Grob v. Continental Machine Specialties, Inc.

283 N.W. 774, 204 Minn. 459, 40 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 503, 1939 Minn. LEXIS 588
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 10, 1939
DocketNo. 31,912.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 283 N.W. 774 (Grob v. Continental Machine Specialties, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grob v. Continental Machine Specialties, Inc., 283 N.W. 774, 204 Minn. 459, 40 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 503, 1939 Minn. LEXIS 588 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

Julius J. Olson, Justice.

. Defendants appeal from an order overruling their separate general demurrers to plaintiffs’ amended complaint, the court certifying the questions raised to be important and doubtful.

■We gather from the complaint the following facts: Plaintiffs are copartners; their business is that of manufacturing, marketing, and selling “continuous filing machines and band saws”; their *461 place of business, Grafton, Wisconsin. The corporate defendant is organized under the laws of this state and has its principal place of business in Minneapolis, where it is engaged in business similar to that of plaintiffs. Defendants Leighton A. and James W. Wilkie are its officers, Peterson its shop foreman, and all of them are “stockholders or otherwise financially interested in” the corporate defendant.

In September, 1933, plaintiffs made application to the United States Patent Office for a patent on improvements “described and designated as a continuous filing machine.” In August, 1935, they made a further application for a patent on the same kind of machine “with additional improvements added thereto and thereon.” They still are the owners and holders of whatever rights they may have under the applications mentioned. In March, 1931, a model was completed, tested, and found serviceable. Since then it has been manufactured and sold commercially to the public.

In 1932 or 1933 defendant Leighton Wilkie “for the first time learned of the subject matter involved in the inventions and applications for patents above referred to.” He thereupon entered “into a combination and conspiracy with the other defendants” for the purpose of obtaining samples or models, information, and data concerning the subject matter of these- inventions. This was done “for the purpose of deceiving, cheating and defrauding the plaintiffs and with the malicious intent” on his part and that of his coconspirators, “to acquire for himself * * * and for his use and benefit, and for the use and benefit of the other defendants * * * the use, rights, benefits, profits, patents and ownership of the subject matter conceived and invented by said plaintiffs.” In October, 1933, the corporate defendant purchased from plaintiffs one of these machines containing “the latest improvements.” Leighton Wilkie visited plaintiffs’ plant in March or April, 1934, and “requested and obtained an agency for the sale and distribution” of plaintiffs’ machines. He revisited their plant in June seeking “a better proposition in connection with his established agency.” The improvements referred to in the second- application were then disclosed to him and the machine demonstrated by one of plain *462 tiffs’ employes. In January, 1935, plaintiffs were informed of their employe’s demonstration. At that time Mr. Wilkie “requested that he he given a license by plaintiffs to manufacture and sell” a similar machine then being manufactured by his company. That request was refused. Wilkie thereafter “maliciously, wilfully, wrongfully, knowingly and with intent to cheat and defraud the plaintiffs and to obstruct the said plaintiffs from obtaining patents pursuant to the applications hereinbefore referred to, did, on or about * * * May, 1935, file an application” in the United States Patent Office asserting and claiming that he was “the first, original and sole inventor of the subject matter” plaintiffs had theretofore sought to have patented. This was all done by him “in furtherance of the conspiracy of the defendants to cheat, defraud and steal from the plaintiffs the inventions and right to patents legally belonging to them as first, sole, original and exclusive inventors” thereof. What is commonly known as an “interference” was thereupon declared by the patent office; “testimony was taken in behalf of both parties by the Examiner of Interferences at which time there appeared as witnesses on behalf of the defendant, Leighton A. Wilkie, the defendants, James W. Wilkie and Emil E. Peterson; that the taking of this testimony and the declaration of the interference proceedings were made necessary by reason of the false oaths contained in the two statements made by the defendant Leighton A. Wilkie.” All of the testimony offered by and in behalf of defendants at the hearings mentioned is claimed to have been “false and untrue, and that said testimony was given by said defendants acting as witnesses in said proceedings with the malicious intent then had and entertained” by them that the same be accepted and taken as true. No patent was issued to either party. The dispute is still pending. Plaintiffs as “the first, sole and original inventors” of the subject matter sought by their applications for patent, have been unnecessarily held up and delayed. As a consequence plaintiffs have incurred large items of expense in the way of attorneys’ fees, traveling expenses, printing briefs, and other items in an amount claimed to exceed $8,000. They further assert that as the proximate result of defendants’ fraudulent acts, the giving of false testimony by *463 them, all pursuant to the conspiracy mentioned, plaintiffs have sustained losses “to their business and a loss of profits from the non-issuance of the patents herein referred to” in the amount of $42,000. The relief sought is a money judgment for these items, $50,000.

Plaintiffs’ complaint when boiled down to its essential elements upon which damages are based amounts to this: Defendants have conspired together to steal plaintiffs’ “valuable property rights” in claimed inventions by them conceived and put to commercial use; that they have timely sought to have their inventions patented; that in furtherance of defendants’ conspiracy and while plaintiffs’ applications for patents were still pending, they, by means of fraud and perjury, brought into being an apparent fact issue, false in fact, thereby bringing about “a so-called interference” before that office; that the pretended issue of fact so raised is there pending and undetermined; “that regardless of whether or not a patent has issued,” they “still have a right to maintain this action on the theory on which it was commenced, viz., that of conspiracy.”

Under U. S. Const. art. I, § 8, it is provided that:

“The Congress shall have power:
“To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries; * * *
“To make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this constitution in the government of the United States, or in any department or officer thereof.”

By 28 USCA, § 41(7), it is provided that the district courts of the United States shall have original jurisdiction, “of all suits at law or in equity arising under the patent, the copyright, and the trade-mark laws.” Section 371, Id., provides:

“The jurisdiction vested in the courts of the United States in the cases and proceedings hereinafter mentioned, shall be exclusive of the courts of the several states: * * *
“Fifth. Of all cases arising under the patent-right, or copyright laws of the United States.”

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51 Cal. App. 3d 774 (California Court of Appeal, 1975)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
283 N.W. 774, 204 Minn. 459, 40 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 503, 1939 Minn. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grob-v-continental-machine-specialties-inc-minn-1939.