Hyatt v. Ingalls

17 Jones & S. 375
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedDecember 3, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Jones & S. 375 (Hyatt v. Ingalls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hyatt v. Ingalls, 17 Jones & S. 375 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1883).

Opinion

By the Court.—Freedman, J.

—A patent for illuminated basements and basement extensions, etc., was issued to the plaintiff in 1867, and re-issued August 6, 1878.

By an agreement, dated November 21, 1878, the plain[377]*377tiff agreed to, and did, license, among others, the defendants to manufacture and sell within certain territorial limits the articles covered by the patent of 1867, as re-issued in 1878.

The defendants thereafter, manufactured and sold these articles, and up to the autumn of 1881, under the said license, they accounted for the articles so manufactured, and sold and paid royalties thereon. Then they refused to account or pay any longer, though they continued to manufacture and sell, whereupon, in October, 1882, this action was brought, in which the plaintiff, among other things which will be hereinafter considered, asks for a forfeiture of the license, the cancellation of the agreement, and an accounting.

If these were substantially the only facts and the only relief sought, the jurisdiction of the court to entertain the action and to grant relief would be beyond question.

But upon the trial the plaintiff found it necessary to move for leave to amend the complaint by setting up a reissue of the patent on September 27, 1881. The motion was granted and the amendment allowed, and thereupon leave was granted to the defendants to amend their answer by inserting as follows : The defendants, answering the amended complaint of the plaintiff, allege that the re-issued patent of September, 1881, is invalid and void, for the reason that it claims more than the patent of 1878 ; and that its descriptions and specifications do not correspond with those of the patent of 1878; and that it also omits specifications and claims made in the patent of 1878. And further answering, defendants say that the court has no-jurisdiction over the issue thus raised.”

The trial proceeded upon the issues thus amended, and the plaintiff, upon proof of the re-issue of September 27, 1881, and of the refusal of the defendants to account and pay since that time, though they continued to manufacture and sell, had judgment against the objections and exceptions of the defendants, who throughout insisted that the court had no jurisdiction.

[378]*378The questions presented by these exceptions áre of great importance.

A grant to a patentee of an exclusive right to manufacture and vend an article described therein, is a grant of property ; and if the validity of the patent is unquestioned, state courts will protect the owner of such property in the enjoyment thereof, by means of a decree of injunction, to the same extent as they would do, were the subject matter of the litigation of any other description. But where the validity of the plaintiffs patent is put in question by the pleadings in a state court, and the defendant presents such proofs upon the trial as render it necessary for the court to examine and pass upon conflicting patents or claims of priority in invention, in- order to determine whether the plaintiff has such a property in the subject matter of the grant as entitles him to the exclusive and unmolested use of it, and an objection is taken to the jurisdiction of the court for that reason, the bill must be dismissed ; for, in such cases, the jurisdiction is in the courts of the United States exclusively (Hovey v. Rubber Tip Pencil Co., 33 Super. Ct. 522; affirmed 57 N. Y. 119).

There is, however, a class of' cases in which the defendant cannot question the validity of the plaintiff’s patent, because by his contract he has estopped himself from so doing, and of these a state court may take cognizance. In them the question concerning the validity of the patent is merely a question collateral to the main issue, and goes only to the question whether there is a consideration to support the promise to pay. A case arising on a contract to pay royalties, or, in other words, a case between patentee and licensee, falls generally within the class last referred to, and in every such case the true rule to be deduced from the authorities, as stated by the court of appeals in Marston v. Swett (82. N. Y. 526), is as follows: Where the patent is apparently valid and in force, the party using it, receiving the benefit of its supposed validity, is liable for royalties agreed to be paid, and cannot set up as a defense the actual invalidity of the patent. The reasons for the [379]*379rule are that the party has got what he bargained for ; that he cannot be allowed at the same time to affirm and disaffirm the patent; and that he cannot in this way force the patentee into a defense of his right and compel him to try it in a collateral action. While the manufacture goes on under such an apparently valid patent, it is presumed to be under and in accordance with the agreement to pay royalties. If the manufacturer does not so intend, and chooses to make the patented article, not under the patent but in hostility to it, he must give notice of that intention, in order that the presumption may not attach or the patentee be misled. But if the patent is annulled or destroyed by due and effective legal proceedings and priority of invention and a patent'is awarded to another, no notice is necessary, for. there is no presumption or inference of manufacture under a patent judicially avoided and anulled. It ceases to exist. The manufacture is either absolutely free or an infringement upon the rights of the prior inventor, or in submission to his claims.”

Mow the parties to the present action, in the agreement of November 21, 1878, and the license executed contemporaneously therewith, did make provision concerning reissues of the patent. By the agreement it was provided that the license should continue for the full term of the patent and for any term of any extension or renewal.” The license which was also executed in the form of an agreement under the hands and seals of the parties to this action, contains a similar provision together with the defendant’s acknowledgment of the validity of the letters patent and their express consent that the plaintiff may, “ without prejudice to this agreement hereafter re-issue, when and as often as she shall choose, the said patent of August 27, 1867, as re-issued August 6, 1878.”

These provisions, taken in connection with the other facts already referred to, would seem to be a complete answer, within the rule as stated by the court of appeals, to the claim of the defendants that the court had no jurisdiction to determine the issues, especially as no notice had [380]*380ever been given to the plaintiff that the defendant had elected to manufacture and sell in hostility to the patent as re-issued in 1881.

It. is insisted, however, that the words, “ As re-issued August 6, 1878,” are words of limitation which restrict the consent given to a re-issue that corresponds with the re-issue of 1878; that, ■ inasmuch as the re-issue of 1881 covers more ground than the re-issue of 1878, neither their consent nor their license, attached to it, and that consequently no notice was necessary.

It is true that the re-issue of 1881 corresponds neither with the re-issue of 1878, nor with the original patent, inasmuch as it embraces more ground and more claims than either. To enumerate the points of correspondence and of difference, would serve no useful purpose.

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Related

Hartell v. Tilghman
99 U.S. 547 (Supreme Court, 1879)
The Union Manufacturing Co. v. . Lounsbury
41 N.Y. 363 (New York Court of Appeals, 1869)
Hovey v. . Rubber Tip Pencil Co.
57 N.Y. 119 (New York Court of Appeals, 1874)

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Bluebook (online)
17 Jones & S. 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hyatt-v-ingalls-nysuperctnyc-1883.