Cover v. Taliaferro

122 A. 2, 142 Md. 586, 1923 Md. LEXIS 68
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 19, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 122 A. 2 (Cover v. Taliaferro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cover v. Taliaferro, 122 A. 2, 142 Md. 586, 1923 Md. LEXIS 68 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

*588 Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On August 29th, 1919, Ralph Cover, of Westminster, Carroll County, I. C. Taliaferro and John Coyle, both of Baltimore City, entered into' an agreement for1 the exploitation and development of improved machinery to be used in the manufacture of canned goods in processing, sterilizing and preserving the .contents of containers of fruits, vegetables and other food products, for some of which improvements letters patent had been applied for. That agreement provided that, upon a satisfactory demonstration of the utility and practicability of a machine embodying the inventions referred to1 in those patent applications, a corporation should be organized for the exploitation, manufactore and sale of such machines. It further provided that the wilful failure of any party to the contract to perform the obligations imposed by it should effect a forfeiture of all his right, title and interest therein to the other parties thereto.

On July 30th, 1920, Cover filed the bill of complaint in this case, in which he asked that the right, title and interest of each of the appellees in said contract be forfeited to him on the ground that they had wilfully failed to perform the part of the agreement which they had agreed in it to perform. An answer was filed, testimony was taken and after a hearing a decree was passed by the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, dismissing the bill, and from that decree this appeal was taken.

The appeal presents but one question, which is, whether the conduct of the defendants amounted to such a breach of the obligations imposed upon them, by the agreement as to warrant a court of equity in decreeing under its terms a forfeiture of their interests and rights therein to the complainant.

In dealing with that question we will inquire (1) what obligations were imposed by the agreement upon the parties to it, (2) what penalty did the agreement exact from the parties for a failure to perform the obligations imposed by *589 it, (3) did the defendants wilfully fail to perform such obligations, and (4) if they did, should the court decree a forfeiture of their rights and interests in the contract in consequence thereof ?

The first question depends altogether upon the construction of the contract, for all the rights, duties, and liabilities of the parties in relation to its subject matter are fixed by its terms. The apparent purpose and object of tbe parties to the contract was to agree to make, market and exploit certáin machinery used in the manufacture of canned food, and more particularly a cooker and cooler called the “Submarine,” ■which was believed to embody improvements over any machine then sold for the complete sterilization of canned food. All the provisions of the contract are subsidiary and incidental to the accomplishment of that purpose. And to that end it states clearly and precisely what each party to the agreement is to do, and what part each is, to have in the common plan. Ralph Cover was to be tbe patent expert, familiar with the law and practice of securing and protecting patents, as well as with the technical and mechanical features, elements, details and functions of machinery used in sterilizing and canning food, and his duty was to investigate the novelty of inventions covered by tbe agreement, and the possibility of infringing existing patents by the manufacture, sale or use of machines, embodying such inventions, to secure data as to the likely profits and hazards of the business, and the conditions under which the machines could bo manufactured most successfully, to keep records of all transactions connected with the work, and in short, to do such practical work as might be required to' perfect the machine and make the manufacture and sale of it a commercial success, so far as he could by the exercise of reasonable diligence do that. His training and experience had fitted him for such work. He was a member of tbe bar; be had been engaged seven years in the development of machinery, principally canning machinery, and had made a special study of patent law and was widely experienced in patent matters.

*590 John O. Taliaferro was “to defray all expenses incurred up to the date of the commencement of the first full sized machine in the exploiting and development of the machines herein referred to,” and he was to “pay all expenses incurred from the date of the commencement of the first full sized machine to the date of the formation of said corporation."' He was the capitalist who was to supply the funds needed for the perfection and completion of a practicable machine, which could be profitably manufactured and sold, to manufacturers of canned food for the sterilization of their product. He had been widely engaged in the development and exploitation of patented inventions'and had been a director in the Continental Can Company, and one of its founders, and had also been general manager of the American Can Company, and a director in the Rational Bank of Baltimore, and the Calvert Bank.

John Coyle was to act as a supervising expert and critic, and was to “act in an advisory capacity in the development, designing, construction and testing of any machines embraced by this agreement.” He was the assistant general manager of the Baltimore plant of the Continental Can Company, and familiar with the operation of machinery of the character covered by the agreement.

In addition to this specific designation of the duties of the several parties to it, the agreement provides that they “shall use and employ their ideas and inventive skill and ability in the arts embraced by this agreement and in the betterment thereof, and each by sketches and where necessary, by written description, will promptly disclose to the others any new invention therein.”

After thus stating the duties of its several parties in relation. to the exploitation and development of the machines referred to in it, the agreement provides “that forthwith upon the satisfactory demonstration under service conditions of the utility and practicability of the machine embodying the inventions specifically referred to by patent application serial *591 numbers in the preamble hereto, a corporation shall be organized under the laws of the State of Maryland, hearing the name ‘United Corporation’ for1 the purpose of exploiting, manufacturing, securing the manufacture of, selling, etc., of the machines embraced by this agreement,” and after providing for the issue of 2,000 shares of common stock, and for the form of the charter, it further provides, “that forthwith upon the formation of said corporation, the parties hereto shall assign all their rights accruing under this agreement to said United Corporation, and they shall receive common stock of said United Corporation in the following proportions immediately after the execution of such assignment: J. O. Taliaferro shall receive 800 shares; John C'oyle shall receive 300 shares, and Ralph Cover shall receive 900 shares,” and that “the said J. O.

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Bluebook (online)
122 A. 2, 142 Md. 586, 1923 Md. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cover-v-taliaferro-md-1923.