Florence Sewing Mach. Co. v. Singer Manuf'g Co.

9 F. Cas. 310, 4 Fish. Pat. Cas. 348, 8 Blatchf. 177, 1871 U.S. App. LEXIS 1793, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 310
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedFebruary 4, 1871
DocketCase No. 4,885
StatusPublished

This text of 9 F. Cas. 310 (Florence Sewing Mach. Co. v. Singer Manuf'g Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Florence Sewing Mach. Co. v. Singer Manuf'g Co., 9 F. Cas. 310, 4 Fish. Pat. Cas. 348, 8 Blatchf. 177, 1871 U.S. App. LEXIS 1793, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 310 (circtsdny 1871).

Opinion

WOODRUFF, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff is a licensee of three associated companies, namely, the defendant, the Wheeler and Wilson Manufacturing Company and the Grover and Baker Sewing Machine Company. By the terms of the license, the plaintiff agreed to pay a license fee or royalty of five dollars for each machine made and sold in the United States, and two dollars for each machine exported; and, under the license, the plaintiff' was making and selling machines to such a number, at the time when the bill herein was filed, that the amount of fees payable at the' specified rates was nearly twenty-five thousand dollars a quarter, or nearly one hundred thousand dollars a year, payable in quarterly payments, on rendering quarterly accounts of the machines manufactured and sold in each quarter. The license contained a provision, that the associated companies should not license the making of a dropfeed shuttle sewing machine using two threads, at a less patent rent, without a corresponding reduction in the patent rent thereby reserved; and, ■ also, a reservation to the licensers, of the right to terminate the license, at their option, on thirty days’ notice, for any breach of the agreement by the plaintiff.

The bill of complaint herein alleges, that the licensers gave such a license to a third party as operated to reduce the plaintiff’s rent or fee to forty cents for each machine; that the plaintiff has paid to the said associates $03,912, since the right to the reduction arose; and that the larger part thereof was paid in ignorance of the fact, and the residue under a protest that it was not due, but was paid in order to prevent a revocation of the license, which was threatened, and which would, as the plaintiff alleged, be very injurious to its business. The bill prays a decree establishing the plaintiff's right to a reduction in the rent or license fee, and directing a repayment of the sums overpaid, and that the defendant be enjoined from giving notice of an option to terminate the license, and from attempting to collect the sums reserved as rent or license fee by the terms of the license.

After the filing of the bill, the plaintiff applied to this court, by motion, for an injunction, pendente lite, to restrain the defendant according to the prayer of the bill, having offered, in the bill, to deposit with such receiver as the court should name, all such sums as the patent rent, under the terms of the license, would amount to, for each qunr-[311]*311ter which should expire during the pendency of this suit, at the times when the same would fall due, the said sums to be held by such receiver subject to the order of this court, and to await the final decree in this suit. Thereupon, on the 8th of January, 1S70, the court ordered that an injunction issue, restraining the defendant, until the further order of this court, from giving notice to the plaintiff of a termination of the license, and from attempting to collect license fees or patent rent thereunder, on condition, “that the plaintiff deposit with the clerk of this court all moneys which shall become due under said license, according to the full patent rent reserved therein, on or before the tenth days of each and every January, April, July and October, * * * said moneys to be deposited by the clerk with the United States Trust Company, * * * on interest, to the credit of the suit, and subject to the order of this court.” An injunction was issued in pursuance of such order, addressed to the defendant, enjoining such defendant as in the order directed; and, in performance of the condition prescribed in the order, and under a subsequent modification thereof reducing the rate of fees, the plaintiff has paid to the clerk of this court, from quarter to quarter, sums which, including the quarter ending on the 1st of October, 1870, amount to $70,793, which is now on deposit, at interest, as directed.

The cause was brought to a hearing upon pleadings and proofs, and, in December, 1870, the decision of the court thereon, was made — Florence Sewing Mach. Co. v. Singer Manuf’g Co. [Case No. 4,884] — that the bill should be dismissed on two grounds — first, that no case was made appealing to the jurisdiction of a court of equity, or requiring the interference of the court to determine the rights of the parties; and, secondly, that the relief sought by the bill could not be granted in a suit to which the Wheeler and Wilson Manufacturing Company and the Grover and Baker Sewing Machine Company were not parties. The court, therefore, declined to pass upon the merits of the controversy, and the question whether the license fee or rent payable by the plaintiff has been affected or reduced by the acts of the associated companies since the license was granted, remains wholly undetermined. Upon the publication of the decision of the court, and before a final decree has been settled and entered, the plaintiff has applied for an order that the money paid to the clerk, and now on deposit as above stated, be repaid to the plaintiff; and, on the other hand, the defendant has made a cross motion or application, asserting title to the money as in truth the proceeds of the use of the patents covered by the license, and profits made by such- use by the plaintiff during the period in which the defendant has been, by the injunction of the court, restrained of its legal right to revoke the license, and that, the plaintiff having failed to establish, in this suit, the right to a reduction of the rent or fee, the defendant is entitled, according to the just construction of the condition upon which the plaintiff took the injunction, to have the money paid over for the use and benefit of the defendant and the companies thus associated with the defendant, in satisfaction, pro tanto, of their claim to license fees while the court has held them • in restraint, and thereby protected the plaintiff in the use of their patents.

The question presented by the circumstances above detailed and by the motion of the parties respectively, is novel and embarrassing. So far as we have derived aid from counsel, and so far as my examination has extended, it is without precedent The money was undoubtedly paid to the clerk, and made subject to the order of the court, in the expectation that the court would, in this suit, determine, by its final decree, upon the pleadings and proofs, whether the plaintiff was still bound to pay the full license fees or rent reserved to the defendant and the other associated companies, or whether, on the other hand, the plaintiff was entitled to retain the license on paying the reduced rent which the plaintiff insisted was alone due, and in the expectation that the money, paid in, would thereupon be paid over to the defendant, for the use of the associated licens-ers, or would be apportioned between them and the plaintiff, according to such rights as were found to arise out of an adjudged reduction of the license fee.

The money paid in was the money of the plaintiff.

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9 F. Cas. 310, 4 Fish. Pat. Cas. 348, 8 Blatchf. 177, 1871 U.S. App. LEXIS 1793, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florence-sewing-mach-co-v-singer-manufg-co-circtsdny-1871.