Hartje v. Vulcanized Fibre Co.

44 F. 648, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 1914
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Delaware
DecidedOctober 18, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 44 F. 648 (Hartje v. Vulcanized Fibre Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartje v. Vulcanized Fibre Co., 44 F. 648, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 1914 (circtdel 1890).

Opinion

Wales, J.

This bill is filed for a discovery, an accounting, and for a decree to compel the payment of royalties claimed to be due and payable for the use of certain patent-rights, which were formerly the property of the complainants, and by sundry mesne assignments came into the possession of the defendant, subject to the payment of the royalties now sued for. The patents referred to cover improvements for treating paper pulp and vegetable fibre substances in the manufacture of what are known as “vulcanized fibrous articles.” The pleadings put in issue the title and ownership of each one of the complainants in or to the royalties which are the subject-matter of the present suit, and by the stipulation of counsel this is the only question now to be decided, leaving the scope and limitation «of any account that maybe decreed to bo settled hereafter.

The answer denies that Waldemar A. Schmidt had any legal or equitable right or interest in any of the patents or royalties mentioned in the bill, at the time of bringing this suit, and alleges that what was known as the Schmidt interest in the patents had been assigned to the defendant before that time. The evidence shows that Waldemar A. Schmidt derived his right and interest in the most important and valuable of the patents by and under a declaration of trust made by August Hartje, that the latter held the patents therein mentioned in trust for the Pittsburgh Manufacturing Company and Waldemar A. Schmidt in equal shares. It further appears that August Hartje, acting as trustee, and with the consent of his cedvis que trustent, sold and assigned the right to use the trust patents to third persons, through whom they carne into the possession of the defendant, on terms and conditions set out in a contract of assignment dated June 30, 1873. This contract fixed the rate of royalties to be paid for the use of the trust patents, and provided that any improvements in said inventions, made by the assignees, should be secured and patented for the joint benefit of the contracting parties. The patents thus assigned were No. 61,267, dated July 12, 1867; No. 113,454, dated April 4, 1870; and No. 114,880, dated May 16, 1871. The contract of June 30, 1878, was supplemented by another one between the same parties, made the 20th of November, 1873, and by which the first contract was modified and altered. The assignees of the trust patents having found it necessary, in order to secure greater protection in their business, [650]*650to buy other patents from Edmund S. Hanna. it was agreed by the supplemental contract that all patents which had already been purchased from Hanna, or which should thereafter be purchased from him, should be the joint property of the parties to these two contracts. E. S. Hanna, on November 14, 1873, had assigned and transferred to parties under whom the defendant claims, all patents and parts of patents held by him either as'inventor or assignee, and all other patents for which he may ' make application thereafter, any of which shall relate to the methods of treating paper, paper pulp, or other vegetable fibrous substances, or any articles made from these substances, or any mechanical devices for working the same, reserving certain royalties to be divided equally between' the said Hanna, August Hartje, trustee, and the assignees of the said patents. On June 7,1880, Waldemar A. Schmidt assigned to A. T. Schmidt (his father) “all my interest, right, title, and claim of, in, and to those three patents,’’etc., referring to the trust patents, and specifying their numbers and dates. On the 15th of October, 1880, A. T. Schmidt assigned ‘his interest in the three trust patents to the defendant for and in consideration of certain money payments, stated in the agreement between them of that date. On March 26,1884, in the court of common pleas, No. 1, of Allegheny county, Pennsylvania, in the suit of A. T. Schmidt, assignee of W. A. Schmidt, against August Hartje, it was adjudged and decreed, inter alia, as follows:

“That the trust heretofore existing as set forth in the bill of complaint be, and the same is hereby, declared to be determined and fully ended; and that the said August Hartje, by good and sufficient assignments or instruments of writing, convey the one-half interest in the patents held by him in trust as set forth in the bill to the said plaintiff.” ■

On November 10, 1884, August Hartje, in obedience to the above decree, assigned to A. T. Schmidt the undivided one-half interest in the trust patents. On the 14th of April, 1885, A. T. Schmidt, by way of further assurance, again assigned all his rights and claims in the trust patents to the defendant, on the payment of the consideration money mentioned in the agreement of October 15, 1880. These contracts and assignments complete the chain of defendant’s title to what had been the Schmidt interest in the trust patents, and show that W. A. Schmidt has no right to sue for any royalties which may be due on them. But his counsel contend that he has never assigned or parted with his interest in the Hánna patents, on 'which royalties are due and payable, and that for a discovery and an account in respect to them he can maintain the present suit. It is true that Waldemar A. Schmidt, by his assignment to his father, transferred nothing more than his interest in the three trust patents, and that the father could not assign to the defendant any more than he had received; but the defendant charges that Waldemar A. Schmidt, in the course of the negotiations for the sale of the Schmidt interest?, induced the defendant to believe that it was buying the Schmidt interest in all the patents, and that he is thereby estopped from now asserting any right in them. ■ By the agreement of October 15,-1880, -between A. T. Schmidt and the defendant, the con[651]*651sideration for ilie assignment of the trust patents was to be paid partly in cash and the balance on the rendition of the decree establishing the right of A. T. Schmidt to the one-half interest in them. The trust having been determined, and the trustee having made the assignment, as ordered by the decree, the defendant was called on to fulfill his part of the agreement by paying the balance of the purchase money; and it is in the negotiations which preceded the final payment, and which were conducted by W. A. Schmidt in behalf of his father, that the evidence must be found to support the defendant’s charge. It is clear enough that the defendant’s officers and attorneys entertained the belief that in closing the transaction of April 14, 1885, they were obtaining the whole Schmidt interest, and it is only necessary to inquire what W. A. Schmidt did or said, or designedly left undone or unsaid, to produce that belief. It appears that at one time he presented a vague claim of $500 on account of some of these patents, which was disallowed, and the matter was dropped. Mr. Dalzell, one of defendant’s counsel, at Pittsburgh, testifies:

“Tho transfer of April, 1885, was made in further assurance of the title to the patents as originally made by A. T. Schmidt to the Vulcanized Fibre Company. 1 have no recollection of ever haying heard, from my first connection with this business up to within a very short time, any suggestion or pretense that the entire Schmidt interest — by whjch I mean all the interest outside of that, held by Hartje as trustee for himself and the manufacturing company— was not owned by A. T. Schmidt. * * * I know of the payment of the last installment of purchase money by tho Vulcanized Fibre Company to AT.

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Bluebook (online)
44 F. 648, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 1914, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartje-v-vulcanized-fibre-co-circtdel-1890.