Illingworth v. Spaulding

43 F. 827, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 1769
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 23, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 43 F. 827 (Illingworth v. Spaulding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illingworth v. Spaulding, 43 F. 827, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 1769 (circtdnj 1890).

Opinion

Green, J,

The primary object of this suit is to obtain the reformation or the rescission of a certain contract of license, entered into by the complainant and the defendants on or about the 22d day of April, 1882, wherein and whereby the complainant granted to the defendants the right to use certain “guides” for guiding rods in their passage through surface-polishing machines, of which the complainant was the first inventor, and for which invention he had obtained letters patent on the 4th day of August, 1874. It appears from the proofs in the cause that, in 1881, the defendants, without the license and against the will of the-complainant, and in technical infringement of his letters patent, did construct and use certain guides upon one polishing machine which they were operating, which were in all respects similar to the guides invented by the complainant. Discovering this, the complainant threatened them with a suit in equity to enjoin such use, and to compel the defendants to account for such profits as might have accrued to them from it. Negotiations, however, between the parties, resulted in an amicable arrangement of the matters in dispute. The suit was abandoned, and the defendants accepted a license to use the guides. That license is in the words following:

“For and in consideration of five thousand dollars ($5,000) to be paid as hereinafter specified, I, John Illingworth, of Newark, Essex county, New Jersey, do hereby grant to Spaulding, Jennings & Co., of West Bergen, New Jersey, a perpetual license to use my patent guides for disk-rolling machines, as described in TJ. S. patent No. 153,677, the said license to become theirs, their heirs’ or assigns’, forever. The conditions of the payment of the above sum are as follows: One dollar cash down; one-third of the balance, or $1,666.38, in three months from tbis date; one-third, or $1,666.33, in nine months from this date; and one-third, or $1,666.33, in twelve months from this date. Notes for the sums are this day given said Illingworth by said Spaulding, Jennings & Co. For themselves, Spaulding, Jennings & Co., as members of the pool now controlling the Reese patent disk-rolling machines, hereby agree to withhold all support and encouragement from Jacob Reese, in any or all attempts which he may make to recover damages in the courts from the said John Illingworth, by the alleged infringement of patent.”

Under this license, the defendants continued to use the guides which they had previously placed upon their polishing machine, for about five years. At this time the increase of their business compelled the defend[829]*829ants to build a new and a second polishing machine, to which they affixed the complainant’s guides, made according to his letters patent, by themselves. To this new use the complainant objects. He claims that the true intent and “meaning of the license which ho had granted was simply to authorize and make lawful the use of the one pair of guides on that particular machine, upon which, before then, they had been unlawfully used; that the license in no wise authorized them to make the guides; and that this new construction and use constituted a deliberate infringement of his letters patent. And he further insists that the terms of the license aro so vague and uncertain, and that it was obtained under such peculiar circumstances, as to require the consideration of parol evidence, for the purpose of construing it, and reforming it, so that its vagueness may be overcome. And, lastly, that the proofs are so strongly evident of mistake or fraud that the license should be rescinded, and a new one be executed, expressing the real intent and meaning of the parties. The prayer of the bill is in accordance with these allegations.

The defendants in their answer, which is under oath, deny, in emphatic terms, any fraud or mistake in the inception of the contract, and claim that the license is in its terms clear, distinct, positive, and general, and amply justifies the act of which the complainant in his bill complains. There is nothing in the nature of a license in writing to place it outside the well-known rules of construction which are applicable to other contracts in writing. The writing itself is considered the ample and conclusive evidence of the final agreement of the parties thereto, and parol testimony to vary its terms is rigidly excluded. It is not the province of the court to make now contracts for parties, at the whim of one or the other. Bather is it the duty of the court to enforce literally the contract as it appears, unless indeed its unconscionable character or conditions, or its fraudulent inception, or its evidence of the mutual mistake of the contracting parties, is so clear as to justify an appeal to the conscience of a court of equity. A critical examination of the license now before the court seems to justify the claim of the defendants that it is general in its character. In terms it grants to the defendants “a, perpetual license to use my [the complainant’s] patent guides for disk-rolling machines, as described in U. S. patent No. 153,677, the said license to become theirs, their heirs’ or assigns’, forever.” Inartistically as the license may be drafted, its plain, common-sense meaning is too clear to be clouded even by the very acute and able argument of counsel. The grant ivas the right to use patent guides forever. The guides were intended for, and were to bo used upon, or in connection with, disk-rolling machines. Not only was this right to be the defendants’, hut their heirs or assigns were admitted to a participation in the benefits of the license. How could stronger language be chosen to express the unlimited use? What word or phrase can be singled out, which suggests limitation of the grant? It will not do to ask the court so to construe a writing that doubt, may thereby be incorporated between its lines. Words are to be taken in their usual sense and significance. A license to use patent guides generally, for disk-rolling machines generally, cannot, by any [830]*830know'n rules of construction, be limited to the use of a “single pair of guides” upon a single machine.

Upon the argument, it was strenuously insisted that the admitted circumstances which led up to the granting of the license clearly show the object of the complainant and of the defendants to be, to legalize, by the license, the use of one pair of guides only. These circumstances, so relied upon, are the previous infringement by the defendants, by the making and by the use of one pair of guides for one machine only, the threatened suit for that infringement, and the negotiations for the settlement of that suit which resulted in this license. The argument is plausible, but the answer to it is, first, that the words used by the grantor do not harmonize with the theory. Starting with the assumption that all the defendants asked, and all the complainant granted, was the right to use one existing pair of guides, how very easy it would have been to have used words which would have effectually limited the license; and, if such had been the intent of the parties, what language would have been more natural or more readily chosen than that which would legalize, in terms, “the guides now in use” by the licensees? The failure to use such phrases or words, so commonplace, so readily suggesting themselves for such purpose, is strongly combative of the insistment of the complainant as to intent. Nor does the alleged scope and purpose of the threatened suit strengthen the argument. If is not exact to say that the use.of one pair of guides by the defendants was the sole moving cause of that suit, which was, admittedly, settled by the negotiations terminating in the license.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 F. 827, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 1769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illingworth-v-spaulding-circtdnj-1890.