Imperial Appliance Corp. v. Hamilton Manufacturing Co.

279 F. Supp. 356, 157 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 699, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12250
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedJanuary 19, 1968
DocketNo. 63-C-291
StatusPublished

This text of 279 F. Supp. 356 (Imperial Appliance Corp. v. Hamilton Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Imperial Appliance Corp. v. Hamilton Manufacturing Co., 279 F. Supp. 356, 157 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 699, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12250 (E.D. Wis. 1968).

Opinion

[357]*357DECISION

GRUBB, Senior District Judge.

This action for breach of contract is before the court on trial solely of the preliminary issue of interpretation of the agreement which relates to royalty payments under a license of patented invention covering clothes drying machines manufactured and sold by defendant.1

Imperial Appliance Corporation (“Imperial”) as licensor, and Hamilton Manufacturing Company (“Hamilton”) as licensee, operated under the agreement in issue, entitled “Contract and License,” dated November 29, 1941, as amended by a three-party agreement among them and the patent owner, Stanley G. Harwood, until September Í962, when Hamilton, deeming the contract terminated by its own provisions, discontinued payments of royalties.

Imperial contends that under the Contract and License, Hamilton has the further obligation to pay royalties in respect to and for the life of purported improvements on the subject matter of the license allegedly being utilized by Hamilton in the manufacture and sale of clothes dryers. The improvement is claimed to lie in U.S. Letters Patent No. 2,540,955 issued in 1951 on application of J. R. Moore, the inventor, filed in 1945, and held by Hamilton, as assignee. This patent will expire in February 1968.

The Imperial-Hamilton license of the Contract and License is, in fact, a sub-license of the subject matter under an exclusive license Imperial held from the patent owner since 1938. Prior to execution of the Contract and License, Imperial and Hamilton had operated under a manufacturing contract whereunder Imperial had retained its license rights to sell and to direct profits on sales of dryers embodying the invention that were manufactured by Hamilton. The parties found it expedient in 1941 to transfer Imperial’s selling right to Hamilton. Accordingly, the patent owner and Imperial amended the 1938 license grant by an agreement hereinafter referred to as the “New Harwood Imperial Agreement” and Imperial and Hamilton executed the Contract and License in issue to accomplish this objective.

Under the original 1938 license, Imperial was granted the exclusive right to manufacture and sell clothes dryers embodying the invention disclosed in United States applications for letters patent, serial numbers 177,123 and 236,-189, until the date of expiration of the last letters patent to expire covering the clothes dryers. The 1938 license was amended on August 14, 1939, to also include Candían application serial number 462,022, filed by J. R. Moore, for clothes drying machines.

The New Harwood Imperial Agreement, dated November 27, 1941, further amends and incorporates as amended the 1938 license. By this agreement, the license is enlarged to include any and all improvements of the dryers or in the process of their manufacture made by or at the instance of either Imperial or Hamilton, which were understood to be and to remain the property of Harwood. The term of the license was extended to run for the full life of the patents issued and to be issued on the designated applications and of any and all improvements thereto.

The New Harwood Imperial Agreement further provides a schedule of royalty rates for as long as said agreement was to remain operative, which were to be paid to Harwood directly by Hamilton whose agreement thereto Imperial was to obtain in the contemplated contract of sublicense. The term of the New Harwood Imperial Agreement, setting forth the amended 1938 license, [358]*358was to commence on January 1, 1942, and to extend thereafter “throughout the life of said patents applied for or issued.” Since the only applications for patents pending at the time of the execution of this agreement were those specified by number, the phrase “the life of said patents applied for or issued,” necessarily has reference only to the life of the patents issuing on said applications. Thus it appears that while the term of' the Harwood-Imperial license extends for the life of the patented invention and improvements thereto, the term of the license-royalty payment agreement between Harwood and Imperial extends only for the life of patents issuing on the designated applications.

The Contract and License between Imperial and Hamilton identifies, incorporates for reference, and has attached to it the New Harwood Imperial Agreement embodying the Harwood Imperial license. It identifies certain subject matter as the “Moore Patents” which are defined as consisting of applications for United States Letters Patent covering Clothes Drying Machines, serial numbers 177,123 and 236,186 and Canadian application serial number 462,022, and as including any and all letters patent of the United States and Canada which. may result from or be granted on said applications.

The Contract and License recites that it was intended to embody such provisions as were necessary to enable Imperial to carry out the New Harwood Imperial Agreement. Hamilton agreed to pay total royalties on its sales of dryers to Imperial and to Harwood for the account of Imperial according to specified schedules and acknowledged that any and all improvements of the dryers or in the process of manufacturing the same were understood to be and remain the property of Harwood and further, that the Harwood-Imperial license was to extend for the full term of the patents issued or to be issued and any and all improvements thereto.

The scope and term of the sublicense granted under the Contract and License are specified in paragraph 2 of Part IV of the instrument. This reads as follows:

“For the considerations hereinbefore recited, Imperial as Licensor hereby gives and grants to Hamilton as Licensee, the sole and exclusive right to manufacture, use and sell Dryers embodying or made in accordance with the inventions described and claimed in the Moore Patents, throughout the entire territory of the United States and its dependencies and also the entire territory of Canada, the’rights hereby granted to the Licensee to continue from January 1, 19b2, to the date of the expiration of the last Letters Patent to expire covering said Dryers, unless this sub-license becomes cancelled or terminated, prior to such final expiration of patents, under any of the provisions of this agreement; * * * ” [Emphasis added.]

Hamilton had the right of unilateral withdrawal from the contract on thirty days’ notice to Imperial with the requirement that it would reassign to Imperial all its rights under the agreement. Pursuant to the 1945 amendment of the Contract and License, Hamilton was also required to serve notice of withdrawal on Harwood, the patent owner.

Comparison of the Harwood-Imperial license and the Imperial-Hamilton sub-license discloses that the scope and terms of the respective grants and the corresponding obligations to pay royalties are not coextensive. The Harwood-Imperial license covers the Moore Patents as that term is used in the Contract and License, that is patents applied for or issued on the three specified applications, as well as improvements thereto. However, Imperial’s obligation to pay specified royalties to Harwood terminates on the date of expiration of the last patent to be issued on the named applications.

The Imperial-Hamilton sublicense, although the parties thereto acknowledge that ownership and the Harwood-Imperial license cover improvements to the Moore Patents, relates only to the Moore [359]

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Related

Daniels v. Foster
26 Wis. 686 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1870)
Imperial Appliance Corp. v. Hamilton Manufacturing Co.
239 F. Supp. 175 (E.D. Wisconsin, 1965)
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263 F. Supp. 1015 (E.D. Wisconsin, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
279 F. Supp. 356, 157 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 699, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/imperial-appliance-corp-v-hamilton-manufacturing-co-wied-1968.