Dickerson v. Matheson

57 F. 524, 6 C.C.A. 466, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2191
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 1, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 57 F. 524 (Dickerson v. Matheson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickerson v. Matheson, 57 F. 524, 6 C.C.A. 466, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2191 (2d Cir. 1893).

Opinion

SHIPMAN, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court for the southern district of New York in favor of the complainant in a bill in equity for the infringement of letters patent. On November 3, .1885, letters patent of the United States, No. 329,632, were issued to Carl Duisberg, a Herman, for an improvement in coloring matter known as “Benzo-Furpurine.” On December 21, 1885, Duisberg assigned the patent to a Herman corporation called “Farbenfabriken, vermals Fr. Bayer & Co.,” and known in the case as the “Bayer Company,” which was also the owner of a German patent for the same invention. On March 8, 1888, the Bayer Company assigned the patent, including the right to recover for past infringements, to the complainant. At (he time of the transaction which is the subject of this controversy, another German corporation, “joy the name of the “Action Gesellschaft fur Aniline Fabrication of Berlin,” called in this suit the “Berlin Company,” had the right, as licensee of the Bayer Company, to sell the patented color both in Europe and in the United States under the European and United States patents. The alleged infringement consists in the importation into this country, in November, 1887, and the subsequent sale therein, by Matheson & Co., who are merchants in New York, of one ton of benzo-purpurine, made under said letters patent by the Berlin Company. The purchase by the defendants was under the following state of facts: Matheson & Co., in October. 1887, directed their London agents, Barnes & Co., to purchase a quantity of the patented color, if it could be bought of the parties who held the United States patents without restrictions against export to this country. The defendants knew that these restrictions were apt to be imposed. Barnes & Co. applied to the Bayer Company, who replied that their product was engaged for two months, but would deliver the color as soon thereafter as practicable. In a day or two the Bayer Comi>any telegraphed to Barnes & Co., inquiring for whom the color was designed, as, in case it was designed for America, they should decline to sell it without restrictions. Barnes & Co. then engaged Domeier & Co:, of London, to buy in their own name, but for Barnes & Co., one ton of said patented color from the Berlin Company. At this time, Domeier, of said firm, was aware that the Berlin Company was in the habit of selling the goods under restrictions against importation into the United States, and was instructed by Barnes & Co. not to buy unless he could do so without [526]*526restrictions. On November 4, 1887, he ordered from Greeff & Co., of London, the agents of the Berlin Company, one ton of the patented color. The order contained the words “strong for export.” On November 15th, Greeff & Co. notified Domeier & Co. that they should send the.invoice and bill of lading' in the course of the day, and would like them to have a check ready for the amount of the bill. The check was drawn by a clerk, was signed by Domeier, was given to the clerk to deliver to Greeff and Co. upon receipt fit the invoice, and upon such receipt was delivered accordingly, on November 15th, by tire clerk. The invoice contained the following words, in German: “The importation into the U. S. of North America of our patented substantive cotton dye-stuffs, congo, benzo-purpurine, etc., is prohibited.” The goods were marked with a label as follows: “The importation into the United States of North America is forbidden.” No notice of any restriction upon the sale or destination of these goods was given to Domeier & 'Co. until the notice which was contained upon the invoice, and Domeier did not know of the contents of the invoice or of the label till he was informed by his clerk of the notice upon the invoice, from one to three days after November 15th. Greeff & ,Co. supposed that the goods were to be used in England.

When Domeier & Co. delivered to Barnes & Co. does not appear, but on November 22d the latter wrote to the defendants that they had received the ton. It was -shipped to the defendants on November 25th. «

It is apparent that the defendants and Barnes & Co. were anxious to obtain the patented color without the restrictions which they knew were customary; that, failing in the attempt to purchase from the Bayer Company, Barnes & Co. sought to use Domeier & Co., in the hope that they might purchase, without an announcement of restrictions, from the Berlin Company; that, when the order was executed by sending the invoice and the goods, the restrictions were announced upon each; that Domeier, who knew of the customary method of selling these colors, upon receiving notice that the papers had arrived and were to be delivered, left a signed check with his clerk to deliver upon receipt of the invoice. The defendants think that their attempt to obtain a purchase without restrictions was successful, because an affirmative announcement of these conditions was not made until the invoice was presented and the sale was consummated, and because, in Domeier’s absence, the clerk who had been intrusted with the check was the only person who saw the invoice.

Upon this branch of the case, the circuit court well said:

“If such propositions are to receive, the sanction of the courts, it will he well-nigh impossible to carry on the business of commerce. A person cannot avoid responsibility by closing his eyes and. ears, and delegating his business to others. If Domeier & Co. would have been bound by the notice of restriction, had Domeier personally received the invoice in exchange for the check, the firm is equally bound by the action of their clerk. The clerk stood in the place and stead of Domeier & Co., and represented them, in that transaction.”

[527]*527The cleric to whom was intrusted the business of receiving and examining ihe invoice and bill of lading, and delivering the check in payment for the goods, must, in the absence of any evidence, to the contrary, or of circumstances which repelled the idea of his knowledge of the contents of the paper, be presumed to have acquainted himself with the contents of the papers which he was to receive in exchange for the check, and, by accepting them, to have assented to the conditions of sale which they contained. It is to be observed that the invoice was not a mere notice or receipt, and was a paper which, from the nature of the business, must be expected to contain the terms of the contract of sale. Belger v. Dinsmore, 51 N. Y. 166; Kirkland v. Dinsmore, 62 N. Y. 171; Blossom v. Dodd, 43 N. Y. 264. The fact that the order of Domeier contained the words "strong for export” is commented upon by the defendants as containing a notice to the Berlin Company that the goods were to he exported; but those words, when addressed by a London firm to a German manufacturer, cannot indicate that the goods are to be exported to the United States. The attempt of the defendants’ agents to buy and export into the United States a quantity of the patented color, freed from a positive restriction against such exportation, was a somewhat careful one; but the argument in favor of its success now rests upon the absence of Domeier from his place of business when the order for the goods was executed, and upon his lack of knowledge of the contents of the invoice. That argument, for the reasons already given, is insufficient.

The question as to the effect of the restriction remains.

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Bluebook (online)
57 F. 524, 6 C.C.A. 466, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickerson-v-matheson-ca2-1893.