Denise v. . Swett

37 N.E. 627, 142 N.Y. 602, 60 N.Y. St. Rep. 289, 97 Sickels 602, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 795
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 37 N.E. 627 (Denise v. . Swett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Denise v. . Swett, 37 N.E. 627, 142 N.Y. 602, 60 N.Y. St. Rep. 289, 97 Sickels 602, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 795 (N.Y. 1894).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

This is an action brought to recover certain royalties alleged to be due plaintiff by virtue of an agreement between plaintiff’s assignor and the predecessors of the defendant, under which it is alleged the defendant and his predecessors (whose liabilities in that regard the defendant assumed) manufactured and sold a certain patented article designated in the agreement as “ an improved screw barrel press.”

The case was tried before a referee, who reported in favor of the plaintiff, and the judgment entered upon such report has been affirmed by the General Term.

The liability of the defendant depends upon the question *605 whether, subsequent to June 30, 1886, the agreement to pay royalties was in force. The plaintiff affirms and the defendant denies the proposition. Unless there were an agreement to pay royalties for the manufacture, it is plain that the state courts would have no jurisdicton, for they cannot entertain an action to recover damages for an infringement of a patent. (The Continental Store Service Co. v. Clark, 100 N. Y. 365, and cases cited.)

Upon the question of • the existence of the alleged agreement the evidence is without contradiction and may be thus stated: In 1882 one Henry H. Brown was the proprietor of the invention above designated, and defendant -.and one Samson were partners in business as manufacturers in Orleans county, in this state. They entered into an agreement with Brown in July of above year under which Brown licensed the partners to manufacture and sell the patented article for one year from July 1, 1882, upon payment of certain named sums for royalties upon each and every dozen presses manufactured and sold by them. The agreement contained the further provision that the partners might obtain an extension of the agreement for any length of time within the life of the patent or which might be desired by them upon their giving notice in writing of their desire to renew the contract at least sixty days before its expiration. This agreement was in fact extended under the above provision from year to year until May 1, 1886, and it is conceded that the renewal made in the spring of 1885 was for a term which would end in May, 1886.

Prior to May, 1886, there had been some disagreements between the parties in regard to the conduct of the business, and it was undecided whether the agreement would be continued or not. By a provision which was put in the agreement when it was renewed in 1885, the further extension from May, 1886, depended upon the mutual agreement of the parties. On the 4th of May, 1886, the partners wrote a letter asking that the contract be renewed. Correspondence and interviews succeeded, but the agreement was not renewed, *606 ■and on June 14 and 17 respectively the partners reiterated their request to Brown for its renewal. On the 19th of June Brown wrote to the partners stating that as the terms of his letter of the 17th were not accepted he thereby revoked the same and he offered to take the stock off their hands and entered into some further details now immaterial.

The letter of Brown dated the 17tli of June and referred to in his letter of the 19th, is not in the record, but the evidence leads to the inference that it contained an offer to renew the contract upon terms therein stated. There is no proof that the terms were accepted, and, on the contrary, Brown, in his letter of the 19th of June, says they were not. In the meantime and pending these negotiations* the partners had continued the manufacture of the article. As to the practical effect of the correspondence and of the letter of the 19th of June written by Brown to the partners, there is no divergence of evidence. Both Brown and Swett, the defendant, were sworn on the trial and they both agree that they regarded the agreement as terminated from that time, June 19. The partners finished or continued to make the presses up to June SOth after the receipt of the letter, and they furnished returns up to that time and accounted for and paid the royalties due up to that date, but from that time they never made another report and did not consider themselves thereafter as manufacturing under any agreement. Dp to that time they had made quarterly reports as to royalties.

The testimony further shows that after June 30th they not only did not manufacture under the agreement, but the defendant maintained that the machine which was manufactured after that date was not identical with the one described in the agreement. The evidence is undisputed that in truth they did not after June 30th manufacture an article which was absolutely and in detail identical with the article mentioned in the agreement, although the referee finds that the two articles are in substance alike. Both parties testified in so many words to the termination of the agreement before July 1, 1886. The defendant was called by the plaintiff as a wit *607 ness on the trial, and he said on examination by his own counsel, that the letter of June 19th ended any attempt on their part to renew the contract; that ended it; there was no correspondence or conversation after that and no attempt made to renew or extend it, and it was not renewed; they sent- back to Brown certain articles which were useless to them after the ■agreement expired and which they could only use under the agreement; they did this by letter June 29th, 1886 ; on the 4th of July following the partners wrote a letter to Brown giving him a statement of presses made up to June 30th preceding, and notifying him that they had placed amount of royalties on them to Brown’s credit; the letter was the final settlement of sales up to that date and no dealings after that were had with Brown, and he never thereafter called upon the partners to make any payment by reason of the agreement or to make any report in regard to it, except that Brown says that possibly he may have asked for a report in the fall of 1886. In June, 1891, it appears from Brown’s own evidence that he had a conversation with the defendant upon the subject of the article the defendant had been manufacturing since the termination of the agreement, and in that conversation Brown said that the article which defendant had been thus manufacturing was an infringement on his rights, and defendant had replied to him that if he were of that opinion he had better contest it. The defendant during the time of his manufacturing, after the termination of the agreement, maintained his right (outside of the old agreement and assuming its termination) to manufacture the article in the way he was doing, and claimed that it was not the same article mentioned in the agreement and that it was not any infringement on the rights of Brown. This is incompatible with a manufacture under the agreement. "Whether the article manufactured were or were not substantially identical with that described in the agreement, the evidence is clear and uncontradicted that defendant maintained it was not, and that he had the right to manufacture it without regard to any agreement and assuming its termination. Upon this question the evidence is also clear *608 that defendant was willing to try conclusions with Brown by means of a lawsuit.

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.E. 627, 142 N.Y. 602, 60 N.Y. St. Rep. 289, 97 Sickels 602, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denise-v-swett-ny-1894.