Baldwin v. Von Micheroux

5 Misc. 386, 25 N.Y.S. 857
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 5 Misc. 386 (Baldwin v. Von Micheroux) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. Von Micheroux, 5 Misc. 386, 25 N.Y.S. 857 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

Patterson, J.

The changed relations'of the parties to this action to its subject-matter and to each other, caused by the dissolution, after suit brought, of the partnership of Baldwin Bros. & Co., malee it impossible to decree that full measure of relief to which the evidence shows the plaintiffs were entitled at the time of the commencement of the action. The contest between the parties relates to the ownership and right to use a certain secret but unpatented process for manufacturing tobacco flavors and substances for flavoring tobacco, and to certain trade marks and brands used in the business of the firm of Baldwin Bros. & Co. at the time this suit was brought and up to January 1,1893. The members of the firm were the plaintiffs and the [387]*387defendant George B. Seymour. The defendant Yon Micheroux, prior to September, 1892, had been a salesman in the employ of the firm, and the defendant Boulger was also employed by it as an expert compounder of the substances made by the firm for flavoring liquors and tobaccos. While Boulger was thus employed he was directed to, and did, concoct or invent certain compounds for flavoring tobaccos, and the firm gave to each substance or compound a certain name and arbitrary designation. This was all done with the full intent of all parties that the firm of Baldwin Bros. & Co. should be the owner of the secret processes by which the substances were prepared, and Boulger invented them, not only while in the employ of the firm and with materials furnished by it, but knew perfectly well that the invention (if it may be so called) was ardently desired by the members of the firm in order that the trade in tobacco flavors might be added to its business, and that the only value of it to the firm would be in the absolute proprietorship of the formula by which each flavoring substance was prepared, and of its being kept a trade secret. The ownership was the firm’s and not Boulger’s. It was not necessary for him to assign his inventions to vest the title in Baldwin Bros. & Co. While that firm could not have acquired ownership thereof unless Boulger was employed to make the inventions, I find as matter of fact that he was in effect so employed. The case differs substantially from Burr v. De La Vergne, 102 N. Y. 415, and Hapgood v. Hewitt, 119 U. S. 220. In the Burr case it was held that the inventions of a copartner made for and used in the business of his firm, and as a result of the employment of copartnership means, did not, simply because of the copartnership relations, become the property of the firm, and in the Hapgood case it was held only that under the particular contract in that case, an employee was not required to make inventions for his employer, and that the utmost that could be inferred from the allegations of the bill (the question came up on demurrer) was that a license to use the inventions had been given the employer. But in the case at bar the testimony shows that Boulger undertook to [388]*388make these inventions of substances for flavoring tobacco for the firm by which he was employed. For years he never claimed or suggested anything to the contrary, and the only legitimate inference to be drawn from the proofs on this part of the case is, and, therefore, I find the fact so to be, that the firm of Baldwin Bros. & Co. were the proprietors and owners of the secret process or processes referred to, prior to January 1, 1893.

It appears in evidence that in the summer or early autumn of 1892, Boulger and Von Micheroux left the employment of Baldwin Bros. & Co., and established a firm of A. Von' Micheroux & Co., to carry on the business of manufacturing these tobacco flavors, and possibly something more. At about the same time Seymour began a series of acts, constituting as base and flagrant a violation of duty and honor as can well be imagined. While yet bound to his confidential relations with the plaintiffs, he formed a partnership with Boulger and Von Micheroux to carry on the same kind of business, viz., the manufacture of those secret preparations; used every endeavor to divert the custom and business of Baldwin Bros. & Co. from that firm to his new concern, and went to the extent of keeping his new partners informed of all that was being done in his attempt to ruin that branch of the business of Baldwin Bros. & Co.; and the testimony also shows that his fraudulent practices were inaugurated and carried on with the complicity of Boulger and Von Micheroux while they were yet in the employment of Baldwin Bros. & Co. Meanness and deceit could scarcely further go, and Von Micheroux and Boulger were directly associated with it. They knew of Seymour’s treachery to and fraud upon his unsuspecting partners, and they, with him, are hable to account and pay over, for the benefit of Baldwin Bros. & Co., all profits derived from the sales of the tobacco flavors up to January 1, 1893. If the parties still stood to ’ each other as they did before that day, further relief on this branch of the case might be granted. But the dissolution of the firm operated a severance of the ownership of the secret processes of the flavoring compounds. [389]*389After that event either of the partners had the right to manufacture by the secret process, there being no agreement or arrangement to the contrary. Hence, Seymour’s doing so since January 1, 1893, was not unlawful. Respecting the trade marks, it is well settled that after a dissolution of a firm either member may use the devices or symbols, unless he has divested himself of the right. Huwer v. Dannenhoffer, 82 N. Y. 499; Hazard v. Caswell, 93 id. 259. In this case it is claimed that Seymour has so divested himself. He has elected, it is said, to have the trade marks sold and the proceeds credited to his account, as is shown by Exhibit A, but I do not see how he is estopped by such an alleged election from using the trade marks or names applied to the compounds, viz.: “ LataMa ” and Rose ” and Imperial.” These names are used as trade designations for the preparations made by the secret processes. They are not salable in gross. They would not only be useless to a purchaser, but caimot constitute property in themselves or separated from the manufactured articles with which they are connected. In. the case cited by the counsel for plaintiffs, in which it has been held that trade marks are the proper subject of sale, it either distinctly appeared or is implied that the trade mark was sold in connection with the business in which it was used. To quote from Judge Earl in Huwer v. Dannenhoffer, 82 N. Y. 499: “A trade mark is a species of property which may be sold or transmitted by death with the business in which it has been used. Leather Cloth Co. v. Am. Leath. Cloth Co., 4 De G., J. & S. 137; Glen & Hall Manuf. Co. v. Hall, 61 N. Y. 226.”- Now, to sell the secret process by which the flavoring extracts are made would be to destroy the business at once, and to permit the trade marks to be used in connection with any other substance would be to perpetrate a fraud on the public. They are only valuable to the owners as affixed to goods manufactured by these processes, and an exclusive right to them exists for that reason alone. Therefore, they cannot be sold as mere names or devices or symbols, and the defendant Seymour may now use them, and may do so in connection with the business of. the [390]*390firm of which he is at present a member. The plaintiffs, although they had a right to the temporary injunction at the.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Misc. 386, 25 N.Y.S. 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-von-micheroux-nysupct-1893.