Dry Ice Corporation of America v. Josephson

43 F.2d 408, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1300
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 5, 1930
Docket4883
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 43 F.2d 408 (Dry Ice Corporation of America v. Josephson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dry Ice Corporation of America v. Josephson, 43 F.2d 408, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1300 (E.D.N.Y. 1930).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

This is an action brought by Dry Ice Corporation of America, to compel the transfer by the defendant Josephson to it of certain inventions made by him, as they allege he is bound to do by the terms of a contract made by Herman H.. Moore and Walter S. Josephson to Prest-Air Coloration, plaintiff’s predecessor.

The plaintiff is a Delaware corporation. Herman H. Moore is a resident of Canada, and has never been served with process, and the court has not acquired jurisdiction as to him.

The defendant Walter S. Josephs.on is a resident of this district, and has appeared and answered, and the action has proceeded against him alone.

The defendant Josephson is an engineer and was engaged in the general practice of that profession from 1912 to 1922.

Herman H. Moore is a-doctor of medicine, who at all the times mentioned herein resided and still resides in Canada.

On an application filed in January, 1920, by Wallace Ateheson Delahey and George Whitefield Delahey, a patent subsequently issued on the so-called power bottle, items 1 and 3 of schedule A of the contract on which the suit is based.

This power bottle patent was in the Deco Metal Products Company of Toronto, and had been commercialized to some extent when in 1922 the said Dr. Herman H. Moore acquired' from said company, for $5,000, an option to purchase that patent for $50,000.

Dr. Moore then met the defendant Josephson, who was a consulting engineer as well as engaged in manufacturing, and consulted Mr. Josephson about that patent, and Mr. Josephson, after testing the bottle for about two months, was so impressed with the commercial possibilities of the patent that he joined Dr. Moore in the purchase of said patent, in Dr. Moore’s name, for $50,000.

On May 23, 1922, Mr. Josephson and Dr. Moore, having acquired said patent, formed the Prest-Air Corporation.

*410 They did not transfer the said patent to the Prest-Air Corporation, but Dr. Moore entered into a license agreement with the Prest-Air Corporation covering said patent, in consideration of a minimum royalty of $50,000 a'year.

Mr. Josephson and Dr. Moore then formed a corporation known as M. & J. Interests, Inc., to which corporation Dr. Moore transferred the said patent and the license contract with Prest-Air Corporation.

All of the capital stock of the Prest-Air Corporation was issued to Mr. Josephson, Dr. Moore, and M. & J. Interests, Ine., in consideration of the granting of said license to the said corporation, and less .than one-half of said capital stoek was by them donated back to Prest-Air Corporation and subsequently sold by Mr. Josephson to the public to raise capital.

The stoek of M. & J.' Interests, Ine., was not sold to the public, but was kept by Mr. Josephson and Dr. Moore for themselves.

The situation then was that the founders of the Prest-Air Corporation, Mr. Josephson and Dr. Moore, were entitled through the M. & J. Interests, Ine., to receive $50,000 a year minimum royalty for the use of the said power bottle patent.

Some of these royalties were paid, but the amount was not shown.

The so-called, power bottle patent of Del-ahey was for an improvement <in tire in-flators, fire extinguishers, and the like, and it was stated in the specification that, “The objects of the invention are to permit of a gas being stored under pressure and being utilized when desired.”

The gas with which the bottle was operated was liquid carbon dioxide CO2, and from the very beginning the development plan was concerned with three phases of the use of carbon dioxide: First, the use of the expansion force of the compressed element as a source of power; second, the use of the chemical properties of the elements when released from compression; third, the use as a refrigerant of the low temperature developed in the process of expansion.

The power bottle was the foundation on which the development of the Prest-Air Corporation was based. Dr. Moore, Mr. Josephson, or M. & J. Interests, Inc., accumulated other devices, but they did not transfer them to Prest-Air Corporation.

On February 19, 1923, M. & J. Interests, Inc., granted a license to Prest-Air Corporation. Mr. Josephson and Dr. Moore held other inventions, in the name of one or the other of them, for which they did not even grant a license to Prest-Air Corporation. .

As early as October 3, 1922, Mr. Josephson filed an application, which was assigned to Dr. Moore on November 9, 1922, for an improvement in refrigerating " devices, “whereby the compressed gas container which is provided for other purposes, such as the inflation of tires, etc., may also be used for the purpose of a readily portable refrigerating device.”

The container referred to was the power bottle of the Delahey patent.

Dr. Moore did not assign that applies tion to Prest-Air Corporation, or to'M. & J. Interests, Ine., and therefore it was not included in the license from M. & J. Interests, Ine., to Prest-Air Corporation.

Notwithstanding its affinity with the power bottle, Dr. Moore held it in his name until January, 1924, when he assigned it to the B. M. J. Utilities, Inc., and Prest-Air Corporation acquired it through the acquisition of the stock of B. M. J. Utilities, Ino. It is item 17 of schedule A of the contract in suit (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 4).

On January 18, 1923, an application was filed by Mr. Josephson “to make practical the use of the liquefied gas as a refrigerant by thermostatically regulating the escape of' the gas from the containers in the novel manner hereinafter described.”

Mr. Josephson did not assign this application to Prest-Air Corporation or M. & J. Interests, Ine., and it was not included in the license from M. & J. Interests, Ine., to Prest-Air Corporation, but in 1924 it was assigned to B. M. J. Utilities, Ine., and came to Prest-Air Corporation through its acquisition of the stoek of B. M. J. Utilities, Ine. It is item 18 of schedule A of the contract in suit (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 4).

On April -26, 1923, Mr. Josephson filed an application for an improved thermostatic valve, to be used in connection with a standard container of liquid- carbon dioxide, “whereby the use of such a liquid as a refrigerant may be more efficiently accomplished.”

This application was not assigned to Prest-Air Corporation or M. & J. Interests, Inc., and it was not included in the license from M. & J. Interests, Ine., to Prest-Air Corporation, but was in 1924 assigned to B. M. J. Utilities, Ine.,. and came to Prest-Air Corporation through its acquisition of B. M, J. Utilities stock. It is item 19 of schedule *411 A of the contract in, suit (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 4).

On February 1, 1923, Mr. Josephson entered into a five-year employment contract with Prest-Air Corporation. Notwithstanding the fact that this contract recited that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
43 F.2d 408, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dry-ice-corporation-of-america-v-josephson-nyed-1930.