Kaumagraph Co. v. . Stampagraph Co.

138 N.E. 485, 235 N.Y. 1, 1923 N.Y. LEXIS 1143
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 23, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 138 N.E. 485 (Kaumagraph Co. v. . Stampagraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaumagraph Co. v. . Stampagraph Co., 138 N.E. 485, 235 N.Y. 1, 1923 N.Y. LEXIS 1143 (N.Y. 1923).

Opinion

*4 Pound, J.

This action is brought to restrain the disclosure and use of certain alleged trade secrets by the defendants. Plaintiff uses a process for making transfer stamps and embroidery patterns which it manufactures and sells. Transfer stamps are used to mark textile fabrics, leathers and other articles with an identifying design. Embroidery patterns are used to outline designs on linen and other goods. These stamps and patterns consist of pieces of thin tissue paper upon which is deposited by means of machinery a composition forming the' outline of the design. The composition is of such a character that when the paper is placed face down on a piece of fabric, leather or other material, and a hot iron is run over the back of the paper the composition is instantaneously released from the paper and adheres to the material to be marked producing a design in gold, silver or colors.” The name “ Kaumagraph ” means “ heat printing.” Other kinds of transfer stamps for marking goods are known to the trade, but it is claimed for plaintiff's method that it has an advantage over them for simplicity and adaptability.

Plaintiff’s method of producing transfer designs was in substance known and used in England for many years before plaintiff organized its business,. John Briggs *5 patented the process in England in 1874 and Joseph Scott patented an improvement thereon in 1894. Briggs claimed as his invention merely “ printing the said patterns with any bituminous substance or varnish of any color on the pattern paper and transferring them to fabrics to be ornamented or embroidered by the application of heat.” Scott’s patent covered the use of solid metal dust or bronze powder for the ordinary paint or color hitherto employed which I mix in the usual way with the wax and resin. I prefer to mix one part of beeswax with five parts of resin and to add to half a pint of this mixture three ounces of gold or metal dust or other powder.” These patents were the basis of all of plaintiff’s work, experiments and improvements. Knowledge of them was obtained by plaintiff’s predecessors, individuals who afterwards organized the plaintiff corporation through two individuals, George Chadwick and William Scott, who were in the employ of William Briggs & Co., Limited, of Manchester, England, which was the principal concern engaged in the business of making stamps by this transfer process. Neither Chadwick nor Scott was owner or licensee of any patents or secret formulas. They came to the United States bringing with them the knowledge they had obtained while working for the English company. Scott became and remained for a time the associate of the new organization. Chadwick made a contract of employment dated May 2, 1904, with the unincorporated Kaumagraph Company, which was plaintiff’s predecessor, as an expert workman in the production of transfer stamps by the process, whereby in consideration of such employment and $7,500 stock in the company to be formed he agreed that under no circumstances nor at any time ” would he engage in any similar business or disclose the secrets of the process or the business. By a second contract dated February 1, 1909, he further agreed that he would not at any time engage in any similar business within the territory of the *6 United States east of the Mississippi river or in the Dominion of Canada, without first securing the written consent of plaintiff. Chadwick was superintendent of plaintiff’s factory and one of the joint owners of the business before incorporation and a stockholder thereafter.

Arthur Turner was employed under a similar contract in 1907. He was Chadwick’s brother-in-law and was also a former employee of the Briggs company in England.

These contracts are unlimited as to time and are valid as a basis for equitable relief only as they protect trade secrets acquired during a confidential employment. They merely express the implied contract of one who enters into such an employment not to carry elsewhere into competition with his employer confidential knowledge obtained from him. (Little v. Gallus, 4 App. Div. 569.) They are valuable to protect trade secrets but, apart from that purpose, they are unavailing to stifle competition.

On March 3, 1919, the five individual defendants who are the respondents, all of whom except Himer and Moffat had been in the employ of plaintiff, with others, organized the defendant Stampagraph Co., Inc., to conduct a competing business, carrying to it full knowledge of every detail of plaintiff’s business and trade. Thereupon plaintiff brought this action for equitable relief, alleging •that it was a breach of trust for the individual defendants to organize the rival corporation and to employ in its behalf the trade secrets of plaintiff and a breach of contract as well on the part of defendants Chadwick and Turner.

The trial court granted the relief prayed for, first, because plaintiff’s employees became possessed of knowledge of secret processes while in its'employ and, therefore, might not themselves use such knowledge or communicate it to others to the detriment of plaintiff, and secondly, because Chadwick and Turner had breached the negative covenants of their contracts of employment and were *7 engaging in a similar occupation conflicting with plaintiff’s business and using plaintiff’s trade secrets therein.

The Appellate Division reversed the judgment of the trial court. Recognizing the principle that employees are bound by express or implied contract not to disclose trade secrets and that courts of equity will restrain a party from making a disclosure of secrets communicated to him through and by means of his having been in a confidential employment (Vulcan Detinning Co. v. American Can Co., 72 N. J. Eq. 387), the court limited its application to cases where plaintiff was employing in its business a secret process either developed by-itself or the sole right to use which had been acquired by it from the discoverer of the process.

The Appellate Division further held that the contracts with Chadwick and Turner were not enforcible in equity as they savored of servitude ” and did not come within the rule in McCall Co. v. Wright (198 N. Y. 143), which held in substance that an important employee would be restrained on such contract from carrying business secrets to a rival concern.

■ A secret is nothing more than a private matter; something known only to one or a few and kept from others. It may be acquired by lawful means, as by discovery, or even by unfair means, without tracing title to the originator, and when so acquired it does not necessarily cease to be a secret which may be protected from unlawful competition. Secrecy may be absolute or relative. As bearing on the question of equitable relief, however, the question before us is not whether defendants make use of some process not generally known to the public but peculiarly within the knowledge of plaintiff and themselves, but whether defendants’ knowledge of the process was obtained by them through and by means of the fact that Chadwick and Turner had been in plaintiff’s employ.

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Bluebook (online)
138 N.E. 485, 235 N.Y. 1, 1923 N.Y. LEXIS 1143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaumagraph-co-v-stampagraph-co-ny-1923.