally of tiling comprising small disks embedded in cement or other binding material and with the peripheral surfaces of the tiles in contact with each other and a filling or binding material in which the said disks are embedded and which fills the triangular spaces between the adjacent disks to bind the same at their edges and to form, part of the design of the tile at the top surface thereof.” It is important in this controversy to note that these specifications constantly refer to the completed article produced by the combination of all the elements as “tile” or “tiling” and to the principal element used in producing it as “disks” or “tile-disks,” and, also a matter of some importance in subsequent discussion, the specifications point out that'these disks may be “laid singly in the binding material”or “insections assembled and pasted on paper.”

After the issue of said letters an agreement was made *280 between the respondents and the appellant which, after reciting that the former were the owners of said letters patent and the latter was desirous of making and selling “ circular tile mentioned in and covered by each of said patents and has requested from said party of the first part (respondents) a license so to do,” amongst other things granted to the appellant a license “to make and sell circular tile mentioned in and covered by each of said patents during the term thereof (hereof),” and obligated respondents to furnish assistance in making designs of “circular tile” and to inform appellant “as to the methods used by said firm (respondents) of putting and arranging circular tile on paper.” And it obligated the appellant on its part, amongst other things, to pay as royalty a certain per cent of the price at which it might “ sell or consign for sale any such circular tile referred to and covered by said patents and each of them, whether mounted on paper, in bulk or otherwise; ” also to sell and invoice all such “circular tile” under the name of the “ Alexander Patent ” and stamp “ each such circular tile ” with the word “patent” or “patented.”

For some time after the execution of this agreement appellant without objection paid satisfactory royalties on the product which it manufactured and sold under the assumed license of this agreement. But after a time it took the position that the simple earthenware disks used in manufacturing or producing the tiling referred to in the letters patent as already quoted when sold by themselves rather than as part of the entire design or product covered by said letters did not come within the purview of the agreement and, therefore, did not call for the payment of any royalties which it thereupon refused to pay, and the underlying issue between the parties on this appeal springs from this contention. The respondent claims that such circular disks' do come within the terms of the agreement and the courts below sustained this view.

*281 In. seeking a determination of the controversy I shall consider, first, the meaning of the contract between the parties; second, the acts of the appellant in manufacturing and selling certain articles as bringing it or not within the requirements of the agreement to pay royalties, and, lastly, what questions the appellant is able to present to us in view of the manner in which its trial counsel allowed the case to be disposed of at the Trial Term.

While it is stated by counsel that the agreement between the parties was “no business man’s agreement,” but was prepared with great care, it constantly falls into a confusion of terms which has provoked some uncertainty and much discussion as to its meaning. As the quotations already made show, it grants a license by the respondents to the appellant to make and sell “ circular tile mentioned in and covered by each ” of the patents referred to. It then imposes upon the appellant the obligation to pay a royalty upon the sale of “any such circular tile referred to and covered by such patents and each of them, whether mounted on paper, in bulk or otherwise.”

The letters patent and specifications show that the design patented and owned by respondents did not at all consist of a “circular tiling,” but that the tiling thus patented was composed in part of circular “disks.” Therefore, when the granting clause of the agreement gave to appellant the right to make and sell “circular tile mentioned in and covered by” said letters patent, the phrase as a whole perhaps might be construed as defining the completed tiling composed of all the different elements covered by the patent. But the clause by which the appellant agrees to pay royalties on “circular tile, whether mounted on paper, in bulk or otherwise, ” can only be construed as meaning and contemplating that the appellant should pay royalties on the manufacture and sale of circular “disks” whether they are mounted on paper for use, as outlined in the specifica *282 tions, or were sold in bulk, that is, as disconnected, detached pieces. This clause would not with any aptness describe completed tiling.

Therefore I agree with the contention of the respondents that appellant in terms has agreed to pay royalties on the manufacture and sale of disks. But this provision and obligation is to be construed with reference to the other provisions of the contract and the situation of the parties. Respondents had patents on tiling, a composite production, and there was no patent on disks as an isolated article. They were only covered by the patents when used as an element in producing the completed design which was patented. The respondents were trying to give and the appellant to obtain a license to make something which the former controlled by their patents, and, therefore, when the appellant agreed to pay royalties on disks I think there must be implied that this agreement applied only in case the disks were made and sold for the purpose of being used in producing the patented article and that it would not compel the payment of royalties on the sale of mere disks if made for some purpose entirely apart from and disconnected with respondents’ patents.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 N.E. 809, 207 N.Y. 276, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-american-encaustic-tiling-co-ny-1913.