Copeman Laboratories Co. v. General Motors Corp.

36 F. Supp. 755, 48 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 292, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3772
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJanuary 7, 1941
DocketC-64
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 36 F. Supp. 755 (Copeman Laboratories Co. v. General Motors Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Copeman Laboratories Co. v. General Motors Corp., 36 F. Supp. 755, 48 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 292, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3772 (E.D. Mich. 1941).

Opinion

TUTTLE, District Judge.

The plaintiff, Copeman Laboratories Company, on April 22, 1930, entered into a licensing agreement with the Inland Manufacturing Company, which is now a division of the defendant, General Motors Corporation, for the manufacture, use and sale of certain inventions in sharp-freezing containers, grids and devices. Plaintiff claims that application by Hathorne, No. 185,214, dated April 20, 1927, for United States Letters Patent, and United States Letters Patent No. 1,932,731, dated October 31, 1933 — issued to Copeman Laboratories Company as assignee upon the foregoing application — and foreign applications and letters patent covering the same invention, were embraced within the licensing agreement. Plaintiff further contends that defendant has manufactured and sold large quantities of devices which come within the scope of said letters patent, foreign and domestic, and has not paid royalty due thereon to which plaintiff claims it is entitled.

The defendant claims: (1) That by the. terms of the licensing agreement the Inland Manufacturing Company and its successors had the privilege of electing whether or not the Inland Manufacturing Company or its successors would include in tire licensing agreement any patent, which issued subsequent to April 22, 1930, upon an application for a patent which was pending and listed in the agreement; *758 that Hathorne No. 1,932,731 issued subsequent to April 22, 1930, and that the Inland Manufacturing Company did not elect to include it within the licensing agreement and is therefore not required to pay royalty. (2) That the agreement of April 22, 1930, as modified by a supplemental agreement dated as of November 27, 1934, provided that royalties under the license contract were to be paid only upon nonmetallic containers, grids and devices, and that the articles manufactured and sold by the defendant were metallic and therefore no royalties were required to be paid to the plaintiff. (3) That the sharp-freezing containers, grids and devices which the defendant manufactured did not infringe the claims of Hathorne. (4) That the plaintiff assigned to the defendant Patent No. 1,943,466, to West, dated January 16, 1934, which by its specifications states that a portion of the grids and partitions and a portion of the top member would be coated with a substance to which ice does not readily adhere, and for that reason, namely, because of the assignment and the disclosures contained in the specifications of the West patent, defendant was not required to pay royalties for using inventions under Hathorne. (5) That by the terms of the original instrument of April 22, 1930, plaintiff agreed to prosecute all material infringers of the patents mentioned in the agreement and of patents which might be granted and come tinder the agreement, and that plaintiff has failed to so prosecute such actions and is therefore barred from the right to recover royalties.

The court finds: That the plaintiff, Copeman Laboratories Company, on April 22, 1930, entered into an agreement with the Inland Manufacturing Company granting the exclusive right to manufacture, use and sell upon a royalty basis the inventions covered by the patents and applications mentioned in the agreement, “and any and all other improvements on sharp-freezing containers, grids and devices made, acquired or controlled by licensor during the life of this agreement; it is understood, however, that licensor will advise licensee of the issuance of each such patent, and that licensee shall thereafter have a reasonable time, not less than three (3) months, to elect as to whether or not it shall be included in this license.” The agreement provided for the payment of royalty by defendant “on each device sold and embodying the inventions covered by the above-mentioned patents and applications, or any of them * * * ”; and further provided for a sworn monthly report to the plaintiff from the defendant “showing the number of devices sold embodying the invention or inventions as set forth in the above-mentioned patents and applications. * * * ” The Inland Manufacturing Company further covenanted to sell as large a total volume of devices “under the patents and applications covered by this agreement as is possible.”

To strengthen the position in the industry of the rubber tray being manufactured and • sold under the licensing agreement, and to discourage the competition of metal trays then appearing, which was the objective of both parties, in July, 1931, the plaintiff purchased from the Kelvinator Corporation Patent No. 1,688,887, to Spreen, dated October 23, 1928, and Patent No. 1,407,614, to Wicks, dated February 21, 1922. The same covered the use of flexible metal in ice trays. The Inland Manufacturing Company had acquired Vandeventer Application No. 135,496, filed September 15, 1926. By a written instrument of September 4, 1931, the plaintiff and the Inland Manufacturing Company agreed that the Spreen and Wicks patents and all patents or applications for patent covering the use of flexible metal in ice trays, owned or later acquired by Copeman Laboratories Company, would come within the scope of the agreement of April 22, 1930, but modified as to royalty. It was agreed that this royalty be paid should the Inland Manufacturing Company license the manufacture, use and sale of devices under the Spreen or the Wicks patents, or under such patents as might be issued on the Vandeventer application.

On November 1st, 1932, by letter directed to and accepted by the Inland Manufacturing Company, the plaintiff stipulated that grids covered by the agreement of April 22, 1930, could be sold by the Inland Manufacturing Company without trays, at a royalty reduced from six cents for each device to three cents each. The grid is a device which does not of itself hold liquid, but is for use as an insertion into a liquid-containing receptacle for the purpose of dividing into cubes the liquid or substance when frozen. Section II of the license agreement of April 22, 1930, provided for a royalty of six cents on each device sold embodying the. inventions covered by the patents and applications or any of them listed in said agreement, up *759 to the amount of 500,000, and five cents on each such device in excess thereof sold in any one calendar year. This letter of November 1st, 1932, by its clear intent provided that the grids alone could be manufactured and sold at the reduced royalty of three cents each; that the number of such grids so sold could not be taken into consideration in determining when the number of devices sold had reached the 500,000 mark, requiring a reduction from six cents to five cents each, in any one calendar year; and that the same applied only as to the number of trays sold. The grid was one of the inventions listed in the original agreement of April 22, 1930, as Application Serial No. 300,713, which later issued into Patent No. 1,817,544, to Copeman, dated August 4, 1931. Grids stamped with that patent number were manufactured and sold by the Inland Manufacturing Company beginning on or about January 31, 1933, without having been advised by the plaintiff of the issuance of such letters patent.

Application No. 286,837, filed June 20, 1928, was for an invention which related to the use of leveling holes in connection with the sharp-freezing containers, grids and devices, and was listed as an application in the original agreement. On September 27, 1932, Patent No. 1,879,602, to Copeman, issued upon this application.

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Bluebook (online)
36 F. Supp. 755, 48 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 292, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/copeman-laboratories-co-v-general-motors-corp-mied-1941.