American Refining Co. v. Gasoline Products Co.

294 S.W. 967
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 1927
DocketNo. 11670.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 294 S.W. 967 (American Refining Co. v. Gasoline Products Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Refining Co. v. Gasoline Products Co., 294 S.W. 967 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

The appellee, Gasoline^ Products Company, a foreign corporation, sued the appellant, American Refining Company, in the district court of Wichita county to recover the sum of about $30,000, the aggre- ' gate amount of stated payments alleged to have matured and become due during a series of months beginning about June 1, 1923, and ending about-December 10, 1923, on account of rents, or royalties accruing under a contract issued to the appellant by the appellee as the licensor of certain patented processes involved in what is designated as cracking crude oil in the production of gasoline.

The appellant filed a lengthy answer, consisting of demurrers and a general denial and a/ special defense, attempting to show that appellee and appellant were conspirators against the Sherman Anti-Trust Act of the United States (U. < S. Comp. St. § 8820 et seq.), and that the contract on which appel-lee sued was a link in' the chain of preconceived proceedings intended as aids in the accomplishment of the conspiracy, and that'~ hence the court should deny the enforcement of the contract declared upon.

The appellee urged certain special exceptions in the nature of general demurrers to the special answer above indicated, which were sustained by the court, and, the appellant having declined to amend, the case proceeded to trial upon the plaintiff’s pleadings and the general denial on the part of appellant. Appellee introduced its contract, proof of the use' of the cracking process by appellant, proof of the number of barrels run upon which royalties accrued, and proof of the termination of the license contract, as a result of which the court entered a judgment in the sum of $32,582.28, besides interest and costs. Prom this judgment the appellant company has duly prosecuted the present appeal.

There is no controversy over the facts, and the judgment below must be affirmed, unless the special answer of appellant above referred to, tested under rules applied in cases of a general demurrer, constitutes a defense to appellee’s action.

Appellant was what is termed a refiner engaged in producing and selling gasoline from crude oil, and the contract declared upon is dated April 4, 1923, and opens with recitals that the licensor, appellee, is the owner of, or has the right to grant licenses under certain enumerated letters patent of the United States relating to processes for treating hydrocarbons and the products derived therefrom and apparatus used in connection therewith, and further recites that it is empowered to grant the limited nonexclusive license therein granted under certain enumerated patents, patent applications, and inventions therein specified or thereafter to be acquired, pertaining to the cracking of oil under pressure. The patents mentioned in the contract "were designated as patents issued to “W. M. Gross and R. Cross” on several specified dates extending from October 31, 1916, to November 28, 1922, a series of patents owned by the Texas Company, issued to various individuals on several specified dates extending from October 28, 1919, to November 28, *969 1922, and patents owned by tbe Standard OR Company of New Jersey to various individuals at several specified dates extending from September 28, 1919, to October 28, 1922, and' patents owned by tbe Standard Oil Company of Indiana issued to various individuals at several specified dates extending from April 12, 1910, to October 4, 1921.

Article„first contains a grant to appellant of a nonexclusive license to construct and operate at a plant or plants owned or controlled by appellant with tbe United States (except a small area in Obio and Kentucky) an installation or installations for cracking petroleum oil by tbe process described in general terms. It is provided that the right of tbe appellant shall be limited to tbe treatment of a maximun amount of oil, including recycled oil, of 30,000 barrels of 42 gallons each per day. In article second, appellant (licensee) agrees to construct two units at its' plant at Wichita Falls, Tex., and agrees that tbe installations shall be erected only in conformity with tbe plans and specifications prepared and furnished free of charge, or approved in writing by licensor or its representative. Article third provides that tbe appellant shall pay to appellee as a throughout royalty for the rights granted a sum of 10 cents per barrel of 42 gallons each, or in the alternative .833 of one cent per gallon for every gallon of gasoline made available by the process. Articles fourth, fifth, and sixth provide for the mechanics of computing and paying royalties. Article seventh provides that, in the event infringement suits are brought against appellant, appellee will assume the defense thereof, and pay any recovery had through final judgment in suits commenced within two years from the date of the agreement. Article eighth reads as follows:

“Any and all improvements on any of the patents, applications, inventions, or processes here-inbefore referred to, designed, or otherwise obtained by the licensee, during the continuation of this agreement shall be the property of the licensor arid duly assigned by the licensee to the licensor, -and the licensee will execute and deliver to the licensor, upon its written demand, any and all papers necessary or proper to vest title to any of such improvements in the licensor. Upon the termination of this agreement, the licensee shall have the shop right to use, but not to assign, any of said improvements, except as otherwise specifically provided herein; it being expressly understood and agreed that, upon and after the termination of this agreement, the Hcensee shall .have no right to use any of the patents, patent rights, processes, inventions, and applications hereinbefore described, or any part thereof, or improvements by others than licensee, in connection with such improvements of the licensee or otherwise.”

Articles ninth, tenth, and eleventh contain the ordinary provisions' against assignment of the license without the licensor’s consent, forbidding the license to contest the validity of the patents under which it is licensed, and providing for the license remaining in force for the full term of the patents, unless sooner terminated. Article twelfth makes available to the licensee the benefit of any reduction of royalties granted by the licensor to other licensees. Article thirteenth contains’ definitions. Article fourteenth contains the usual termination clause permitting the licensee to terminate the contract by giving 60 days’ written notice. Article fifteenth gives the addresses 'of the parties. Articles sixteenth and seventeenth deal with the rights-of successors and assigns of the parties under the contract.

As before indicated, the appellant company must admit the making of this contract and the enjoyment of the rights grantedl thereunder, and that royalties in the amount for which judgment was rendered accrued in accordance with its terms.

Appellant’s special plea, attacking this contract as invalid and to which the court sustained ffie demurrers, covers some thirteen pages of the transcript, and is too lengthy for full insertion here.

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Bluebook (online)
294 S.W. 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-refining-co-v-gasoline-products-co-texapp-1927.