Arnold v. Norfolk & New Brunswick Hosiery Co.

42 N.E. 980, 148 N.Y. 392, 2 E.H. Smith 392, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 566
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 18, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 42 N.E. 980 (Arnold v. Norfolk & New Brunswick Hosiery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnold v. Norfolk & New Brunswick Hosiery Co., 42 N.E. 980, 148 N.Y. 392, 2 E.H. Smith 392, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 566 (N.Y. 1896).

Opinion

Haight, J.

On the 10th day of April, 1882, the plaintiff, as party of the first part, entered into an agreement with the defendant as party of the second part, in and by the terms of which the plaintiff, as the owner of letters patent of the United States for an improvement in modes of uniting edges of knit goods number 104,532 and a device for securing knit fabrics while being cut and sewed, number 241,116, and a device for trimming fabrics, number 249,743, granted to the party of the second part the exclusive right for the United *396 States of America under each of the above-named letters patent and under any other patent which has been', or may hereafter during the continuance of this agreement be granted to the party of the first part, or to Satterlee Arnold, her husband, for any improvement or invention whatsoever appertaining to or useful in making what is known as “ The Anchor Stitch Seam,” or appertaining to “The Anchor Sewing Machine Trimming and Holding Device,” in the manufacture of all kinds of knit shirts or drawers known as men’s, women’s and children’s underwear. The agreement provides for a royalty to be paid to the party of the first part which the second party covenants and guarantees shall amount to an average sum of one ■ thousand dollars per month from and after the first day of January, 1883 ; the party of the second part covenanting that so long as this agreement shall remain in force it will not contest the validity of any of the patents enumerated, or of the right of the plaintiff to such patents; and the party of the first part covenants and undertakes to warrant and defend the party of the second part against infringements-by any person or persons whatsoever of any of the afore-mentioned patents or of any of the patents herein referred to and to furnish to the second party at a reasonable price such machines and appurtenances for the doing of the work as the party of the second part shall desire.

Three different actions were brought to recover royalties under this agreement, which were consolidated into one and tried upon a stipulation before the court without a jury. No question is raised with reference to the amount due and owing to the plaintiff under the contract. The defense is that the contract should be annulled upon the ground that its execution was induced,by misstatements and misrepresentations made by the plaintiff’s husband as her agent. First, with reference to the capacity, of the machines furnished by the plaintiff to do the work for which they were designed, with sufficient rapidity to make their use commercially profitable; and, second, in making misstatements in reference to the state of the art and concealing from the defendant limitations on *397 the inventions covered hy the contract, and the risks that it ran of infringing on other patents.

The defendant was a corporation, and for upwards of thirty years had been engaged in the manufacture and sale of woven or knit woolen underwear, having factories at New Brunswick, New Jersey, and Norfolk, Connecticut. Satterlee Arnold was an inventor and an expert in seams, sewing machines and patents, and had transferred to the plaintiff, his wife, all of his inventions and patents. At the time of making the contract in question the defendant company was-producing two classes of goods, one known as “ full fashion,” in which each piece going to make up the garment was separately knit or shaped, with a selvage edge, which, when united by stitches, produced a seam which was weltless, having its two abutting edges lying in- the same plane, neither overlapping the other, which, owing to the shape of the pieces, required the constant attention of an operator. The other class of goods produced were known as the circular or cut goods, in which the material was first woven or knit in tubular or circular form and then cut into shaped pieces required by the garment and finally united by sewing. The edges of the cut pieces were superimposed and united by overseaming through and over both edges. This resulted in leaving a considerable material beyond the seam, producing a welt which reduced the goods to a cheaper and lower grade-than the full fashioned goods. This appears to have been the history of the art up to about 1880, at which time Arnold invented a seam which he called the anchor stitch seam, which was produced by bringing the cut edges of the goods into' abutting contact while lying in the same plane, and then stitching back and forth over and under the line of abutting juncture with an anchor stitch, reaching farther into the body of the material, so as to confine the raw edges together and prevent raveling, and at the same time produced a weltless seam. At about this time he also invented a sewing machine designed to make the anchor stitch, so called, and subsequently he made applications to the patent office to have his inven *398 tians patented. The first application is known as the two-stitch patent, and the other the three-stitch machine patent.

In the fall of 1880 the inventions of Arnold appear to have been called to the attention of the defendant, and from that time numerous interviews took place between Arnold and one Letson," the president of the defendant, in which, if Arnold’s testimony is to be believed, he fully disclosed, as fully as he understood it, the state of the art up to that period, with a history of his patents and an account of his inventions, upon which he was seeking patents. Arnold first constructed and delivered to the defendant two machines, which were set up in the factory and used. Subsequently he constructed and delivered to the defendant other machines which were also set up and used. After the use of these machines for a number of months, a contract was entered into on the 25th day of November, 1881, between the parties hereto for the use of the inventions of Arnold by the defendant during the life of the patents for a royalty agreed upon, in which an ojition was given to the defendant by which it might surrender up all the machines and appurtenances furnished by Arnold, and thereby be relieved from all further obligations under the agreement. The machines furnished by Arnold were operated under that agreement, some of them having been operated over a year when that contract was superseded by the contract in question. One hundred machines were ordered by the defendant, and ninety were constructed by the plaintiff and delivered.

It will be observed in the first place that there is no guaranty or representation in the contract with reference to the capacity of the machines to work with sufficient rapidity to make their use commercially profitable, or that they would even make the stitch described in the invention. The evidence with reference to the working of the machines is conflicting. But it appears that fifty thousand dozens of garments were manufactured thereon; that they were operated under the contract during the years 1882—3—4—5 and 6. In 1888—9 other machines were constructed by the plaintiff making a lock *399 stitch, and ten of such machines were delivered to the defendant, who continued to operate them until 1891, about the time of the commencement of this action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 N.E. 980, 148 N.Y. 392, 2 E.H. Smith 392, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-norfolk-new-brunswick-hosiery-co-ny-1896.