Brown v. Ocean Drilling & Exploration Co.

374 A.2d 842, 1977 Del. Ch. LEXIS 139
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 9, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 374 A.2d 842 (Brown v. Ocean Drilling & Exploration Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Ocean Drilling & Exploration Co., 374 A.2d 842, 1977 Del. Ch. LEXIS 139 (Del. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

MARVEL, Chancellor:

Plaintiff seeks the granting of relief claimed to be due him under the terms of an agreement, which he allegedly entered into while employed by defendant and which is concerned with certain novel concepts allegedly designed by him for his employer, the defendant Ocean Drilling and Exploration Company, 1 in the form of an accounting for damages. The case is at present before the Court on defendant’s motion for summary judgment of dismissal of the action as well as plaintiff’s motion for partial summary judgment.

Defendant is engaged in the business of offshore drilling for petroleum and gas and over the years has designed and operated its own offshore drilling rigs. Its operations include development of mineral rights owned by others as well as drilling either for its own account or on the account of a syndicate of which either one of its subsidiaries or defendant itself is a party. Defendant also has interests in a number of *844 wholly and partly owned subsidiaries which engage in offshore drilling operations.

During the mid-1960’s a decision was made to expand defendant’s business operations so as to include offshore drilling in foreign waters. Drilling operations were thereafter commenced in the North Sea in which operations drilling rigs were employed of a design which had been adequate for defendant’s domestic operations. However, such rigs proved to be not up to the severe weather conditions prevalent in the North Sea, which produced cracks and leaks in defendant’s conventional drilling rigs. It was therefore determined by defendant in 1967 that a design would have to be made for an offshore oil rig which would be capable of withstanding the stresses of the North Sea.

Such project became a primary responsibility of plaintiff, who had commenced work for defendant in 1964 as an engineer and who had thereafter taken part in the design of earlier drilling rigs. In his capacity as chief engineer plaintiff thereafter designed a specialized rig known as the Ocean Prospector, 2 a semi-submersible device capable of self-propulsion.

The Ocean Prospector appears to have successfully coped with the difficulties encountered by earlier drilling rigs, its success being demonstrated in part by the fact that ten later rigs have been constructed on the basis of a design similar to that of the Ocean Prospector for use both in defendant’s fleet as well as by others. However, none of such other rigs is owned by defendant itself, three rigs being owned by a wholly-owned subsidiary of defendant known as Canam. Four additional rigs, including the Ocean Prospector, are owned in part by defendant’s subsidiaries and in part by other participants in joint ventures. Each of the remaining four rigs is owned by a corporation in which defendant has no interest. Defendant has received substantial sums of money in return for leave granted to others to use its rig design.

Patents have been issued covering the basic design of the Ocean Prospector rig as follows: by the United States of America on April 4, 1972; by Great Britain on May 2, 1973, and by France on January 17,1975. Patent applications were also filed in Norway and Japan, but, after being initially rejected, have not been pursued by defendant. Applications in Germany and the Netherlands are presently pending but await defendant’s decision as to whether or not to submit them to the proper authorities for formal processing. Next, the agreements concerning the construction of the eleven rigs in question were with one exception, all entered into prior to the issuance of the patents presently held by defendant.

The basic thrust of the litigation here involved is concerned with the terms of an agreement between defendant and plaintiff having to do with the latter’s compensation for the design of the Ocean Prospector. Such agreement, which defendant claims is uniformly used in all contractual arrangements with its engineering and technical employees, is entitled “Agreement In Respect of Inventions and Patent Rights” and was entered into by the parties on September 27, 1967. Under the terms of such agreement plaintiff agreed (1) to assign to defendant all inventions which he might conceive or develop during his employment by defendant; (2) to disclose all inventions conceived by him to defendant and to no one else, and (3) to agree that all records and documents pertaining to such inventions were to be the sole property of defendant. In exchange, defendant agreed, in a document, which was basicallly drafted by attorneys for ODECO, that plaintiff was to receive “ * * * ten percent (10%) of the gross proceeds of licensing fees received by ODECO in connection with the licensing of others under the Letters patent of any country issued upon an invention * * * ” conceived by Brown. It was further agreed, however, that defendant would not be required to file patent applications on *845 any invention which might be developed during plaintiff’s employment.

Plaintiff left defendant’s employment on September 27, 1971, allegedly unaware of the arrangements made by the latter with others regarding the use of the Ocean Prospector design but later learned of the existence of such arrangements from other sources, including articles in trade journals. When questioned by plaintiff about the subject, defendant ultimately agreed to meet and discuss the question of whether or not plaintiff was entitled to an accounting with regard to the transactions of which he now complains and several meetings were thereafter held. However, the parties were unable to reach an accord, and this action was filed by plaintiff in June of 1974, charging defendant with breach of the agreement of September 27, 1967.

The basic contention made by plaintiff at this stage is that the revenues derived from the agreements to construct drilling rigs on the basis of the Ocean Prospector design .were, in essence fees paid to defendant in connection with the licensing of others on the basis of letters patent issued upon plaintiff’s invention which should be accounted for and that ODECO be made to remit to plaintiff 10% thereof as provided by the parties’ agreement. The complaint also alleges that defendant has been unjustly enriched by reason of its failure properly to compensate plaintiff for his fair share of the profits gained by defendant from plaintiff’s invention.

ODECO argues a number of points in support of its motion for summary judgment which is based in part upon the contention that with one exception the agreements in question were executed prior to the time when a patent was actually granted on the idea. Defendant also contends that the agreements in issue merely licensed the use of design drawings and did not make reference to a patent held by defendant. Next, it is argued that the term “under” in the phrase “under a patent”, which was used in the inventions agreement, is not applicable to something which does not exist. In addition, defendant stresses the fact that the moneys which are the subject matter of this dispute were received or became contractually payable before a patent issued on the oil rig design in issue and were in no way contingent on or conditioned upon the issuance of any patent. Defendant concludes, therefore, that not having licensed a patent right it has no present obligation to pay plaintiff anything.

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Related

Brown v. Ocean Drilling & Exploration Company
403 A.2d 1114 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
374 A.2d 842, 1977 Del. Ch. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-ocean-drilling-exploration-co-delch-1977.