Clark Car Co. of New Jersey v. Clark

11 F.2d 814, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1467
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 2, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 11 F.2d 814 (Clark Car Co. of New Jersey v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark Car Co. of New Jersey v. Clark, 11 F.2d 814, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1467 (W.D. Pa. 1925).

Opinion

SCHO ONMAKER, District Judge.

This is an action in equity. The plaintiff, Clark Car Company of New Jersey, as the owner of certain patent rights and Mventions that had been leased by it to the defendant, Charles H. Clark, along with all its business and assets, is now seeking to set aside an assignment of said leasehold made by the defendant Charles H. Clark, through the agency of an attorney in fact, to the Clark Car Company of Pennsylvania, in wMeh company, through the agency of the same attorney in fact, the defendant Frank J. Lanahan secured a controlling interest. ' The plaintiff also seeks an account from the defendants, respectively, of their operations under said lease.

The defendants Clark Car Company of Pennsylvania and Frank J. Lanahan have answered, denying plaintiff’s right to the relief prayed for. The defendant Charles H. Clark has answered, admitting plaintiff’s right to relief, except as to the answering defendant, and has filed a counterclaim in the nature of a cross-hill as against the defendants Clark Car Company of Pennsylvania and Frank J. Lanahan, demanding against them practically the same relief as the plamtiff is demanding.

*816 The validity of this assignment through the agency of Clark’s attorney in fact is assailed on the following grounds: (1) The

so-called lease of the Clark Car Company of New Jersey to Clark individually was personal to Clark; and not assignable; (2) even if assignable, the grant of power contained in the letter of attorney was not sufficient to authorize this assignment; (3) Clark was non compos mentis, both at the time of the execution of the power of attorney and the execution and delivery of the assignment and transfer complained of; (4) there has been no ratification of the attempted transfer, either by the Clark Car Company of New Jersey or the defendant Clark; and (5) fraud on the part of Lanahan in securing this transfer.

The case was heard on the amended and supplemental bill of plaintiff, the answer and counterclaim of the defendant Clark, and the answers of the defendants Lanahan and the Clark Car Company, both to the amended and supplemental bill of the plaintiff and the counterclaim of the defendant Clark, and in addition thereto the proofs offered at the trial. From these we find the following facts:

The necessary jurisdictional facts appear —i. e., the plaintiff is a New Jersey corporation, the defendants are residents of Pennsylvania, and the amount in controversy is over $3,000. The defendant Charles H. Clark is an inventor, and in the year 1908 held patents covering appliances used in railway dump ears. He also had applications for other patents then pending and designs for new inventions for which no application has been filed. Under the terms of agreement dated May 25, 1908, between the defendant Clark and other persons, the plaintiff corporation was formed and became invested with the title to the Clark patents, and the right to • take over whatever others Clark might secure.

Some years thereafter, by written agreement of lease dated December 1, 1915, the plaintiff leased all its property and assets to the defendant Clark individually, which included the right to use these patents. By this agreement, Clark was to pay an annual dividend of 3 per cent, to the stockholders of the plaintiff company, and was in addition thereto to pay said stockholders 20 per cent, of his gross earnings in the manufacture of dump cars, over and above the sum of $20,-000 per annum, to be divided among them pro rata to their stock holdings in the plaintiff company. During the years 1918, 1919, and 1920 Clark paid over $100,000 to the stockholders of plaintiff under the terms of this, agreement.

In the year 1920, Clark’s health began to fail. He suffered from an intestinal impaction, from which frequently he suffered such extreme pain that he was put under the influence of opiates. He was constantly under the care of a doctor, and during the year 1921 the illness had progressed to such an extent that he was away from business much of the time, and finally, on October 11, 1921, was removed to a sanitarium at Wellsville, N. Y., for treatment. This intestinal impaction produced autointoxication, or toxemia, which affected Clark’s mind to a considerable extent before he left his home in Pittsburgh for the sanitarium. He rapidly grew worse at the sanitarium, and around the early or middle part of November lapsed into a state of coma, in which he was wholly unconscious and spoke to no one. It was thought that he could not live. Mental specialists were called to examine him, and on December 1, 1921, he was taken back to Pittsburgh, to the home of his brother. His comatose condition continued for about 10 days thereafter, when he came to and improved, though he did not entirely regain his health, and an operation was deemed advisable. On March 13, 1922, he was taken to St. Joseph’s Hospital in Pittsburgh, where he shortly underwent two major operations, requiring the removal of portions of his intestines. He was discharged frobi the hospital on May 13,1922, when his physical and mental condition began to improve, and by late June dr early July he was able to go down town for business. During the early stages of his disease, and while he was at the Wellsville Sanitarium, he suffered such pain that he was kept a large share of the time under opiates.

When Clark left Pittsburgh for the Wellsville Sanitarium, his business affairs were not in good condition. He had been too ill to attend to business properly for some time prior thereto. He owed the Cambria Steel Company, which was engaged in building dump cars for him. He owed the Westinghouse Air Brake Company, the Ft. Pitt Malleable Iron Company, of which the defendant Lanahan was president, and other firms. His creditors were clamoring for money, and it seems there was no money on hand to pay them, as the dump car market appeared at that time to be dull. On the day he went away, Clark executed and delivered to Charles H. Hummel, an office man in his employ, a power of attorney to transact business, which is in the following language:

“Know all men by these presents that I, *817 Charles H. Clark, of • Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, have made, constituted, and appointed, and do hereby make, constitute, and appoint, Challes E.

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Bluebook (online)
11 F.2d 814, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-car-co-of-new-jersey-v-clark-pawd-1925.