Dinwiddie v. St. Louis & O'Fallon Coal Co.

64 F.2d 303, 17 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 141, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4079
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 4, 1933
Docket3341
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 64 F.2d 303 (Dinwiddie v. St. Louis & O'Fallon Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dinwiddie v. St. Louis & O'Fallon Coal Co., 64 F.2d 303, 17 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 141, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4079 (4th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

NORTHCOTT, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit in equity brought' in the District Court of the United States for the District of Maryland, to determine plaintiff’s right to certain inventions made by Cuno and Bashioum, two of the appellants. There were four suits originally brought, one in the District of Maryland, against the appellant Dinwiddie; one in Missouri, against appellant Cuno; another in Pittsburgh, against appellant Bashioum; and the fourth in Delaware, against the appellant Bashioum Producer Retort Company, a corporation. By agreement Cuno, Bashioum, and the Bashioum Company appeared in this ease and an amended bill was filed against all four of the appellants who will be hereinafter referred to as defendants. The appellee, who was plaintiff below will be herein referred to as plaintiff. The temporary injunction that had been issued in this ease against defendant Dinwiddie was extended to cover all the defendants.

Evidence was taken before the judge below who heard the witnesses, mostly in person, and in an able and exhaustive opinion found for the plaintiff and entered a decree vesting the plaintiff with the full and complete equitable title to the patents in question and granting the plaintiff the permanent injunctive and other supplementary relief as prayed for. 53 F.(2d) 665, 662. From this action of the court below this appeal was brought.

The plaintiff was one of the companies affiliated with the Busch Interests of St. Louis, Mo., and in the year 1928, entered into two agreements with one Ludwig Kern, a German chemist, and his two sons relating to the Kem processes for the production of various materials and by-products by low-temperature distillation of coal. The plaintiff coal company owned a large tract of coal and the agreements were made with the Kerns for the purpose of developing plaintiff’s coal and by-products thereof, under the process of low distillation which they (the' Kerns) had invented and which had been developed prior thereto, to a greater or lesser degree, in Great Britain and Germany. Under these two agreements certain sums were paid the Kerns who were to receive a certain percentage of the voting stock of any company formed to handle any inventions growing out of the researches conducted. All inventions were to be the property of plaintiff. Defendant Dinwiddie had been employed by the Busch Interests in various capacities upon a salary, and was asked to report upon the feasibility of making the Kerns’ connection; and it was upon his favorable report that the agreements were entered into. Dinwiddie’s salary was a liberal one and he was paid certain bonuses conditioned upon the success of his activities. After the Kerns’ agreements were entered into, because of the fact that while they were chemists, possessing a high order of ability, they did not possess the mechanical manipulative knowledge essential in demonstrating practical theories, and upon his recommendation Dinwiddie was authorized to associate with him in the work of developing the Kerns’ processes the defendant Dr. Charles W. Cuno, of St. Louis, and later defendant Dr. Harrison Bashioum, of Pittsburgh. Dr. Cuno was an engineer of the Industrial Bureau of St. Louis, and Dr. Bashioum was a chemical engineer of an extended experience and head of the Chemical Engineering Department of the University of Pittsburgh. Dinwiddie during the period here in controversy was paid in salary and expenses more than $17,000. Dr. Cuno was first paid on a per diem basis of $50 a day, later, $300 a month and his expenses and he received during the same time over $7,000. Bashioum was paid on a fee basis which aggregated for the time in question, more than $5,000. The total expenditures made by the plaintiff in prosecuting this work were approximately $85;000 up to the time defendants severed their connections with the plaintiff.

Various experiments were carried on in St. Louis, and in Pittsburgh, all being conducted, apparently, in working out the Kerns’ processes; and it was believed by the defendants Dinwiddie, Cuno> and Bash-ioum that certain discoveries of great commercial value had been made and patents were applied for in the name of the three defendants, Dinwiddie, Cuno, and Bashioum. Four patents were applied for: No. 423,702, relating to coal products and the manufacture thereof, 423,703, relating to the formation and treatment of plastic materials and the products thereof, 444,344, relating to ceramic products and the manufacture thereof, and 441,232, relating to a method of, and apparatus for, distilling coal products.

On or about May 6, 1930, defendants Dinwiddie, Cuno, and Bashioum, with one J. William Davis, organized a Missouri cor- *305 poralion known as the “B.C.D. Corporation,” and tho three defendants assigned their rights under their patent applications to this corporation. Later the B.C.D. Corporation, which had been joined as. a party to the suit against Cuno, in Missouri, assigned said rights to the defendant Bashioum Producer Retort Company. Dinwiddie aft-erwards filed a disclaimer as to any rights he might have in the patent applications as patentee, but had an interest in the Bash-ioum Corporation. On April 11, 1930, Din-widdie, Cuno, and Bashioum appeared before a committee representing the Busch Interests in St. Louis, and made a general report on their work up to. that time. This report was made in the name of Dinwiddie, but Cuno and Bashioum were both present when it was made and when the matter was generally discussed with the committee representing the plaintiff. The three defendants had full knowledge of the Kerns’ agreement and their (the Kerns) interest in any discovery made. The application for the patents in question was made by the patent attorney representing the plaintiff and the expenses of the applications were borne by the plaintiff.

In April, 1930, it developed for the first time, so far as representatives of the plaintiff knew, that the defendants claimed any right in these patent applications as their own individual property. At a conference on A.pril 26, 3930, at which Dinwiddie, Cuno, and Bashioum. were all present, the three defendants were at once informed by the committee representing the plaintiff that their rights could not bo recognized as they had made the discoveries involved in the patents while in the employ of the plaintiff, engaged for that particular work. Hero a conflict arises in the testimony, members of the committee testifying that all three of the defendants agreed to waive any claim as a matter of right and rely upon the generosity of the plaintiff for anything that they might get. This is denied more or less directly by the three defendants. Shortly after, upon learning of tho formation of the .Bashioum Company and the assignment to it of the rights of the three defendants, plaintiff brought these actions.

In view of tho very able and exhaustive opinion of the judge below, in which there is a complete analysis of tho evidence, it is not necessary, hero, to enter into an extended discussion of that phase of the case. Giving to the finding of the trial judge that weight to which it is entitled, owing to the fact that he heard the witnesses in person, we are of the opinion that he reached the right conclusion. The conduct of the three defendants, Dinwiddie, Cuno, and Bashioum, throughout the entire transaction leads to the conclusion that they only conceived tho idea of making-their claim after they became convinced that the discoveries would be of great commercial value.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gilson v. Commissioner
1984 T.C. Memo. 447 (U.S. Tax Court, 1984)
Opinion No. 70-224 (1970) Ag
Oklahoma Attorney General Reports, 1970
Scutt v. Bassett
194 P.2d 781 (California Court of Appeal, 1948)
Marshall v. Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Co.
76 F. Supp. 378 (D. Delaware, 1948)
Crown Cork & Seal Co. v. Fankhanel
49 F. Supp. 611 (D. Maryland, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 F.2d 303, 17 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 141, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dinwiddie-v-st-louis-ofallon-coal-co-ca4-1933.