Cowles v. Rochester Folding Box Co.

81 A.D. 414, 80 N.Y.S. 811
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 81 A.D. 414 (Cowles v. Rochester Folding Box Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cowles v. Rochester Folding Box Co., 81 A.D. 414, 80 N.Y.S. 811 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

McLennan, J.:

The facts, so far as they bear upon the questions involved upon this appeal, are not in dispute. The plaintiff, who was an inventor and expert machinist, together with two other men, Browne and Levis, about the year 1895, organized the defendant corporation, with a capital stock of $200,000. Sixty thousand dollars of the paid-up capital stock of the corporation Was transferred to those three individuals, upon the express consideration ¡that they would transfer to it their business and all the machinery and tools owned by them and used in connection therewith, which they did, and also in consideration of their agreement to assign and transfer a certain patent for improvements in paper box machines which the plaintiff had [417]*417invented, as well as all future improvements, inventions and patents which might he invented by the plaintiff, relating to the business of the corporation, during the time the plaintiff remained in its employ. After the organization of the defendant, and after the agreement referred to had been made by the plaintiff and his associates, he entered into the employ of the defendant at a considerable salary, and devoted his time largely to inventing new machines or devices for the better and more profitable conduct of its business; and while thus in the employ of the defendaut he made the inventions which are the subject of the patents referred to in the judgment appealed from.

Under this arrangement the plaintiff continued in defendant’s employ for about three years and until about March, 1898, as did also Browne who assisted him in organizing the defendant, when both resigned from their positions with the defendant, and organized or entered into the employment of a rival corporation in the city of New York. During the three years the plaintiff was thus in the employ of the defendant he invented certain new and useful improvements of value to the defendant in its business, which were then or afterwards patented, and which are the same described in the judgment. Plaintiff’s inventions made during said three years while in defendant’s employ, whether they had ripened into patents or were merely in the form of applications for patents, although under the express agreement made between the plaintiff and defendant they belonged to and were its property, had not been transferred or assigned to it, and the defendant did not have the legal title thereto, but they stood in the name of the plaintiff. Upon leaving the defendant’s employ the plaintiff assumed to assign and transfer them to other parties without any consideration being paid therefor, in disregard of defendant’s right and in violation of the agreement which he had entered into with it.

Shortly prior to September 5, 1898, the date of the contract in question, plaintiff’s venture in the city of New York having proved unsuccessful or unsatisfactory, he returned to the city of Rochester and again sought employment with the defendant. He acknowledged that he had violated his agreement; that he had assumed to transfer the inventions made by him'and which of right belonged to [418]*418the defendant, to other parties, but stated in substance that the assignments made by. him had not been recorded in the' Patent Office; that.the purpose for .which such transfers Were, made had failed; that there was no consideration for the same, and stated or expressed the opinion that the respective assignees would reassign the same to him.

The contract in suit was then, executed.. The purpose for which it was made is perfectly plain. The defendant expected that by the assignments from the plaintiff, which the contract provided for, it. would secure the legal title to the property of which it was then the. equitable owner, and if that could thereby be accomplished it was willing to give employment to the plaintiff for at least one year, and a ope-quarter interest in the property which it then owned as against him, when such, .term of employment should end. The plaintiff on his part expected to and did secure employment, and he-also expected to secure a. one-quarter interest in his inventions upon the termination of his employment,. provided the assignments executed by him to the defendant were effectual for the purpose intended. We may not assume that it was the intention of the ■ parties that the defendant should- give to the plaintiff an interest in this property,, in case it turned out that he was powerless to perfect defendant’s legal title to the same, or to do any other act in respect to snch property which would be of advantage to the defendant. This was exactly the situation which developed.. The defendant discovered that the assignments made by the plaintiff, in violation of his agreement with it, had been recorded in the Patent Office by the respective assignees; that they each claimed to be the owner of the patents or inventions so assigned to them, and denied that the plaintiff or the defendant had, as against them, any .right, title or interest in or to the same. Therefore the defendant could not obtain the legal title to the inventions in question under - the contract which it had executed, or by means of anything . the plaintiff might or could do in the premises.

Thereupon, and in October, 1898, the - defendant commenced an action .in the Supreme Court, in which the.plaintiff and all his alleged assignees were made defendants. It was alleged in substance in ■ the complaint that the defendant (the plaintiff in that action) was the owner of the inventions in question, by reason of [419]*419the agreement made at the time of the organization of the defendant corporation between it and this plaintiff, and appropriate relief was demanded. In Hay, 1899, the action was tried and resulted in a judgment which adjudged, in substance, that this defendant (the plaintiff in that action) was the equitable owner ■ as against the defendants, including this plaintiff, of the inventions in question, and the judgment required the defendants in that action to assign to this defendant all the interest which they or any of them had in or to said inventions. From that judgment an appeal was taken to the Appellate Division, and the judgment was in all things affirmed. (Rochester Folding Box Co. v. Brown, 55 App. Div. 444.) From such judgment of affirmance an appeal has been taken to the Court of Appeals, and is now pending.

Thus it has been judicially determined that at the time the contract in suit was executed, the plaintiff had no interest in the inventions in question which he could assign or transfer to the defendant. It has been judicially determined that at that time the defendant was the owner of such inventions, and that it, as matter of right, was entitled to an assignment by the plaintiff and his assignees of any and all interest which they or any of them claimed to have therein, wholly independent of the contract in suit, to the end that the defendant might thus acquire the legal as well as the equitable title to the property which it owned. Plaintiff’s assignments of the invention in question to the defendant amounted to nothing; were no better than so much blank paper, because, as determined by the judgment of the court, he had nothing to assign ; and such assignments were equally ineffectual to perfect the legal title of the defendant in and to such inventions. What was expected to be accomplished by such assignments failed, and the defendant was, therefore, required to resort to a suit in equity to accomplish the purpose for which the contract in suit was made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 A.D. 414, 80 N.Y.S. 811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowles-v-rochester-folding-box-co-nyappdiv-1903.