Ambler v. Chouteau

1 F. Cas. 589

This text of 1 F. Cas. 589 (Ambler v. Chouteau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ambler v. Chouteau, 1 F. Cas. 589 (circtedmo 1876).

Opinions

DILLON, Circuit Judge,

delivered an oral -opinion, as follows, (TREAT, District Judge, concurring:)

In this case there is a demurrer to the bill of complaint. The case is a very important ,one, if it is ever brought to a hearing on all the charges made in the bill. There is a demurrer on various grounds. One is, that the individual corporators, or certain individual corporators, have been joined as defendants, with the corporation, the “Missouri Liquid Fuel & Illuminating Co.” Another is that it appears from the bill, that there was an agreement between the plaintiff, Ambler, and one Whipple, giving the latter the entire control of the patent, the complete, jus disponendi, and that what is charged as a fraud here, is simply acts that Whipple, by virtue of this contract, had authority to do, namely, to control and sell the patent in which the plaintiff claims an interest. Another ground is that, although the bill is based upon fraud, and is profuse in general charges of fraud, nevertheless the facts stated do not show fraud in the defendants. Another ground is that Whipple & Dickerson are necessary parties to the relief sought in this bill, and are not made parties, either complainant or respondents.

In 1869 the government of the United States, on the 13th of July, granted a patent, known as 92,687, jointly to the complainant, Ambler, and to one Whipple. It seems that Ambler, the Complainant here, is the inventor, or claims to be the inventor, of the process mentioned in the patent, which is claimed to be very valuable, and that Whipple was to be the business manager of the concern. They formed a partnership, and their contract provides that Ambler shall go on and perfect his invention; shall get a patent; that all the improvements shall inure to their joint benefit; that Ambler shall keep his hands off when they get a patent, in the way of disposing of it to make it valuable; and, finally, that he shall confine himself to the work of invention, and that Whipple shall do the work of selling, to make it realize money .gains. Accordingly that arrangement was made. That is the substance of the contract Whipple had authority to sell and dispose of it, and was to account to Ambler for one-half the gains. According to the judgment of the supreme court of the United States, which has had before them a controversy between Ambler and Whipple, this man Whipple, believing this to be a very valuable patent, immediately conceived the idea of swindling Ambler out of it; and it does not stand alone in the history of inventions, that the man whose cunning, whose days and nights, are given to the perfecting of the patent, is often swindled out of the proceeds of it, by those more cunning than himself in the ways of the world. According to the opinion of the supreme court of the United States, Whipple, as I have said, conceiving this to be a very valuable patent, immediately set to work by a confederacy with [590]*590one Dickerson to swindle Ambler out of It They pirated from him an improvement on this invention, went to the patent office, made due application, and caused two patents to be issued, one 95,665, the other 102,-662, although they were improvements simply, on Ambler’s original patent. They caused those patents to be issued to Whipple and Dickerson, and not to Ambler, who was ignored in this transaction. After-wards other proceedings were had — but not until after the transactions here in question took place — whereby another patent was issued to the plaintiff, as the sole and first inventor of the same improvements, which were embraced in the patent surreptitiously obtained by Whipple and Dickerson. Now, while Whipple and Dickerson hold the patents, which were procured, undoubtedly in fraud of the plaintiff’s rights here, but while the original contract between Whipple and Ambler was in force, by which these patents were to have been turned into that partnership arrangement, Whipple and Dickerson come out west, and make a sale of this patent-right to Blunt and Insley, for thirty-five or seventy thousand dollars. Blunt and Insley come here and organize a company, on a grand scale of a quarter of a million, half a million, or a million dollars; sell out this patent to a company here, which is incorporated under the laws of Missouri, and commence operations. The supreme court of the United States, in the case between Ambler and Whipple, which was brought in January, 1870, and resulted in a decree in the supreme court of the United States in November, 1874, [Ambler v. Whipple, 20 Wall. (87 U. S.) 546; 23 Wall. (90 U. S.) 278,] this litigation drawing its slow length along in the District of Columbia for four years, ov nearly five, decided, that this was a co-partnership arrangement, originally between Ambler and Whipple; that all improvements made, and all subsequent patents issued, fell into this partnership arrangement; that the patents issued to Whipple and Dickerson were issued in fraud of the rights of the plaintiff; and that to one-half of all the gains under those patents Ambler was entitled.

That was not a bill, as the supreme court remarked, to dissolve the partnership between Ambler and Whipple, but a bill to account; and the supreme court held that there should be an accounting, between Ambler and Whipple, as to all gains which had been made under all these patents, one-half of which belonged to the Whipple side; it did not make any difference to the plaintiff whether to Whipple alone or to him and Dickerson. The supreme court, in deciding that, although they did not say anything about it, must have held, that a bill between partners for an account, would lie pending a partnership, for they say the partnership is not dissolved; they, therefore, must have held, if their attention was called to it, that a bill would lie pending the existence of a partnership, by one partner against another, for an accounting, and to restrain improper conduct, notwithstanding there was no dissolution, and no prayer for dissolution; in regard to which there has been a great deal of controversy. Lord Eldon, according to my recollection, has stated, several times, that such a bill would not lie, but the American courts have sometimes held otherwise, and perhaps with very good reason. Ordinarily if partners can not agree and there is a loss of confidence between them, the partnership had better be dissolved; but we can imagine a case where it would be, perhaps, to the interest of the parties to have an accounting, notwithstanding they do not want a dissolution. But no matter about that; the-supreme court decided that there should be an accounting under all these patents and that Mr. Ambler was entitled to one-lialf of the gains, which had been made out of all of them, ordered an accounting accordingly, and remanded the case to the lower-court. Such proceedings have been had; there-has been an accounting between them, and Whipple has been found indebted to Ambler in some six or seven hundred thousand dollars, so stated.

Now, in this state of the case, Ambler comes into this court, exhibits his bill in his own name, not joining Whipple, not alleging that this partnership between him. and Whipple is dissolved, but rather alleging that it is not dissolved; not alleging any fact showing that he has succeeded to the general rights of the firm composed of himself and Whipple; not alleging any dissolution; not alleging any succession to the rights of the two; not making Mr. Whipple-a party either complainant or defendant, and exhibits this bill against the Missouri Liquid Fuel and Illuminating Co., which was organized here, and against certain of its-stockholders or directors, and wants relief.

The bill is defective for two reasons. It is multifarious, but that is easily amended.

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Related

Ambler v. Choteau
107 U.S. 586 (Supreme Court, 1883)

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Bluebook (online)
1 F. Cas. 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ambler-v-chouteau-circtedmo-1876.