Elle v. Babbitt

488 P.2d 440, 259 Or. 590, 1971 Ore. LEXIS 413
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 488 P.2d 440 (Elle v. Babbitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elle v. Babbitt, 488 P.2d 440, 259 Or. 590, 1971 Ore. LEXIS 413 (Or. 1971).

Opinion

McAllister, j.

This suit for an accounting was brought against Beall Pipe and Tank Corporation by three partners of a partnership known as The Pipe Machinery Co., for the benefit of all the partners thereof. The other 16 partners were named as defendants. The dispute arose out of the leasing of two pipe mills by the partnership to Beall and the termination of the lease. Beall appeals from the decree of the trial court.

Beall Pipe and Tank Corporation is a family-owned corporation, which for many years has been engaged in making pipe in Portland. John E. Beall *594 was president and chief executive officer of the corporation and owned about 55 percent of its stock. His cousin, Franklin Beall, was the executive vice president and owned about 40 percent of the corporate stock. We will refer herein to Beall Pipe and Tank Corporation as the corporation or as Beall and to the individual Bealls by their full names. We will refer to The Pipe Machinery Co. as the partnership.

Beall formerly manufactured pipe by the “can” method. In 1953, Beall decided that it should acquire a modern tube mill for making welded steel pipe. In such a mill a continuous sheet of steel is fed into a machine which gradually bends the steel into a circle and welds it into a tube which is then cut into desired lengths. The rolls and guides which bend the sheet steel into a tube are known as “tooling.” Pipe of various dimensions can be made by changing the tooling.

Beall did not have enough capital to buy a tube mill and John Beall proposed that a partnership be organized to buy the tube mill and lease it to the corporation. The partnership was formed on April 1, 1954, and was comprised of John Beall, Franklin Beall and five employees of the corporation. Later in 1954, eight additional partners were added, all of whom were Beall employees, except W. H. Kipp, Jr., who was a Beall customer. At a later date, W. H. Kipp, Sr., became a partner and there were other minor changes in the partnership personnel, but those changes have no bearing on the issues in this case.

The first pipe mill was built in the Beall plant by the Monarch Forge Company of Portland and paid for by the partnership. As built, the mill was designed to make pipe from 6 to 16 inches in diameter. The *595 •mill was leased by the partnership to Beall for a royalty of one cent per inch of diameter for each lineal foot of pipe produced by the mill. A written lease was entered into under date of April 1, 1954, with an initial term of one year giving Beall the option to extend the lease from year to year for 10 years.

Later the partnership purchased a second mill known as the “through-put” mill designed for the manufacture of pipe from 16 to 42 inches in diameter and leased it to the corporation. A new lease covering both mills was executed on April 1, 1957, which provided for the payment of royalties for the pipe produced by both machines according to the original formula of one cent per inch of diameter for each lineal foot of pipe. The lease also provided:

“Lessee also agrees to pay to Lessor an additional rental in the sum of $500.00 per month for the use of the pipe mill designed to fabricate pipe in the sizes from 16" to 42" [the “through-put” mill].”

Sometime prior to April 1, 1965, Beall decided to terminate its lease of the partnership mills and offered to buy both mills from the partnership. The offer was refused by some of the partners and while the parties were negotiating about the price a new lease was executed dated April 1, 1965. The new lease reduced the royalties for the use of each mill to .775 cents per inch of diameter for each foot of pipe. It made no provision for the $500 a month “additional rental” and expired by its terms on April 1,1966.

When Beall’s final offer to purchase the mills was rejected, the corporation decided to build a new mill. The new mill was not ready on April 1,1966, and by oral agreement the corporation continued to use *596 the partnerships mills until August 1, 1966, when Beall’s own mill, referred to in the record as the replacement mill, was ready for use.

There is little dispute about the foregoing facts. Additional facts will be discussed in connection with the various assignments of error.

The first three assignments of error concern the plaintiffs’ charges that in building its own pipe mill, Beall copied the original partnership 6 to 16 inch mill and should be required to account to the partnership for the value of the design and engineering which was copied. The trial court found that the copying had taken place and awarded the partnership $27,000 on that account. Beall contends that the trial court erred in finding that the corporation copied the partnership mill and that, in any event, it was entitled to copy the mill if it wished. Beall also objects to the amount awarded the partnership on account of the alleged copying.

There was a great deal of evidence introduced at trial on the issue of the copying of the partnership mill, and much of it was conflicting. We agree with the trial court that the weight of the evidence shows some copying of specifications and measurements. We turn, then, to the question of whether Beall had a right to use this information.

Plaintiffs rely on two basic arguments. The first, derived from Kamin v. Kuhnau et al, 232 Or 139, 374 P2d 912 (1962), is that the engineering and design information was made available to Beall under circumstances raising a duty on its part not to use that information for its own advantage. Such a duty was found to exist in Kamin, on two bases. First, the information imparted to Kuhnau consisted of Kamin’s ideas for a new invention. It later developed that *597 Kamin’s idea had been anticipated by others, bnt was not yet known in the Oregon marketing area. The decision holds that for information to be confidential and protected from appropriation by another it need not be of “patentable novelty”. The court nevertheless found it significant that the new idea was not known locally and that both the plaintiff and the defendant apparently thought it completely original. The second basis was the relationship of the parties— Kamin, the inventor, hired Kuhnau to assist in the development of the idea and the subsequent manufacture of the resulting product. In this setting, this court held that the defendant’s use of the information for his own benefit, by manufacturing and selling a product based on plaintiff’s idea, was unfair to the plaintiff and should be enjoined.

In the present case plaintiffs have conceded that there was nothing in the nature of a trade secret or invention involved. The principles used in the design and engineering of pipe mills are known throughout the world. The original mill owned by the partnership was unique only in the sense that each installation of a pipe mill requires its own engineering to install the mill in the location and plant provided for its use. Any copying of the original mill would have saved the corporation money which would otherwise have to be expended in engineering and design costs, but it would not have been an appropriation of concepts or ideas not generally known.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
488 P.2d 440, 259 Or. 590, 1971 Ore. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elle-v-babbitt-or-1971.