American Tube Works v. Bridgewater Iron Co.

124 F. 782, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5033
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 9, 1903
DocketNo. 14
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 124 F. 782 (American Tube Works v. Bridgewater Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Tube Works v. Bridgewater Iron Co., 124 F. 782, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5033 (circtdma 1903).

Opinion

COLT, Circuit Judge.

This supplemental bill, brought by the defendant, raises the question whether the complainant was a party .to, [783]*783or had knowledge of, the contract of June 16, 1873, entered into between the defendant and Adams, the patentee. It is clear that the original bill must be dismissed if the complainant acted in concert with Adams in making this contract, or if it had actual knowledge of the contract, and did not repudiate it.

At the time the contract was made, the complainant had a secret agreement with Adams for the assignment of the extended term of his patent, for which it had paid him a valuable consideration. By the terms of that agreement Adams was to make every effort to secure the extension “under the direction” of the complainant, and was to forfeit the sum of $5,000 if he failed to make and prosecute the application for an extension “as directed by” the complainant.

When Adams, in accordance with his agreement, made application to the Patent Office, the defendant filed objections to the extension, and employed counsel to defeat it. In this condition of affairs Adams began negotiations with the defendant, which resulted in the license and royalty contract of June 16, 1873, and the consequent withdrawal of all opposition to the grant of the extension. Under such circumstances it is immaterial whether the complainant was an actual party to this contract; or whether, having knowledge of what Adams had done, it failed to disavow his action. Adams was bound to conduct all proceedings for the extension under the direction of the complainant ; and, if he made this contract without the complainant’s direction or consent, the complainant should have notified the defendant as soon as it was informed of the fact. Failure to disclaim, in view of the existing relationship between the complainant and Adams, was a ratification of the contract. The complainant manifestly has no standing in a court of equity upon a bill for infringement if it concealed its knowledge of this contract from the defendant, and quietly waited until the extended term of the Adams patent was about to expire before bringing suit.

The original bill was filed July 10, 1880. The extended term of the Adams patent expired August 2, 1880. The bill charged the defendant with infringement of the Adams patent, and prayed for an injunction and account. The defendant, among other defenses, set up the contract of June 16, 1873. . Proofs were taken, and, after full hearing, the court, on February 3, 1886, directed a decree for complainant. The case was then referred to John G. Stetson, a master of long experience, high standing, and acknowledged capacity. The accounting before the master was not concluded until April 9,' 1898. During these proceedings, which extended over a period of 12 years, the relations, in general and in detail, between the complainant and the defendant, and between both these parties and Adams, were fully brought out, and thoroughly examined and sifted. As a result of these long and exhaustive hearings, the master, among other things, found that the complainant was a party to the agreement of June 16, 1873. In support of this finding, the master reported, as follows:

“The circumstances under which Adams made the contract of June 16. 1873, with the Bridgewater Iron Manufacturing Company, the wording and terms of the contract, the events closely following its execution, and the omission of the complainant to bring this injunction suit till within less than [784]*784a month of the expiration of the extended term of the Adams patent, or, so far as the evidence before me shows, to make any remonstrance against, or to take any action to prevent, the defendant company’s unauthorized manufacture of the cast copper cylinders of the Adams patent, support my finding that in making the contract of June 16, 1873, with the Bridgewater Iron Manufacturing Company, Adams, though appearing in the contract as principal, was the agent of and acted under the direction of the American Tube Works, so far as said contract relates to the extended term of the Adams patents.
“Adams’ agreement with the American Tube Works bound him to make application for an extension of his patent, and to use all means and make all efforts in his power to obtain the same under the direction of said American Tube Works, to which company he had agreed to assign his patent for the extended term, upon obtaining the same; having received from said company full payment therefor. Pursuant to this agreement, Adams had made on May 2, 1873, the application for the extension, and the Bridgewater Iron Manufacturing Company had appeared in the Patent Office in opposition thereto, and had filed on June 4, 1873, a statement of its reasons for opposing the application. Adams had no personal interest in arranging for a withdrawal of this opposition, except that he had contracted to prosecute his application by all means and with all efforts in his power, as directed by the American Tube Works. Tinder these circumstances the contract between Adams and the Bridgewater Iron Manufacturing Company was made June 16, 1873; and the opposition of that company to the extension of the Adams patent thereupon ceased, to the advantage of the American Tube Works. Notice of the taking of testimony in Boston to be used in the Patent Office was acknowledged by the Bridgewater Iron Manufacturing Company, by Nahum Stetson, treasurer, who signed the contract of June 16, 1873. The notice was dated Boston, June 25, 1873, the same day the taking of testimony commenced. So far as the evidence before me shows, Dickerson & Beeman, of New York, who appeared for the Bridgewater Iron Manufacturing Company in the Patent Office, were not notified of the taking of the testimony. The magistrate who took the testimony certified that no one was present in behalf of the Bridge-water Iron Manufacturing Company. Adams, the patentee, was present, and was examined as a witness. The testimony was taken under the direction of'the American Tube Works, and at its expense.
“The Bridgewater Iron Manufacturing Company made no formal withdrawal in the Patent Office of its opposition to the extension of the Adams patent after the execution of the contract of June 16, 1873, between it and Adams. It made no further opposition to the extension. It accepted service of notice, but did not appear at the taking of testimony. It took no testimony, and did nothing further in the Patent Office to oppose the extension.
“The facts stated in the two preceding paragraphs indicate clearly that a concert of action between Adams, the American Tube Works, and the Bridge-water Iron Manufacturing Company to procure the extension of the Adams patent was effected by the agreement as to license and royalty contained in the contract of June 16, 1873, and that this agreement was known by the American Tube Works as well as by the parties appearing as principals in the contract.
“The omission of the complainant to bring an injunction suit or to make any remonstrance against or to take any action to prevent the defendant company’s unauthorized manufacture of the cast copper cylinders of the Adams patent is consistent with knowledge on the part of the complainant that the defendant company was entitled to a license from them under the extended term of the Adams patent upon the conditions stated in the contract of June 16, 1873, and is inconsistent with lack of such knowledge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 F. 782, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5033, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-tube-works-v-bridgewater-iron-co-circtdma-1903.