American Ball Bearing Co. v. Adams

222 F. 967, 13 Ohio Law Rep. 137, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1568
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 12, 1915
DocketNo. 190
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 222 F. 967 (American Ball Bearing Co. v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Ball Bearing Co. v. Adams, 222 F. 967, 13 Ohio Law Rep. 137, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1568 (N.D. Ohio 1915).

Opinion

CEARKE, District Judge.

This- is a suit in equity, in which infringement of letters patent of the United States No. 792,690 is claimed, with the usual prayer for an injunction and an accounting. The [969]*969bill was filed on June 25, 1913. On motion of the Kardo Company, claiming to be a corporation of the state of Ohio, an order was entered on October 19, 1914, granting said the “Kardo Company” leave to file a bill in the nature of a supplemental bill, and that it be substituted for the American Ball Bearing Company as plaintiff in the suit.

Such a bill was filed on October 20, 1914, and in this bill the Kardo Company alleged that after the filing of the original bill and the answer, and while the case was pending in this court, to wit, on or about the 28th day of February, 1914, the Kardo Company acquired the entire right, title, and interest in the letters patent in suit from the American Ball Bearing Company. The case came on for final hearing on February 1, 1915, and in the progress of the trial vague suggestions by counsel for the defendant that there was some legal infirmity in the plaintiff, the Kardo Company, and by the counsel for the plaintiff that all was not right with the active defendant in the case, the National Automobile Chamber of Commerce, led the court, of its own motion, to inquire as to the occasion and meaning of such innuen-does. At the suggestion of counsel for the plaintiff, one of them took the witness stand, and stated that he did not think any of the directors of the company were bona fide owners of any shares of the capital stock of the company, but that the real bona fide owners of all of it were the three corporations, the American Ball Bearing Company, the Peerless Motor Car Company, and the Packard Motor Car Company.

After the hearing was concluded, and the court came to a consideration of what its decision should be, the question as to whether the Kardo Company was a lawfully organized corporation, such that it could be a proper party plaintiff in the case, pressed so insistently upon the attention of the court that it was decided to take further testimony upon this point, and accordingly after due notice to all counsel concerned, on March 8, 1915, all parties being represented, the court took further testimony upon this question framed by it, viz.: Is the Kardo Company so organized as a corporation as to make it a proper party plaintiff, competent to present a real and substantial controversy to this court in this cause? On this hearing full opportunity was given, and was availed of, to lay before the court precisely the character of the proposed and actual organization of the Kardo Company. The result of this additional testimony may be stated as follows:

“The three corporations, the American Ball Bearing Company, the Packard Motor Car Company, and the Peerless Motor Car Company, decided to form a corporation under the laws of Ohio, with a capital stock of $1,000,000, In which said corporations were to be equally interested, for the purpose, as stated in the articles of incorporation subsequently filed, of purchasing, leasing, or otherwise acquiring, and of registering, owning, and using inventions, improvements, trade secrets, processes, or interests therein, and applying for and receiving, purchasing, or otherwise acquiring letters patent or patent rights, or interests in or under letters patent, for or upon motors or other vehicles or means of transportation, and for or upon the mechanism, parts of equipment of the same, or the tools or machinery for the manufacture of same, or for selling, granting, or assuming licenses or rights under or In respect of such secrets, processes, inventions, improvements, or patents, and otherwise dealing in respect of or with the same, or either of them, and oí [970]*970manufacturing, using, And dealing in the vehicles, articles, machinery, equipments, and parts covered by or provided for in said inventions, patents, or improvements, and of doing all things necessary, proper, and incidental to the transaction of said business or any part thereof.”

It however appeared from the testimony of Walter C. Baker, a director of the Kardo Company, on the original hearing, that the prime purpose of organizing the Kardo Company was to transfer to it patents which each of the three companies had on automobile axle' equipment, which apparently interlaced or overlapped one another, so that, if one company gave a license under the patent which it owned, complaints of infringements and threatened suits straightway arose from- one or another of the other companies, and the purpose of the organization was to so place the ownership of these patents in one company, to be organized by the three corporations, that one license could be given on “rear axle patents owned by them.”

The evidence further shows that the following steps were taken for the purpose of organizing the Kardo Company as a corporation under the laws of Ohio:

Articles of incorporation were signed on the 21st day of February, 1914, by five men, all in the employ of the law firm in charge of the organization, and none of them connected otherwise than as attorneys with any of the three companies named as parties to the formation of the Kardo Company. These articles of incorporation were filed with the secretary of state on the 24th day of February, 1914. On the same day each of the subscribers to the articles of incorporation subscribed for one share of the capital stock, and one of them subscribed as trustee for the American Ball Bearing Company for 995 shares of the capital • stock of the proposed company, agreeing to pay for these shares $9,500 in cash and $90,000 by the transfer of patents by the American Ball Bearing Company to the Kardo Company. It further appears from the evidence that $10,000, being 10 per cent, of the $100,000 of stock subscribed for on February 24, 1914, was on the same day paid' for by check of the American Ball Bearing-Company, and that no money whatever was paid by any one of the persons named as incorporators of the company.

Abundant formal,detail of waiver of notice of opening books of subscription to the capital stock in the manner and to the extent stated, of the filing of a certificate of subscription with the secretary of state, and of a waiver of the notice of the first stockholders’ meeting appears in the record. At the first stockholders’ meeting on this same day (February 24, 1914) the five incorporators were present and a code of regulations and by-laws was adopted, article 5 of which provides the number of directors shall be five, that the directors must be holders of stock of the company, and that a majority must be citizens ot the state of Ohio.

A first directors’ meeting was held on the same day, 30 minutes later than the stockholders’ meeting, at which meeting four of the lawyers organizing the company were elected to the offices of president, vice president, secretary, and treasurer, and an elaborate resolution was solemnly passed adopting a proposed form of agreement,between the' [971]*971Ball Bearing Company, the Packard, and the Peerless Company, providing for the sale and transfer to the Kardo Company of letters patent by each company, for which each was to receive $200,000 of the capital stock of the Kardo Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
222 F. 967, 13 Ohio Law Rep. 137, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-ball-bearing-co-v-adams-ohnd-1915.