Kamin v. KUHNAU

374 P.2d 912, 232 Or. 139, 135 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 133, 1962 Ore. LEXIS 417
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 374 P.2d 912 (Kamin v. KUHNAU) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kamin v. KUHNAU, 374 P.2d 912, 232 Or. 139, 135 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 133, 1962 Ore. LEXIS 417 (Or. 1962).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, J.

This is a suit in equity to enjoin defendants from unfairly competing with plaintiff and to recover damages resulting from such competition. Defendants appeal from a decree permanently enjoining them from engaging in unfair competition with plaintiff and from an award of damages in the amount of $19,272.48.

Plaintiff alleges that he employed defendant, Richard Kuhnau, as an independent contractor to furnish labor and materials required in the construction of garbage truck bodies embodying improvements invented by plaintiff. It is alleged that plaintiff perfected a so-called “packer” garbage truck body involving the use of a “plow” which is a power-operated device for compressing materials placed in the truck body and thereby increasing its capacity. It is asserted that these improvements were trade secrets communicated to defendant Kuhnau in the course of a confidential relationship, giving rise to a duty not to disclose or appropriate such secrets for defendant’s own benefit. Plaintiff charges that defendant, in violation of this duty, manufactured packer truck bodies for his own account, sold them, and offered them for sale in competition with plaintiff.

Defendants interposed a general denial and affirmatively alleged, in effect, that the principle involved in their construction of garbage truck bodies *143 had been in the public domain prior to plaintiff’s experimentation. They also alleged that the truck bodies manufactured by defendants are different from plaintiff’s product in that the former embody only the improvements invented by defendants.

The facts are as follows. For approximately 25 years plaintiff had been employed by a knitting mill as a mechanic. In 1953 he entered into the garbage collection business. From the time plaintiff entered into the garbage collection business he began thinking of methods of facilitating the loading of garbage trucks and of compressing or packing the materials after they were loaded. By 1955 he had done some experimental work on his own truck, devising a hoist mechanism operated by hydraulic cylinders to lift a bucket from the ground to the top of the truck box. By this time he had also arrived at the conclusion that the packing of the loaded materials could best be effected through the use of a hydraulically operated plow which would move against the loaded materials and compress them against the interior of the truck. At the time plaintiff conceived this solution there were on the market garbage truck bodies containing various “packer” mechanisms, including hydraulically operated plows. However, plaintiff and defendant apparently were not aware of the use of hydraulic cylinders for this purpose and thought that plaintiff’s idea was novel in this respeet.

In January, 1955, plaintiff made arrangements with defendant Kuhnau, president and manager of Oregon Rental Equipment Company, to use the company’s machine shop and one or more of its employees to assist plaintiff in carrying on further experimental work in developing plaintiff’s ideas. This experimental work was carried on for approximately one *144 year. According to plaintiff’s evidence, all of the experimental work was done under his supervision and Kuhnau had no voice or control as to the manner in which the developmental work was to he carried on. It is Kuhnau’s contention that he and the employees of Oregon Rental Equipment Company contributed suggestions and ideas which were used in the development and improvement of the truck body and compressor meehanism.

In the course of worldng on the project several persons who were engaged in the garbage collection business came to the defendant’s machine shop, observed the progress being made by plaintiff and made suggestions as to the practical application of plaintiff’s idea. Sometime in the summer of 1956 the truck and compressor meehanism which plaintiff was seeking to develop was crystallized substantially in the form in which it now exists.

When plaintiff had completed his experimental work he began to receive orders for truck bodies embodying his improvements. The first two units sold were manufactured by Oregon Kental Equipment Company. After the sale of these two units (in the spring of 1956) Kuhnau terminated his connections with Oregon Rental Equipment Company. He rented a machine shop at another location and began business under the name of R. K. Truck Sales. Between May and October, 1956, he manufactured ten units for plaintiff. For each unit Kuhnau received an amount agreed upon by the parties. Plaintiff fixed the selling price of the unit and his profit consisted of the difference between the selling price and the amount he paid Kuhnau.

On or about October 1, 1956, Kuhnau informed plaintiff that he was going to manufacture truck bodies in competition with plaintiff. Kuhnau testified that *145 the relationship was terminated as a result of a disagreement over the amount he was to receive for manufacturing the unit for plaintiff. Plaintiff contends that Kuhnau terminated the relationship for the purpose of entering into competition with plaintiff. The units manufactured by Kuhnau were similar to those which he had previously manufactured for plaintiff. However, there were some differences in the design of the two units. The principal difference was that Kuhnau mounted the hydraulic cylinder operating the plow or blade under the truck bed whereas the cylinder in plaintiff’s truck was above the bed. There was testimony supporting plaintiff’s assertion that it was his idea to place the cylinder under the bed of the truck but that suggestion was not adopted because Kuhnau did not think it was feasible.

The trial judge inspected the competing devices at the conclusion of the testimony. The trial court concluded that the agreement entered into between plaintiff and Kuhnau for the manufacture of the truck bodies established a confidential relationship between the parties and that this relationship imposed upon Kuhnau the duty not to use the information disclosed to him by plaintiff for his own benefit.

The principal contentions advanced by defendants on appeal are (1) that the evidence does not show that the disclosure made to Kuhnau was a trade secret, (2) that even if the information were a trade secret originally, it ceased to be one after public disclosure by sale and patent, and (3) that a confidential relationship did not exist between the parties.

In support of the first point defendants introduced evidence to show that at the time the arrangement for the manufacture of the units was entered into there were on the market various types of compressor de *146 vices designed to pack loaded garbage. Among these nnits was one which employed a hydraulic cylinder for the movement of the plow or blade. It appears, however, that at the time in question these units were not in common use in Portland and the surrounding area. The evidence indicates that plaintiff proceeded with his experimentation in the belief that he was developing a novel method of compressing loaded materials. It further appears that although plaintiff did not first conceive the basic idea of a packer body employing a hydraulic cylinder, he was granted a patent on a packer unit involving the hydraulic principle.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
374 P.2d 912, 232 Or. 139, 135 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 133, 1962 Ore. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kamin-v-kuhnau-or-1962.