Computing Scale Co. v. Barnard Co.

259 F. 250, 170 C.C.A. 318, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1639
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 13, 1919
DocketNo. 3181
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 259 F. 250 (Computing Scale Co. v. Barnard Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Computing Scale Co. v. Barnard Co., 259 F. 250, 170 C.C.A. 318, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1639 (6th Cir. 1919).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). Of the three possible grounds of cancellation reserved by paragraph 10 of the contract, clause (c) may be eliminated. The situation thereby contemplated never arose. This leaves only clauses (a) and (b) as possible support for the cancellation.

Under clause (a), the question was whether the device was inoperative or defective. This seems to be a question of fact, and not of opinion or judgment. If the Scale Company had wished its own judgment to be the criterion of its right to cancellation under this clause, it would have used plain language to that effect; and this conclusion is emphasized by comparison with the ground of cancellation reserved by clause (b). As bearing on this issue of fact, the questions which stand out most prominently are: (1) Whether the “patented invention” should be considered as the entire device specified in the patent claims and necessary to make an operative scale, or only as the features which were new in this scale. See Computing Co. v. Standard Co. (C. C. A. 6) 195 Fed. 508, 513, 115 C. C. A. 418. (2) Whether, after the plaintiff had sent on his scale as a sample of the invention, operatively arranged, and it developed (if it did) that this sample could not be successfully operated, plaintiff might nevertheless insist that it could be made practical by refinements which plaintiff afterwards developed or by changes which defendant might have worked out if it had tried. (3) Whether “operative” and “defective” refer to a laboratory or to an everyday use standard. All these questions are presented on this record, not independently, but as bearing on the main inquiry whether there was substantial evidence to support the special finding on that subject or the general judgment which would imply such an underlying finding. American Bank v. Miller (C. C. A. 6) 185 Fed. 338, 342, 107 C. C. A. 456. [253]*253Since we conclude that the judgment must be reversed for another reason, and since the probability that these questions will arise again impresses us as rather remote, we think it not advisable now to discuss or decide them.

The inquiry whether the patented invention was inoperative or defective in a mechanical sense is very different from the . question whether it would be a commercial success. There are sufficient reasons why this would always be true, but they are emphasized in the present case, where the device was one of extreme delicacy, where it was to be subjected to all kinds of incompetent handling and must be “fool proof,” and where its accuracy must depend upon the behavior of a considerable body of mercury in a large receptacle. It would be wholly unreasonable to suppose that any manufacturer would bind himself to a large obligation which should be dependent upon the judgment of any other person or tribunal that a business would be successful. Accordingly, the Scale Company provided that if, at any time, 60 days before the end of 2%_ years, it was not satisfied that the scale containing the invention was commercially successful, it could cancel the contract, but remaining liable for payment of the royalty for the 21/ji-year period.

[1] In our judgment, the undisputed facts make out an effective cancellation under clause (b). No doubt the Scale Company, by its telegram of January 20, had in mind a desire to end the contract under clause (a). If it could make that kind of termination effective before the January 20 payment was due, it could avoid that payment and save $5,000. Under this contract, however, there is no reason why a cancellation primarily resting on clause (a) may not also rest on clause (b). The greater always includes the less, and if a patented invention is defective, it naturally follows that it will not be a commercial success. When, therefore, the company declared, as it undoubtedly in substance did on January 20, that it considered the device so inoperative or defective as to entitle it to cancellation, it necessarily declared that the device would not result in commercial success to its satisfaction.

If there were doubt about this conclusion, it would be removed by the letter of March 15, 1909, which contains an express declaration that there are fatal defects in the invention, and that the Scale Company considers the entire matter at an end, but that it would be willing to consider the proposition anew if it could be shown any way “to make a practical and commercially successful scale from the invention.” We think it beyond doubt that the Scale Company then, if not before, intended to terminate the contract, and intended to rest that action in part upon its right to cancel under clause (b), that it sufficiently declared such intention, and that Barnard could not have misunderstood this cancellation.

[2] We cannot fail to notice that, so far as this record informs us, Barnard did not, until the commencement of this suit, make any claim that the contract was not ended as of January, 1910, nor make any demand for royalties thereafter accruing. There was a further right of cancellation under clause (c), of which it was not unlikely [254]*254the Scale Company would have attempted to avail itself, if it had known that Barnard considered the contract still in force. If in truth he knew that the Scale Company deemed the contract ended not later than the end of the royalty period to which the New York suit was directed, and realized that a'demand by him would bring a cancellation under clause (c), and nevertheless kept silent for the longest period permitted by the statute of limitations, it would at once be evident that he must meet the charge of estoppel so arising. The prosecution of the New York suit was not necessarily inconsistent with acquiescence by Barnard in a termination effective in January, 1910; and his letter of January 23, refusing to accept the cancellation attempted, is also not certainly in conflict with such acquiescence, because it refers directly only to the Scale Company’s claim that the contract ended in January, 1909. However, the New York proceedings or other matters not in this record may show such claims by Barnard as will acquit him of any intent to mislead the Scale Company by his silence. We therefore do not rest our conclusion in any degree upon the rule of estoppel.

[3] The right to cancel under clause (b) did not depend on any precedent manufacture of the device and putting it on the market. The language used, “fail to be commercially successful to the satisfaction of the party of the second part,” does not necessarily imply an intent that commercial success could be decided only by actual manufacture and commercial sale; but, under the conceded circumstances here existing, such intent would be so very improbable that only the clearest language could justify that interpretation. It was known to both parties that the actual manufacture and the attempt to sell, in any such quantities as to be a fair test of how much it would cost to make and how acceptable the device would be, would involve expenditure of thousands and perhaps tens of thousands of dollars. No manufacturer would intentionally contract that, although he was satisfied that a device would not be a commercial success, he should, nevertheless, go ahead, and put it on the market at his own risk. The reasonable meaning of this clause (b) is that, if at any time within the limit specified the Scale Company finds itself not satisfied that the device will be a commercial success, it may cancel.

[4] The only remaining question is whether the Scale Company was in fact satisfied.

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Bluebook (online)
259 F. 250, 170 C.C.A. 318, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/computing-scale-co-v-barnard-co-ca6-1919.