Johann v. Milwaukee Electric Tool Corp.

72 N.W.2d 401, 270 Wis. 573, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 311
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 72 N.W.2d 401 (Johann v. Milwaukee Electric Tool Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johann v. Milwaukee Electric Tool Corp., 72 N.W.2d 401, 270 Wis. 573, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 311 (Wis. 1955).

Opinion

CuRRiE, J.

The following issues are presented on this appeal:

(1) Whether there is insufficient credible evidence to support the findings of the jury made in their special verdict.

(2) Whether the trial court erroneously misinterpreted the mandate of this court in Johann v. Milwaukee Electric Tool Corp. (1953), 264 Wis. 447, 59 N. W. (2d) 637, in restricting the issues to be litigated at the second trial to the two questions submitted in the special verdict, and in denying a motion of defendant made during the course of the trial to amend his answer so as to set up additional defenses.

(3) Whether this court should recede from its determination made on the prior appeal wherein it held that defendant was estopped to deny that certain tools manufactured and sold by it, having attached thereto identification tags bearing the patent-registration number of the patent issued upon plaintiff’s invention, actually embodied such invention.

(4) Whether there has been a failure of consideration which has relieved defendant from the obligation to pay plaintiff the $10,000 due under the 1940 parol contract found by the jury to have been entered into between the parties.

(5) Whether the trial court committed prejudicial error in its rulings on evidence and its instructions to the jury which would entitle the defendant to a new trial.

Substantially the same testimony and evidence was adduced in behalf of plaintiff on the two issties submitted to the jury in the special verdict on the second trial as at the first trial. In our opinion on the first appeal we held that there was suf *578 ficient credible evidence to support a jury finding that the parties had entered into the parol contract in 1940 alleged by the plaintiff, and that the subsequent written agreement of October 15, 1942, and the payment pursuant thereto by the defendant of $2,000, did not constitute an accord and satisfaction of plaintiff’s claim for royalties based on the 1940 parol contract. Appellant has presented nothing on this appeal which has caused us to question the soundness of our holding on the first appeal as to this issue, and we adhere thereto. The plaintiff did give contradictory testimony in some respects but the question of his credibility lay solely within the province of the jury. While the complaint alleged that the parol contract upon which plaintiff bases his cause of action was entered into between the parties in October, 1940, and at the second trial plaintiff testified the same was entered into in the summer of 1940, we do not consider the same to constitute such a variance as to preclude plaintiff’s right of recovery.

In our opinion on the first appeal this court stated (264 Wis. at p. 455) :

“Therefore, it is necessary that the cause be remanded for a new trial on the issues of the existence of the verbal contract providing for royalties as alleged by plaintiff, and as to whether the subsequent agreement of October 15, 1942, was intended by the parties as a release of all rights of plaintiff for royalties. If both of these questions at the new trial should be answered in favor of the plaintiff, then plaintiff would be entitled to judgment in the sum of $10,000 as prayed for in his complaint inasmuch as more than 5,000 pneumatic tools were marketed by defendant having identification tags attached bearing the patent-registration number covering plaintiff’s invention.”

The mandate which followed the above-quoted statement remanded the cause for a new trial “consistent with this opinion.”

*579 The learned trial court construed our mandate on the former appeal as not remanding the cause for a new trial on all issues but only as to the two issues stated in the above-quoted extract from our opinion. Counsel for appellant, on the other hand, maintained throughout the second trial that such new trial was not to be so restricted, but was open to all issues litigated, or which might have been litigated, at the first trial. Not only was it our intention by our opinion and mandate on the former appeal to so limit the issues to be tried on the second trial, as interpreted by the trial court, but we deem the words used by us in phrasing such intention to have been unambiguous and not open to the construction argued for by appellant’s counsel.

Furthermore, defendant on the first appeal moved for a rehearing and filed a brief in support thereof, which brief raised no issue with respect to the question of whether an unlimited new trial, or one restricted to limited issues, had been directed by our mandate. If defendant had considered that there was any ambiguity in the opinion and mandate on this point, that was the proper time to raise the point, and not before the trial court during the course of the second trial.

On this appeal, defendant attempts to raise the issues of the statute of frauds and the statute of limitations. However, we do not feel called upon to consider the arguments advanced on these points because the same are without the restricted issues to which the second trial was confined by our mandate.

During the course of the second trial, defendant moved for leave to file an amended answer setting up additional defenses not contained in the original answer. One of such defenses was that defendant, at the time of entering into the alleged parol agreement of 1940 for the payment of royalties, already possessed shop rights in plaintiff’s invention, so that consideration was utterly lacking to support defendant’s promise to pay royalties. Because this court, by its *580 mandate on the first appeal, had restricted the issues to be litigated at the second trial, the trial court properly denied defendant’s motion for leave to file such amended answer. However, lacking such basis for denying the motion, it would not have been an abuse of discretion for the trial court to have denied the same upon the ground of it not having been timely made.

Counsel for appellant has requested us to reconsider the determination we made on the first appeal whereby we held that the defendant, by its act of attaching tags to 6,225 tools manufactured by it, which tags bore the patent-registration number of plaintiff’s invention, was estopped thereby to deny that the tools bearing such tags embodied plaintiff’s invention. The brief filed by defendant with this court in support of its motion for rehearing on the first appeal was addressed solely to such holding of estoppel. After this court denied such motion for rehearing, defendant petitioned to the United States supreme court for certiorari, which petition was denied February 8, 1954, Milwaukee Electric Tool Corp. v. Johann (1954), 347 U. S. 913, 74 Sup. Ct. 477, 98 L. Ed. 1069. With such full consideration having already been accorded this issue, we might quite appropriately hold that our former determination on this issue was “the law of the case.” However, as pointed out in McGovern v. Eckhart (1929), 200 Wis. 64, 77, 227 N. W. 300, this court does not deem itself bound to so strictly adhere to the court-made rule of “law of the case” as to preclude us from correcting a manifest error.

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.W.2d 401, 270 Wis. 573, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johann-v-milwaukee-electric-tool-corp-wis-1955.