Lambach v. Lundberg

33 P.2d 105, 177 Wash. 568
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1934
DocketNo. 24712. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 P.2d 105 (Lambach v. Lundberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lambach v. Lundberg, 33 P.2d 105, 177 Wash. 568 (Wash. 1934).

Opinion

Geraghty, J. —

This action was brought by the plaintiff, Hugo C. Lambach, against the defendant Carl E. Lundberg, for rescission of contracts, under the terms of which the plaintiff purchased from the defendant a system developed by him for building abstract plants, together with certain mechanical devices for copying by photography public and other records.

As the interest of the intervening corporation is the same as the plaintiff’s, and the defendant People’s Bank and Trust Company is merely an escrow holder, for purposes of convenience the case will be treated as one between the plaintiff and defendant.

The defendant had been engaged in the abstract business for many years, and prior to 1926 had been employed by several abstract companies in Spokane. In that year, he removed to Seattle, where he was employed in building a new abstract plant for the Puget Sound Title Insurance Company. In building this plant, photography was used, and defendant had developed certain systems and devices which were claimed to have greatly shortened the time required in producing the work, with a resulting saving of cost. By 1928, the installation of that plant was substantially completed, and defendant thereafter devoted his attention to promoting his system and seeking to invest capital in its development and promotion. He called his methods the Lundberg Systems, and issued circulars and other printed matter explaining the sys *570 tem and the manner in which the Puget Sound Title Company’s plant had been produced and the saving in time and money accomplished. He was introduced to plaintiff, interested him in his system and devices, and on April 26, 1930, a preliminary contract was entered into, under the terms of which, for a down payment of $2,500, plaintiff acquired the right to purchase all of defendant’s systems and devices for an additional $22,500.

Subsequently, on July 9, 1930, plaintiff in the meantime having determined to exercise his option, a permanent agreement was entered into between the parties, by the terms of which the plaintiff acquired defendant’s systems and devices. This second agreement recited the ownership by the defendant of the right to manufacture, use and dispose of a photographing device used in duplicating records on a continuous film, as well as the right to manufacture, use and dispose of sundry other devices, apparatus, machines and equipment to be used in connection with the building of title insurance and abstract plants and in connection with industrial, financial and commercial institutions in general; also certain methods for indexing such plants and business records based upon sound rather than upon spelling of the names indexed- — -all of these methods and systems being known and recognized in business as the Lundberg Systems.

The agreement also recited that the defendant had either applied for, or was about to apply for, certain patents in connection with these devices and systems, and had theretofore conceived, devised and developed certain formulas and equipment for developing the film used in such devices and for making photoprints and enlargements; all of which were conveyed to plaintiff under the agreement. The agreement scheduled in detail the various processes, systems, devices and me *571 chanical appliances constituting the system, including “secret processes, methods, contrivances, treatments and manipulations ” regarding the construction of a camera, called filmograph, and its parts and accessories.

Under the terms of the first agreement, the plaintiff, if he exercised his right to purchase, was to organize a corporation for taking over and promoting the business. This corporation, the intervener here, was organized by the plaintiff, defendant being one of its officers, and plaintiff transferred to it the rights acquired from defendant.

In addition to the cash purchase price, defendant was to receive as a royalty five per cent of the gross income from the business; this royalty to be not less than five hundred dollars a month, beginning November 1, 1930. Defendant was to devote all his time to the supervision and manufacture of machines and work out new ideas in connection with the development of the business. This service was to be rendered without charge until August 1, 1930, and thereafter he was to receive a salary of five hundred dollars per month for such time as the trustees of the company might desire to employ him.

In his complaint, the plaintiff alleged that he was induced to enter into the agreements with defendant by fraudulent misrepresentations on defendant’s part; that the defendant represented that the systems, processes and devices were original and patentable, and that he had applied for patents upon some of them; that these inventions had been perfected and employed commercially, and their commercial worth established; that they were especially valuable for use in the building of title insurance and abstract plants, and that, with them, the work of plant building could be done in one-quarter of the time and with one-half the cost of *572 work done by the methods and devices in common use ; that he had made a survey of the field for the use of his inventions, and with an investment of five thousand dollars sufficient business could be procured to net a profit of two hundred thousand dollars a year; that under no other system could clear records be made, and that he had perfected secret devices which enabled him to make perfect prints and reproductions; that in these secret devices, which he would not disclose, rested the chief value of his inventions; that the secret device was in a camera which could be produced at a cost of not more than six hundred dollars for the first, and that additional cameras could be built in lots of five or more at a cost of two hundred dollars to three hundred dollars; that the first camera could be completed in not more than sixty to ninety days, and an enlarging device in two weeks, at a cost not exceeding one hundred twenty-five dollars; that, by September 1, 1930, the company would be earning sufficient money to pay the defendant a royalty of five hundred dollars a month, as well as a salary from the business which the defendant had also contacted.

The defendant, in his answer, denied making any misrepresentations in relation to his systems and inventions ; and alleged affirmatively his long experience in the abstract business, as a result of which he had devised, originated or invented methods, forms, mechanical devices, apparatus and equipment, and improvements thereof, including a form of name index and photographic camera employing moving picture principles and mechanical devices and apparatus for making projectors of film images adaptable for use in compiling tract indexes, all being generally known as the Lundberg Systems; that the systems had been, at all times since, and long prior to, the execution of the contracts, capable of effecting a saving over other sys *573 terns known to the defendant of approximately three-fourths of the time and half the cost of building modern abstract and title insurance plants; that two such plants were built in accordance with the system prior to the execution of the contracts, thereby establishing the fact that abstract plants could be built by the system for less money than by any other system known to the defendant.

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361 S.W.2d 293 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1962)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 P.2d 105, 177 Wash. 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lambach-v-lundberg-wash-1934.