Gould v. Gerkin

162 N.E. 701, 28 Ohio App. 309, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 646, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 347
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 19, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 162 N.E. 701 (Gould v. Gerkin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gould v. Gerkin, 162 N.E. 701, 28 Ohio App. 309, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 646, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 347 (Ohio Ct. App. 1927).

Opinions

Biohabds, J.

The original case was commenced by John D. Gerken to recover damages growing out of a contract of sale of all the corporate stock of the Marshall-Gerken Company. The trial resulted in' a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $11,856.65, and •this proceeding is brought to secure a reversal of that judgment. A jury was impaneled and substantially all of the evidence adduced in the presence of the jury, but, ultimately, by agreement of parties, a jury was waived and the case submitted to the judge to determine the facts and the law, although the action was one at law and not in equity.

The principal business of the company was the manufacture of a binding post, which is a device used in radio sets. Substantially all of the capital stock of the Marshall-Gerken Company was owned by John D. Gerken, Herman C. Kuebler, H. C. Kuebler, Jr., and Theodore B. Gerken, and they entered into a contract with Harry M. Gould, plaintiff in error, which bears date of January —, 1925, for the sale to him of all the stock of that company. The material parts of that contract are as follows:

“In consideration of this agreement and the delivery of said stock within the time hereinbefore mentioned, said Harry M. Gould agrees to and hereby does assume the liabilities and indebtedness of said company and agrees to save said stockholders harmless upon the same. Said total liabilities and outstanding indebtedness having been represented to said Harry M. Gould to be not in excess of twenty-one thousand dollars ($21,000.00), payable in the *311 nature of bank loans and accounts payable in the amount of five thousand seven hundred thirty-eight dollars and twenty-eight qents ($5,738.28).

“As an inducement in the purchase of this stock, it ,has been warranted by the undersigned stockholders that the assets of said company are as follows: Inventory (local) $2,600.00, inventory (Scranton) $6,614.25, accounts receivable $11,939.74, cash $986.47, as of January 27, 1925.

“In consideration of the foregoing agreement on the part of said Harry M. Gould, the undersigned stockholders further warrant and guarantee the payment to said company of all of the accounts receivable, in the amount of eleven thousand nine hundred thirty-nine dollars and seventy-four cents ($11,939.74), above mentioned, hereby representing and warranting that all of the said accounts are bona fide accounts receivable and that the debtors are solvent and of good credit rating.”

The parties all understood that the $21,000 of indebtedness of the Marshall-Gerken Company was owing to the Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Company and that Herman C. Kuebler and John D. Gerken were liable upon the notes representing that indebtedness. It was desired by all the parties that' this indebtedness to the bank should be • extended from time to time, but the bank was unwilling to accept Gould as its debtor. In order, therefore, to effectuate an arrangement for extending the indebtedness from time to time, a contract was made by which Herman C. Kuebler and John D. Gerken guaranteed to the bank the indebtedness and such renewals of the notes representing the indebtedness as might thereafter be made. That contract of guaranty *312 bears the date of February 19, 1925, but was manifestly executed on the same day that the contract of sale of the corporate stock was signed.

Upon the execution of the contract the stock of the Marshall-Gerken Company was delivered to Gould, and-thereupon he took possession of the assets of the Marshall-Gerken Company and conducted the business, paying from the assets various sums upon the indebtedness to the bank until April 12, 1926, at which time the indebtedness was reduced to $16,292.08. On that date Herman C. Kuebler and John U. Gerken, guarantors on the indebtedness to the bank, paid the same by executing their own individual notes to the bank, whereupon the bank canceled and surrendered the notes of the MarshallGerken Company, which it had held. Claim is made that this did not constitute a payment of the obligations which the bank had held against the company, but we have no difficulty in reaching, the conclusion that the transaction amounted to a payment of that indebtedness.

On June 3, 1926, Herman C. Kuebler assigned to John D. Gerken all his claim against Harry M. Gould arising out of the transactions, and on July 1,1926, this action was brought by Gerken to recover the amount which he and Kuebler had been compelled to pay the bank.

The amended answer set. up numerous defenses. Among these was a claim of misrepresentation in the execution of the contract, resulting in the claimed rescission thereof by Gould. The averment of the amended answer in that respect is that the “four stockholders represented to defendant that said binding post was not a patentable device and that *313 the Marshall-Gerken Company was, and would continue to be, free to manufacture the same without actual or apparent infringement upon any other patent, and relying wholly upon these representations, defendant entered into said contract. ’

The bill of exceptions discloses that, when negotiations were pending for the sale, inquiry was made by Gould of Theodore Gerken in regard to the existence of a patent for the binding post which the company was manufacturing, and that Gerken showed Gould the correspondence which had passed between the company and Messrs. Owen & Owen, patent attorneys, relating to the binding post, and this correspondence disclosed that the device was not patentable, at which time Gerken stated to Gould it was not a patentable device. Gould on this occasion evidently learned from this correspondence as much about the patentability of the device as Gerken knew. It is true that the right to a patent depends on the existence of certain facts and the application of the patent law to those facts. But a statement that a given device is or is not patentable must be a matter of opinion, and the falsity of such representations would not afford ground for avoiding a contract. Dillman v. Nadlehoffer, 119 Ill., 567, 7 N. E., 88; Rawson v. Harger, 48 Iowa, 269; Reeves v. Corning, (C. C.), 51 F., 774.

So far as the representation that the purchaser was free to manufacture the device was concerned, that statement was apparently true at the time it was made, but the portion of the representation that the purchaser would continue to be free to manufacture the device was necessarily a representation as *314 to future events, and, even if false, would not lay the foundation for an action for misrepresentation.

There is another aspect to this branch of the case. A few months after the execution of the contract Gould received notice from Philadelphia that a patent had been issued to one Hugh H. Eby on a certain “improvement in binding posts,” and was threatened with litigation unless the manufacture of the Marshall-Gerken binding posts was stopped.

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Bluebook (online)
162 N.E. 701, 28 Ohio App. 309, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 646, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gould-v-gerkin-ohioctapp-1927.