Asheim v. Pigeon Hole Parking, Inc.

175 F. Supp. 320, 122 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 509, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2946
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Washington
DecidedJuly 30, 1959
DocketNo. 1165
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 175 F. Supp. 320 (Asheim v. Pigeon Hole Parking, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Asheim v. Pigeon Hole Parking, Inc., 175 F. Supp. 320, 122 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 509, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2946 (E.D. Wash. 1959).

Opinion

RYAN, Chief Judge of the Southern District of New York,

sitting by assignment.

This suit was filed on February 8, 1954, by plaintiff Bernard Asheim, a citizen of Oregon, against defendants Pigeon Hole Parking, Inc., a Washington corporation, and Vaughn Sanders and Leo Sanders, citizens of Washington. Lawrence L. McLean, also a citizen of Washington, was' added as a party defendant on July 14, 1954.

Vaughn Sanders is the President, Leo Sanders, the Vice President, and Lawrence L. McLean, the Managing Director and Assistant Secretary of defendant Pigeon Hole Parking, Inc. All three are directors and stockholders of the corporation.

The suit arises out of the relations and dealings of Asheim with Pigeon Hole Parking during which he functioned part of the time under a franchise or agency agreement with Pigeon Hole Parking in the marketing and selling of installations for the off-street mechanical parking of automobiles in a structure containing tiers of automobile storage stalls or bins. The complaint states four separate counts, labeled as “separate and distinct causes of action"; all seek a money judgment.

This Court has jurisdiction by reason of diversity of citizenship, and the requisite jurisdictional amount is involved in the suit.

The first count, sounding in tort, is stated against all four defendants, and [323]*323alleges plaintiff has been damaged by their alleged wrongful acts in the sum of $2,246,400.

The second count alleges a claim in contract against the corporate defendant only, and seeks recovery in the sum of $93,600.

The third count seems to state a claim sounding in contract against the corporate defendant only, and asks for damages in the sum of $2,543,750.

The fourth count is phrased to state a claim in tort (and apparently to recover for the same and identical damage alleged to have been sustained in the “third” count) against the individual defendants. The gravamen of this fourth claim is the allegation “that the individual defendants conspired and colluded with each other and with third parties maliciously and wrongfully to prevent plaintiff from performing under the terms of his franchise agreement with the defendant corporation thereby preventing plaintiff “from performing under said contract and said contract has become valueless.”

The defendants by answer served on July 23, 1954, have in substance denied any and all of the wrongful acts alleged by plaintiff, or that there are any monies due or recoverable of them by the plaintiff. The defendants “specifically deny that any fraudulent claims were made concerning said patents as alleged in plaintiff’s first cause of action, or in any other fraudulent manner at all.”

A cross-complaint is pleaded by the corporate defendant in which, as plaintiff, it seeks to recover of Asheim $74,880 in damages for his alleged tortious and unlawful interference with its dealings and negotiations with General Realty and Utilities Corporation, a prospective customer and purchaser of the Pigeon Hole Parking equipment.

The negotiations and dealings between Asheim and the defendants which are in suit began in the month of August, 1952, during what seems to have been friendly contacts between them, and there were talks concerning the Pigeon Hole Parking apparatus and the granting of a franchise by Pigeon Hole Parking to Asheim.

The first count of the complaint evolves primarily out of the dealings plaintiff had with defendant Pigeon Hole Parking just prior to a trip by him to the East and to New York in the early fall of 1952, and his negotiations with Pigeon Hole Parking while in New York and immediately following his return to his home in Portland, after this journey.

The crux of this claim of plaintiff is stated in Item “7” of the pretrial order listed under the heading of “Plaintiff’s Contentions”. Here, plaintiff alleges he was cheated and defrauded by the joint and wrongful acts of all the defendants.

It is the claim of plaintiff “that prior to September 13, 1952, defendants made certain written and oral representations to plaintiff concerning the validity and extent” of the Pigeon Hole Parking patent protection; that they “represented that they had patent protection on a broad combination of structure, mobile elevator and lift carriage or dolly”; that these statements were material to the subject matter of the transactions then being had between the parties; and were made by the defendants with intent that plaintiff rely upon them, and that they were relied upon by the plaintiff; that the statements were false and untrue in that “the names of all of the inventors were not included on the patent application, No. 110296”, and in that “the broad patent coverage that they claimed had previously been denied to them and abandoned by them”, and in that the “claims as allowable were all restricted to the specific arrangement of parts in the lift carriage or dolly,” and in that the patents were invalid; all to plaintiff’s damage resulting from his reliance upon such representations, and his ignorance of their falsity.

Preparatory to his traveling, Asheim wanted to get some writing from Pigeon Hole Parking which would state and set forth the terms of a franchise which he might acquire of wide' territorial limits, within the continental United States, [324]*324Canada, Hawaii, and Alaska, excepting only the certain cities, areas and states which were subject to preexisting franchises. Accordingly, Pigeon Hole Parking addressed and sent a letter to Asheim under date of August 28, 1952 (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 55 in evidence). This letter, written by E. A. Cornelius in response to a letter from Asheim of August 21, 1952, set forth the terms and conditions of a “suggested agreement” which stated that “it should not be taken as binding on either party until the final contract is approved” by the Directors and possibly by a special meeting of the Pigeon Hole Parking stockholders.

Thereafter, on September 2, 1952, plaintiff Asheim wrote Vaughn Sanders, sending an agreement which he proposed to Pigeon Hole Parking, covering efforts plaintiff proposed to make to secure from New York people financial backing for a franchise for Pigeon Hole Parking; this proposal was not accepted by Pigeon Hole Parking, and it did not accept or sign the agreement Asheim submitted in his letter.

Following this, and between September 7 and 12, 1952, Asheim met with Vaughn Sanders and McLean on a number of occasions. There was then talk about the patent situation, and there was shown to Asheim a copy of a letter from Glenn Fish, the Pigeon Hole Parking patent lawyer. This letter was dated July 29, 1952 and was addressed to Pigeon Hole Parking, Inc.

The letter from Fish recited that it was written in response to the request of Pigeon Hole Parking that he (Fish), “briefly state the substance of your allowed application Serial Number 110,-296.” It stated that, “Five claims have been deemed allowable by the examiner.” It also set forth the writer’s opinion as to the extent of these claims in the following language:

“We believe that your claims as allowed fully cover a structure of tiered storage stalls positioned at one or both sides of an elevator capable of being operated both horizontally and vertically; said elevator supporting a longitudinally shiftable vehicle lift carriage movable onto and off of the elevator by mechanical means.”

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Bluebook (online)
175 F. Supp. 320, 122 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 509, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/asheim-v-pigeon-hole-parking-inc-waed-1959.