G & G Fishing Tools Service v. K & G Oil Tool & Service Co.

305 S.W.2d 637, 115 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 63, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2040
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 12, 1957
Docket6966
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 305 S.W.2d 637 (G & G Fishing Tools Service v. K & G Oil Tool & Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
G & G Fishing Tools Service v. K & G Oil Tool & Service Co., 305 S.W.2d 637, 115 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 63, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2040 (Tex. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

DAVIS, Justice.

K & G Oil Tool & Service Company, Inc., et al., hereinafter referred to as K & G, and John J. Kirby, II, plaintiffs-appellees, sued G & G Fishing Tools Service et al., hereinafter referred to as G & G, five other corporations, two partnerships, and nine individuals for damages for alleged theft of a trade secret and for injunction permanently enjoining the defendants from the use of the alleged trade secret. Judgment was rendered for appellees for damages in the sum of $22,000 and a permanent injunction was issued against several of the defendants. Suit as to the other defendants was dismissed during the trial. The remaining defendants-appellants appeal.

In 1951, appellee Kirby constructed a tool or device known and referred to as a “magnetic fishing tool.” An application for patent was made, and a license to manufacture the tool was issued by Kirby to K & G, which was incorporated about September 1951, for the purpose of manufacturing and leasing or renting the tool. During the latter part of 1951 and the early part of 1952, the tool was put on the open market and was used extensively in Texas, Oklahoma, and possibly other states. Early in March of 1952, K & G contacted a representative of G & G in Duncan, Oklahoma (G & G at that time having a well-established oil field fishing business), and made arrangements to lease a room or space from G & G at Duncan, Oklahoma, to store several of the magnetic fishing tools, and further made arrangements with G & G to sub-lease the magnetic fishing tool (which was labeled K & G even though the invention was by Kirby) on a percentage basis; G & G to retain 25% of any sum collected as rentals for use of the tool or tools.

The magnetic fishing tool manufactured by Kirby is a tubular-shaped device ranging in size from 3⅛ inches to 11½ inches in diameter, outside dimensions. It is so constructed that it can be attached to the end of a drill pipe used in drilling oil and gas wells. Inside the lower end of the tool is a core of Alnico metal which can be energized with a powerful quantity of magnetism. It was constructed for the purpose of fishing pieces of drill bits and other metal that might be broken off at the bottom of a well during the process of drilling oil and gas wells. Magnetic fishing tools were not new to the oil field drilling industry at the time of the construction of the tool which is the controversy of this lawsuit. The tool involved in this case was also constructed so it would permit circulation of drilling mud through the tool such as is done in rotary drill bits. Such circulation is as old as rotary drilling.

Kirby is not the inventor of Alnico metal. He did not discover the fact that Alnico metal could be highly energized with magnetism.

At the time K & G made a trade with G & G to store the magnetic fishing tool in G & G’s office in Duncan, Oklahoma, appellees contend that a contract was made whereby G & G would not break open the *639 K & G tool or attempt to duplicate it. Both Kirby and K & G emphatically deny that he or any representative of K & G confided the alleged secret of the tool to either of the defendants or a representative of defendants.

After March and prior to August 15, 1952, a representative of G & G approached a representative of K 8s G and demanded a higher percentage of the rentals of the K & G tool, and informed K & G that unless a higher percentage of the rentals was paid to G & G, then G & G would manufacture and use its own magnetic fishing tools. K & G declined the higher percentage and in September 1952, G & G placed its first magnetic fishing tools upon the market that could be attached to the end of a drill pipe and permit circulation as in rotary drilling. A representative of K & G was notified of the fact and Kirby, the alleged inventor of the magnetic fishing tool, immediately went from Houston to Odessa, Texas, and there saw one of the G & G tools. Kirby testified upon the trial of the case that he examined the G & G tool without breaking it down and used only a flashlight and a piece of wire to examine the G & G tool and could tell from such examination that the G & G tool was exactly like the K & G tool upon which Kirby had a patent claim pending. The record is not too clear, but it seems that appellees knew that G & G was working to manufacture a magnetic fishing tool to be attached to the end of a drill, as early as June, 1952. At no time did K & G or Kirby say or do anything in opposition to the manufacture and use of a magnetic fishing tool by G & G until August 20, 1953, the date their suit was filed. They knew at all times that more and more such magnetic fishing tools were being manufactured and placed on the open market by G & G. Appellees also knew that the manufacture of such tools involved expenditure of large sums of money.

Prior to the time that G & G commenced the manufacture and use of magnetic fishing tools on the end of drill pipe and permitting circulation, K & G had already placed its tool on the open market, and widely and extensively advertised the same and displayed it in different oil shows.

Among the defenses of the appellants was: (1) The K & G tool had been placed on the open market prior to the time G & G commenced manufacturing and using such magnetic fishing tool and that the secret of the K & G fishing tool, if any, was lost by the marketing of same; (2) the K & G tool could be copied by an ordinary machinist without breaking it down; (3) all the secret, if any, of the K & G tool was contained within the tool itself and it was not necessary to acquire any knowledge from the alleged inventor to duplicate the tool; and (4) the appellees were guilty of laches in not taking action immediately, if any action they had, to stop appellants from making and using such magnetic fishing tool and expending large sums of money.

There was neither pleading nor proof on the part of appellees that would define with any degree of exactness the trade secret the appellants are alleged to have stolen.

In response to special issues the jury found that: (1) Appellants agreed not to disassemble the K & G magnetic fishing tool; (2) it was understood that the purpose of the agreement was to guard against anyone’s determining the internal construction of the magnetic fishing tool by examining the interior thereof; (3) G & G, prior to August 15, 1952, disassembled the K & G magnetic fishing tool for the purpose of making examination thereof; (4) the disassembling of such tool by G & G was for the purpose of examining the interior construction thereof; (5) the disassembling of such tool by G & G was for the purpose of making a similar tool; (6) G & G used the information obtained from this disassembling of the K & G magnetic fishing tool to make one substantially the same as the K & G magnetic fishing tool; (7) the magnetic fishing tool made by G & G is substantially the same as the one then being used by K & G and their affiliated interests; *640

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Related

K & G Oil Tool & Service Co. v. G & G Fishing Tool Service
314 S.W.2d 782 (Texas Supreme Court, 1958)
K & G Tool & Service Co. v. G G Fishing Tool Service
314 S.W.2d 782 (Texas Supreme Court, 1958)
Hyde Corporation v. Huffines
314 S.W.2d 763 (Texas Supreme Court, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
305 S.W.2d 637, 115 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 63, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2040, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-g-fishing-tools-service-v-k-g-oil-tool-service-co-texapp-1957.