L. L. Brown Paper Co. v. Hydroiloid, Inc.

118 F.2d 674, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 1, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4075
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 24, 1941
Docket203
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 118 F.2d 674 (L. L. Brown Paper Co. v. Hydroiloid, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
L. L. Brown Paper Co. v. Hydroiloid, Inc., 118 F.2d 674, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 1, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4075 (2d Cir. 1941).

Opinion

CHASE, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff, a Massachusetts corporation, manufactures and sells paper which is resistant to the effect of water, grease and the like, as a licensee under United States Patent No. 1,682,390, granted on the application of Alfred Lutz, for what will herein be called the Hydroiloid Process to make .paper so resistant. Controversy having arisen as to its rights as such licensee and as to the rights of the other parties to this action under the license agreement and under the patent, it brought this suit under the provisions of the Declaratory Judgment Act (Title 28 U.S.C.A. § 400) for their determination. From a decree for the plaintiff, part of the defendants have appealed.

The principal issues involved are whether the assignee of a patent who took title when a license under the patent had been granted and did not acquire the rights of the licensor as such may cancel the license for alleged breaches of the agreement by the licensee; and, if so, whether the plaintiff, the licensee, has broken the license agreement.

The facts are somewhat complicated. In June 1921, a German corporation called Ex-portingenieure fuer Papier und Zellstofftechnik G. m. b. H., to which the parties refer as the Parent Company, and in which appellant Scherbak was the principal stockholder, owned some foreign patents covering a process for treating paper and like products to make them water and grease resistant. It also owned an application, No. 456,759, made by the inventor for a United States patent for the same process already mentioned herein as the Hydroiloid Process. Licenses had been granted under the foreign patents and the trademark “Hydroiloid” had been applied to products so made and had become well-known.

On June 11, 1921 the Parent Company assigned all its rights to the process for use in the United States, and to the above mentioned application for a United States patent, to four men in New York among whom were defendants R. C. Lee and J. D. Lee who are not appellants here. Those assignees assigned all their interests so acquired to a New York corporation Hydroiloid, Inc., which will hereafter be called Hydroiloid.

Before any American patent 'was granted on the Lutz application, Hydroiloid entered into a contract with the appellee authorizing it to exploit the process in this country as a secret one. At first appellee’s license covered the treatment and sale in the United States of writing paper of a quality designated by price but on April 29, 1926 it was modified to include all rag content writing paper. The agreement provided that the license granted should extend to the then pending patent application of Lutz; to any future patent applications by Lutz or Hydroiloid; to all United States Patents which should be issued on such applications ; and to the trade-mark “Hydroiloid”. The patent involved herein was granted on the Lutz application, above mentioned, on August 28, 1928, to defendant R. C. Lee pursuant to mesne assignments which conveyed the title to the application to him.

Under this license agreement the appellee was bound to pay Hydroiloid "stated royalties; to give it access to the Brown mill to enable it to help in carrying out the process; to disclose the process only to such persons as would agree to keep it confidential and to whom disclosure was necessary; to take reasonable precautions to prevent disclosure by others; to keep proper records; and to sell all paper processed under trade names which would include either “Hydroil” or “Hydroiloid”. Hydroiloid agreed to permit appellee to use its New York laboratory to copy any part of its machinery or process; to give advice on any relevant matter; to give instructions at appellee’s mill or in writing; and to supervise the erection of Hydroiloid machinery at appellee’s mill.

The capital stock of Hydroiloid was owned in part by the American interests which may conveniently be referred to now as Lee and by the foreign interests which may be called simply Scherbak. The disputes arising between these interests have *676 led to this suit by the plaintiff which has been adversely affected by such controversies though it has had no trouble with Lee.

The difficulty began in 1926 and grew out of the fact that Lee and Scherbak withdrew from Hydroiloid the royalties it received from appellee, and from two other licensees, to such an extent that it became' financially embarrassed. Both Lee and Scherbak wanted the other to finance Hydroiloid but neither would do so and at a meeting of Hydroiloid’s directors on Nov. 30, 1927, the dispute culminated in Scherbak’s leaving the meeting and within a few days naming one Caldwell, in place of J. D. Lee who had before so acted, to collect and remit royalties to him and in his sailing for Europe on December 4, 1927.

Hydroiloid continued to be in difficulty from lack of funds and in March 1928 made a general assignment for the benefit of creditors. A sale was made of all its assets to R. C. Lee which was duly confirmed by the court and in this way Lee acquired what was covered by the original assignment of 1921 made by the Parent Company; the patent application of Lutz on which the patent was later granted to him; and the license contract with appellee.

. On April 2, 1928, Scherbak granted a license for the United States which Lee claimed he had no right to grant and their disputes continued. Appellee, caught in a dilemma, paid the royalty next falling due to both Lee and Scherbak and sued Lee to recover the payment to him, inviting Scherbak to join in the suit but he refused. The suit was discontinued when Lee gave appellee an indemnity bond and thereafter appellee paid royalties, only to Lee. Later Lee and Scherbak settled their disputes and, after making contracts to that end, exchanged general releases on November 5, 1930.

Under this settlement Scherbak obtained an assignment of the American patent hereinbefore mentioned and that was then assigned to the appellant Verwaltungs und Reorganisations A. G. Schwyz, a Swiss corporation controlled by Scherbak. The settlement agreement provided that the license agreement between Hydroiloid and appellee, which Lee had obtained on the general assignment sale, should be owned by Ronald C. Lee and one Loeb, Scherbak’s attorney, and that each should have an undivided one-half interest in said license contract and the payments accruing thereunder. Loeb later assigned his interest in the license agreement to the appellee. Hydroiloid was dissolved in 1933.

For sometime after this settlement, matters remained quiet but in 1935 Scherbak took the ground that the dissolution of Hydroiloid had terminated the appellee’s rights under its license and pressed it to take a license from Scherbak to avoid having the Parent Company terminate the general license to Hydroiloid and undermine, as Scherbak insisted could be done, Lee’s title in such a way as to destroy the validity of appellee’s license. Nothing came of this but in May of 1938 Scherbak charged appellee with infringement of the patent claiming he could, on behalf of Hydroiloid and the Swiss corporation, cancel its license for breaches of the "agreement by appellee for failing to account; for failing to supply information as to improvements; for adopting a competitive process; for failing to use the trade-mark “Hydroiloid”; for failing to deliver testimonials it received; and for making claims that it had produced like paper before using the process in contradiction of its covenant in the license that it had not done so.

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Bluebook (online)
118 F.2d 674, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 1, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-l-brown-paper-co-v-hydroiloid-inc-ca2-1941.