Del Riccio v. Photochart

268 P.2d 814, 124 Cal. App. 2d 301, 101 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 298, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1734
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 31, 1954
DocketCiv. 19855
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 268 P.2d 814 (Del Riccio v. Photochart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Del Riccio v. Photochart, 268 P.2d 814, 124 Cal. App. 2d 301, 101 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 298, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1734 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

*304 WHITE, P. J.

This is an action to recover royalties under a 17-year license agreement covering certain camera devices and methods.

Plaintiff Del Biccio is an inventor and met defendant Bogart Bogers, the prime figure in defendant partnership and corporation, in 1937, at a motion picture studio in Hollywood. Del Biccio had been experimenting with a camera especially adapted to photographing moving objects. Bogers had been active in organizing Del Mar Bace Track, and plaintiff Del Biccio told him that the latter’s new camera would improve photo-finish photographing. Later, plaintiff Del Biccio and the individuals named in the complaint herein as defendants, formed a partnership to exploit Del Biccio’s invention of an open-slit camera for photographing race finishes. Plaintiff Del Biccio owned a one-half interest in the partnership.

The original camera used at Del Mar Bace Track in 1937 had a slit with parallel sides. All interested in the venture recognized that this type of photography was an old art.

When this demonstation in 1937 disclosed that the parallel slit did not produce accurate results, plaintiff Del Biccio set about to solve the problem through the use of a tapered or angular slit, known as the V-slit. Following the completion of the first camera with parallel slit, four additional cameras were built, each provided with the V-slit.

Plaintiff Del Biccio believed that the V-slit was a new invention and patentable. The' inventor also invented and introduced into the four later cameras a special control or timer and a film carrier.

On March 20, 1939 (prior to making the license agreement on June 25, 1941), an application for a patent on each of said inventions was made by respondent Del Biccio. However, before a patent issued on the first application, Del Biccio was advised by the patent office that his application would have to be divided because it contained an application for both a patent on a camera and a patent on a method of photographically recording the order of passage of moving objects. The division was made and resulted in the issuance of two patents, one entitled the “Camera," and the other entitled “A method of photographically recording the order of passage of moving objects." The method patent was reissued with the same title on May 20, 1947, and is the patent which was the subject of litigation in the federal courts in 1950, to be hereinafter referred to.

*305 As heretofore noted, prior to the execution of the license agreement, plaintiff Del Riccio and the other persons interested in the above mentioned partnership known as The Photochart (which was the predecessor of defendant corporation) had banded together and pooled their efforts and money toward perfecting and promoting the Del Riccio camera and its use. In that venture they were copartners, Del Riccio owning a one-half interest.

Prior to the making of the licensing agreement differences had arisen and existed among the partners. In order to compose and compromise these differences, a license agreement was entered into on June 25, 1941. The pertinent parts of said agreement, insofar as this litigation is concerned, are:

1. Included in the benefits which accrued to the licensee partnership were,
(a) License for 17 years to use the camera with angular slit, the speed control and the film carrier described therein, including the five cameras then in use.
(b) Acquired the 50 per cent proprietary interest of respondent Del Riccio in the extant partnership and thereafter the remaining partners comprising the partnership owned the entire proprietorship, and respondent Del Riccio owned and had only the reserved royalty.
(c) Acquired all cameras, good will, technical knowhow, engineering drawings and data, all existing patent protection and some fixtures and parts.
(d) Acquired obligation of respondent Del Riccio as adviser, consultant and as director of any succeeding corporation.
(e) Eliminated competition of respondent Del Riccio for the period of five years, together with right to use any future improvements of respondent Del Riccio.

2. Plaintiff Del Riccio suffered the following correlative detriments,

(a) Surrendered right to license others than licensee;
(b) Surrendered 50 per cent partnership interest and accepted royalty position instead;
(c) Surrendered management to partnership licensee and set about other business activities;
(d) Obligated self to serve licensee as adviser, consultant and possible director;
(e) Agreed to forego competition with licensee for said period of five years.

The partnership operated under this 1941 agreement until April 23, 1946, when they executed a supplemental agree *306 ment which compromised litigation then pending between them and specifically incorporated United States Patent No. 2382617 (hereinafter referred to as Patent No. 617), the method of photographically recording the order of passage of moving objects. The parties continued to operate under this agreement until 1949, when, in an action in the superior court of Los Angeles County, it was held that under the licensing agreements plaintiff Del Eiccio could compete with his licensee, and that defendant licensee was not obligated to use the patented camera.

On September 16, 1947, defendant Photochart and plaintiff Del Eiccio joined as plaintiffs in a patent infringement action against Photo Patrol, Inc., and others, brought in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. Tendered as an issue in the original complaint filed in the federal court were all patents mentioned in the original license agreement as well as method patent No. 617, and reissue patent No. 22,881 (hereinafter referred to as Patent No. 881). By the time of trial all issues as to all patents had been withdrawn except those involving claims, 1, 2, 7 and 8 of No. 881 (the reissue patent). The findings in that case described the disputed method in paragraph XII as follows:

“Eeissue patent No. 22,881 relates to a method of photographing the finishes of races by positioning a camera above and to one side of a finish line or other given line of a race track and the photographing of the contestants as they pass said line upon a continuously moving strip of film positioned behind a narrow aperature”;

And in paragraph XVIII: ‘‘ The precise method patented involves positioning the optical axis of the lens of the camera in alignment with one edge of the slit and with the finish line or some other given line.”

In its ruling the federal court held: “Eeissue patent No. 22,881 is invalid because the subject-matter of said patent does not constitute invention and the subject-matter of said patent was old in the art more than one year before the Del Eiccio patent application was filed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 P.2d 814, 124 Cal. App. 2d 301, 101 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 298, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/del-riccio-v-photochart-calctapp-1954.