Brownsville Glass Co. v. Appert Glass Co.

136 F. 240, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 5150
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 21, 1905
DocketNo. 1
StatusPublished

This text of 136 F. 240 (Brownsville Glass Co. v. Appert Glass Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brownsville Glass Co. v. Appert Glass Co., 136 F. 240, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 5150 (circtwdpa 1905).

Opinion

BUFFINGTON, District Judge.

This is a bill in equity, filed by the Brownsville Glass Company against the Appert Glass Company for an accounting under a contract. The Mississippi Wire Glass Company and the Mississippi Glass Company are also made parties respondent, but the controversy is wholly between the two companies first named. Prior to September 30, 1899, these two companies were competing in the manufacture and sale of wire glass. This article was made by imbedding a wire netting between two sheets of plate glass by patented processes. On that day the Brownsville Company by written contract executed by itself and all its stockholders, gave an exclusive license under [241]*241its patents, gave an option on all its stock, sold its plant and good will to the Appert Company, and stipulated, as did also all of its stockholders, that it and they would not engage in the manufacture of wire glass for five years. In consideration the Appert Company paid a present consideration of $12,500, and bound itself to pay a semiannual percentage royalty on the gross value of all the Appert Company’s sales of skylight, figured-rolled, and wire glass, in the manufacture of all of which it was then engaged. In pursuance of this contract the Brownsville Company went out of business, its plant was dismantled, and its stockholders and other skilled workmen went iñto the employ of the Appert Company. The Appert Company continued its operations, and in pursuance of the contract paid royalty to the Brownsville Company as follows: For the first half year, ending April 9, 1900, $3,295.10; for the second half year, ending October 9, 1900, $4,027.56; for the third half year, ending April 9, 1901, $9,335.37. In addition to the Appert Company, three others, the Besto Glass Company, of Latrobe, Pa., the Mississippi Glass Company, of St. Louis, and the American Wire Glass Manufacturing Company, of Philadelphia, were in the spring of 1900 engaged in the manufacture of wire glass under patents. At that time, the Appert Company having given notice to the Besto Company it was infringing its patent, Mr. Dilworth, the president of the latter company, conceived the idea of getting the manufacturers together. The plan by which they did so was, as the latter says, an evolution. No written agreement was made between the parties, but their discussion finally culminated in the creation of a common holding company, which took assignments or control of all the patents of the consenting companies, to whom it issued stock in payment. The agreement, its purpose and effect, are stated by witnesses. Thus Mr. Dilworth says:

“The general plan of a deal of this kind is evolution. * * * It would be impossible for me now to go back and pick out step by step as it went along. * * « I was first brought in contact with Mr. Dulles by being notified that we had infringed a patent of the Appert Company. , * * * The organization of such a company as the Mississippi Glass Company [the holding one] was first suggested some time in the late fall of 1900. * * * There were a great many meetings. There was a general plan upon which the negotiations were then agreed, the ownership of the patents absolutely by the new company for a stock consideration, and the stock to be issued to the parties owning the patents who sold them. * * * The final result of this series of negotiations was the formation of the Mississippi Wire Glass Company.”

He was asked as to the reasons leading to such action and the purpose in view.

“We found that the business could be conducted' to better advantage and more economically with one company than with several companies. * * * We had no fixed purpose except for the companies to own those patents, and the future of the business was an unsettled problem. It was the purpose to have the wire glass trade in the hands of the proposed wire glass company so far as we could by the ownership of these patents.”

The purpose of the agreement he thus sums up:

“The purpose of the proposed deal was to form a company to purchase the patents of the wire glass companies; for the purpose of making money that way, by the sale of wire glass.”

[242]*242The effect he thus states:

“From the time when the Mississippi Wire Glass Company took over the patents owned or held by the Appert Glass Company, the Mississippi Glass Company, the Besto Glass Company, and the American Wire Glass Manufacturing Company, until within the last three months [testimony taken February 9, 1903], there has not been any other manufacturer of wire glass in the United States, to my knowledge, that I heard of, except in an experimental way by the Encaustic. Tile Company. I don’t know of any they have put on-.the market. Since the organization of the Mississippi Wire Glass Company there has been no wire glass sold to the trade in the United States by any other person or corporation than the Mississippi Wire Glass Company, except by the Brownsville Company, of Morgantown, who began their operations two or three months ago.”

When asked as to the purpose of the formation of the Mississippi .Wire Glass Company, Mr. Abbott said:

“It was organized with a view to consolidating the wire glass business, and possibly doing away with conflict in the matter of patents — rights under patents — and of effecting economies in the manufacture of that particular product.”

As to its effect he states:

“I do not know of any other person or corporation in the United States that has made any wire glass for the trade, or sold any to the trade, aside from the Mississippi Glass Company and the Mississippi Wire Glass Company, between the time of the organization of the Mississippi Wire Glass Company and say the 1st of December last [1902].”

The scope of the arrangement between the parties was clearly well understood before their final meeting. Thus Mr. Baldwin, who was counsel in the negotiations for the Mississippi Wire Glass Company, the Appert Glass Company, and the Mississippi Glass Company, says:

“Contracts between the Mississippi Wire Glass Company and the Mississippi Glass Company were drawn some days prior to the meeting, and they were not changed. The contracts between the Appert Glass Company and the Mississippi Wire Glass Company were drawn by me some days prior, and were not changed. The same is true of the Besto Glass Company contract with the Mississippi Wire Glass Company. The contract between the Philadelphia parties and the Mississippi Wire Glass Company was changed. The contract with the clients of Mr. Ballard [thé American Wire Glass Manufacturing Company] was changed so that the Mississippi Wire Glass Company received only a license for certain letters patent, and not an assignment; and also that the Mississippi Wire Glass Company paid a fixed royalty for the use of the patents.”

Mr. Abbott, who attended the final meeting in Mr. Dilworth’s place, says:

“So far as I am concerned, I had nothing whatever to do with the original negotiations. All I knew that Mr. Dilworth had decided that it would be to the advantage of the Besto Glass Company, in view of the competition that was offering, and possible complications as to patents under which we were operating, to accept the offer that had been made by the Mississippi Wire Glass Company to purchase our wire glass patents or the patents owned by the Besto Glass Company.”

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Bluebook (online)
136 F. 240, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 5150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brownsville-glass-co-v-appert-glass-co-circtwdpa-1905.