Gas Tool Patents Corporation v. Mould

133 F.2d 815, 56 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 357, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3898
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 3, 1943
Docket8011
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 133 F.2d 815 (Gas Tool Patents Corporation v. Mould) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gas Tool Patents Corporation v. Mould, 133 F.2d 815, 56 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 357, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3898 (7th Cir. 1943).

Opinion

SPARKS, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendant in an action for *816 specific performance of a contract pertaining to inventions and patents relating to gas hammers. By its action, appellant sought disclosure of all inventions and improvements made by appellee in the field; the transfer and assignment of all such inventions and patents to appellant; an injunction to prevent further violation of the contract relied upon; and an accounting of all damages and profits resulting from the acts complained of.

The contract sued upon was executed in 1927, following a series of transactions by which appellee, J. W. Graf, and C. B. Duffey had obtained an exclusive license to manufacture and sell devices made under two patents pertaining to a gas hammer and an air-cooled cylinder, which had been issued in 1917 and 1923, respectively, to one Saunders. Under the terms of a contract executed in 1926, appellee and Graf had agreed to pay Saunders and one Hendricks, joint owner of the patents, $10,000 for title to the patents, acquiring upon payment of $500, the exclusive license to manufacture and sell the devices as long as they continued to manufacture them or until they became the owners of the patents. This $500 was the only amount in fact paid under this agreement. In 1927, appellant was organized as a holding company for the patents, and appellee, Graf and one Duffey, who had paid $3,000 for a 10% interest in the patents, executed the contract sued upon as follows: “In consideration of the issuance to the undersigned of one thousand shares of the capital stock of Gas Tool Patents Corporation, a Delaware corporation, receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, the undersigned J. W. Graf, J. A. Mould and C. B. Duffey hereby assign, transfer and set over unto said Gas Tool Patents Corporation, its successors and assigns, all the rights of the parties of the second part under that certain contract entered into July 23, 1926, by and between Samuel R. Saunders and Joseph Hendricks as parties of the first part, and J. W. Graf and J. A. Mould as parties of the second part, including all the right, title and interest of the undersigned in and licenses under certain letters patent of the United States, No. 1237827 for a gas hammer, and No. 1463595 for a cooling system for air-cooled motors, also Canadian letters patent No. 228089, and Mexican letters patent No. 21116, on a cooling system for air-cooled motors, as set forth in said contract of July 23, 1926, it being the intention hereof to substitute said * * * (appellant) as party of the second part in said contract as fully as though it had been named as second party therein when originally executed; and upon the same consideration the undersigned further assign * * * unto said Gas Tool Patents Corporation any and all inventions in which they or any of them may have an interest, whether patented or unpatented, relating to the subject-matter of any of said patents or improvements thereon, including any invention or improvement that they or any of them may make in the future relating thereto, and hereby agree that they will upon request from time to time in the future execute such further assignments and conveyances as may be necessary to vest the entire title to any such inventions and the patents therefor in the said Gas Tool Patents Corporation * * * '' (Our italics.)

Appellee was elected president of the holding company. He was also president of the Milwaukee Gas Tool Corporation, organized at the same time, for the purpose of manufacturing under the license agreement. He was a mechanical engineer and had worked on various types of internal combustion engines since 1908, obtaining patents on two devices invented by him. He was employed as engineer of the Milwaukee Corporation from July 1927, until its adjudication in bankruptcy in September 1928. During this period a new model of gas hammer had been developed by it. Following the bankruptcy of the manufacturing corporation, a new one, the Rodax Manufacturing Company, had been organized with appellee as its president and engineer, and holder of 51;% of its stock. It was agreed that Rodax would continue the development of the gas hammer, paying all costs, and applying royalties due appellant on such costs. In 1930, Rodax refused to furnish any additional funds for development, and appellee then sold his Rodax stock to one Jones of that company which thereupon discharged appellee as engineer. A series of patent applications , covering all improvements worked on by appellee up to the time of his discharge were duly assigned by him to appellant and the patents were duly issued thereon to that corporation.

After appellee left the employ of Rodax he remained unemployed for four years. He continued to hold the office of president of appellant until January, 1935, although his only activity as such was to preside at the annual meeting, and he did *817 not even know of his re-election in January 1935, for the reason that it was brought about in his absence by proxy voted by a third party. He continued to drop into the Rodax plant frequently, and discussed with Jones- and one Frantz, an officer of appellant, an idea he had for utilizing a patent for a pressure riveter involving an internal combustion engine operated by an external spring. Both assured him they could do nothing about developing it.

In 1934, in order to enable Jones to sell his stock in Rodax to one Bard, who also wanted the stock in appellant, he sold the latter stock to Jones for $3,000, and Jones agreed to obtain a release from any obligation he might still have to appellant. Although Jones was the majority stockholder in appellant after this transfer, until the sale to Bard, the release was never delivered to appellee.

Appellee, otherwise unemployed, worked on his device from June 1931 to 1935. In July 1935, he called on Boddinghouse, an employee of the Barco Company, of which Bard was sole owner, and showed him the drawing of his device, then described as a new hammer. Boddinghouse took the matter up with Bard who wrote to appellee, in July 1935, that they were not much impressed with Boddinghouse’s outline, but that if appellee wanted to come to Chicago (from Milwaukee) he would have their engineers go over it with him. Appellee replied that he could not come to Chicago, but that he had explained fully to Boddinghouse. Hearing nothing further from Bard, two months later he started work on the final development of his hammer, as illustrated by a drawing completed in January 1936, and a model constructed thereafter. Late in 1936, Boddinghouse, acting under instructions from Bard, called on appellee in Milwaukee and asked to see the hammer, suggesting during their lengthy conversation that he thought Bard would be willing to pay for it.

May 19, 1937, by letter signed in the name of appellant by Bard, demand was made for the immediate assignment of all inventions pertaining to gas hammers and all improvements, patent applications and patents concerning the same, and also that appellee cease the manufacture and sale and the offering for sale of gas hammers embodying any of the inventions covered by the agreement of February 1927. In October 1937, appellee sent his final drawing and his patent application to appellant’s attorney, and they were not returned until February 1938.

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133 F.2d 815, 56 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 357, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gas-tool-patents-corporation-v-mould-ca7-1943.