American Machinery & Construction Co. v. Haas

54 So. 38, 127 La. 811, 1910 La. LEXIS 887
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 12, 1910
DocketNo. 18,156
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 54 So. 38 (American Machinery & Construction Co. v. Haas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Machinery & Construction Co. v. Haas, 54 So. 38, 127 La. 811, 1910 La. LEXIS 887 (La. 1910).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. J.

Plaintiff sues to recover royalty or rental for use of a patent leased to defendant from 1904 to 1907.

The amount of the claim is $3,000.

The patent leased was acquired by plaintiff in 1901.

It consists of a device or machine for the delinting of cotton seed.

In the contract of lease, the lessors warranted and obligated themselves to maintain the lessees in the peaceful enjoyment and use of the delinting machine during the whole term of their lease.

The defendants obligated themselves to delint each year at least 1,000 tons of cotton seed.

The machines were delivered, and were operated to February, 1903.

From that time plaintiffs charge that defendants violated and repudiated their contract.

Plaintiffs in the first place filed suit in the parish of Rapides, charging defendants with having breached their contract by failure to pay rental due. Afterward plaintiff brought suit against defendant in the parish of St. Landry.

The whole amount claimed in the suit instituted in the parish of Rapides was $17,000, less a credit stated in the petition. Three thousand dollars of this amount were claimed for royalties to 1903, and $14,000 for the remaining four years.

We leave for the time being consideration of the suit filed in Rapides parish, and take up the present suit, filed in the parish of SL Landry.

In this last suit, after claiming the amount due, plaintiffs recite at length the facts connected with the suit in the parish of Rapi[814]*814des. Plaintiffs allege in the present suit (in St. Landry) that in the suit brought in the parish of Rapides they averred that they had complied with their obligations as lessors, but that the lessees had not. They (plaintiffs) also mention that the defendants in that suit (in Rapides) filed a defense denying all indebtedness; that they alleged that the letters patent originally issued to W. C. Baxter, which plaintiffs held, were illegal and invalid; that they had been so declared by a decree of a competent federal court; that it was an infringement of another patent issued to one Thomas; that afterwards it was transferred to the American Delinter Company. See decisions cited infra.

To return for a moment to plaintiffs’ suit in parish of St. Landry; i. e., the present suit: They charge that there was collusion between the defendants and the American Delinter Company during the trial, in that they induced the American Delinter Company to bring suit against them, Haas and Stewart, and against petitioners, in order that it might help them in their defense to the present case. They sought in that way to assist in proving that plaintiff has no title.

Plaintiffs recite at length the different grounds alleged by the owners of another patent for the asserted infringement upon their patented rights.

They also complain of an injunction taken out by the interveners, the American Delinter Company.

That they, the plaintiffs, interposed an exception to this injunction and a defense to the suit on the ground that the court was without jurisdiction ratione materke, an exception which was maintained, but it seems that defendants did not choose to file any defense, and judgment was rendered against them.

We are further informed by the pleadings that the defendants filed a supplemental answer in the suit brought in the parish of Rapides, in which they alleged that they had been evicted from the possession of the machines; that the defendants sought to make this defense notwithstanding that it had been decided as against plaintiffs that the court was without jurisdiction.

In the suit in Rapides parish, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiffs and against defendants in solido, condemning them to pay rental for two years at the rate of $1,000 per annum, subject to a credit, and further rights were recognized.

The case was appealed to the Supreme Court and affirmed except as to the petitioner’s demand for future rents. This part of the demand was dismissed as in case of non-suit. See decision cited infra.

Plaintiffs’ contention, after reciting all the facts in connection with the suit in Rapides parish, is that all the issues between the parties are now closed; that res judicata is an absolute bar to all of defendants’ defenses.

The American Delinter Company intervened in the present suit, and alleged that it owns the patent right which is infringed upon by plaintiffs, and asks that the contract between plaintiffs and Stewart and Haas be decreed void.

They prayed for judgment in the sum of $2,000 and interest paid by Stewart and Haas to plaintiffs; also $1,000 paid to plaintiffs; and $1,000 punitive damages.

The lower court dismissed the intervention on the ground that it had no jurisdiction; No appeal was taken from the judgment dismissing his intervention. We will not here refer to this intervention again as presenting an issue to be decided.

It may as well be stated here that Haas, one of the defendants, partner of the firm of Stewart & Haas, being a resident of the parish of St. Landry, was sued in that parish.

The partnership having been dissolved, the suit was properly brought at his domicile.

[816]*816The action as against Stewart was dismissed, as Stewart was a resident of another parish.

From this time on we will refer to Haas as the only defendant.

It also appears in the pleadings that defendants . alleged that there was a suit in equity in the federal court in Mississippi, brought by the American Delinter Company against plaintiffs; that a judgment was rendered, perpetually, enjoining the American Machinery & Construction Company from letting any machines for delinting cotton under the Baxter patent, and that this suit and contract on which it was based are in violation of the injunction, and a fraud on the right of the American Delinter Company.

The defendant Haas in his answer denied that he entered into a contract with plaintiffs; said that he knew nothing of the asserted contract; that it was signed by Charles Stewmrt -without authority to sign for Stewart & Haas; that it was ultra vires their partnership.

He alleges that the machines were defective and inefficient, and that he, in consequence, suffered heavy losses; that they were an infringement upon the Thomas patent, and that they, defendants, would be held liable to the American Delinter Company for using these machines; and that he, in consequence, notified plaintiffs that the contract was at an end and offered to return the machines.

He also alleged that there was a failure of crops during the year for which plaintiffs sue for royalty owing to the boll weevil.’

The decree of the Circuit Court of the United States, referred to above, was rendered in January, 1905. The sale of the Thomas patent was made to plaintiff by the American Delinter Company in July, 1907.

The plaintiffs confidently rely upon the plea of res judicata, based upon the judgment rendered by this court, to which we will refer later.

The plea is invoked in plaintiffs’ petition.

It may as well he said here that it is predicated on the fact, as they contend, that the issues between the parties were all decided.

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Related

Johnson v. Sweat
265 So. 2d 801 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1972)
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1 So. 2d 686 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 So. 38, 127 La. 811, 1910 La. LEXIS 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-machinery-construction-co-v-haas-la-1910.