Leupold v. Weeks

53 A. 937, 96 Md. 280, 1903 Md. LEXIS 73
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 16, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 53 A. 937 (Leupold v. Weeks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leupold v. Weeks, 53 A. 937, 96 Md. 280, 1903 Md. LEXIS 73 (Md. 1903).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of Circuit Court No. 2, of Baltimore City, dismissing the appellant’s petition to have two claims in his favor treated as liens upon a fund, in the hands of the appellees, produced by the sale of certain patent rights. One of his claims, which was for the return of $2,500 paid by him toward exploiting the patents, was allowed in part, and the other claim, which was for an agent’s commission of ten per cent on the proceeds of sale, was rejected entirely by the Circuit Court.

*282 It appears from the record that the Automatic Telephone Exchange Company, an American corporation hereinafter called the Baltimore Company, was the owner of patents issued by the United States and different European governments for an automatic telephone exchange and had applications pending for additional foreign patents relating to the same contrivance. Desiring to market the foreign patents in the territory ' of the governments by which they had been issued or before which they were pending, the Baltimore Company through its general agent promised the appellant to give him an option on the sale of its European patents if he would furnish $2,500 to be applied to the cost of sending to Europe an experimental exhibit of its exchange and an electrical engineer in order to .properly make known the nature of the invention. The appellant accordingly paid the $2,500 to the Baltimore Company for which he received the following receipt from Joshua Horner, Jr., its treasurer.

Baltimore, March 8th, 1898.

“Received of Richard J. Leupold twenty-five hundred dollars ($2500.) advanced by him to guarantee the safety of certain telephone exhibits and to cover certain expenses to be incurred in effecting sale of the patent-rights upon a certain system of automatic telephone service and appliances appertaining thereto, in the countries of Great Britain, France, Germany, Belgium and Austria-Hungary, or in any one or more of said countries said expenses being chiefly in the cost of the necessary transportation of an exhibit consisting of telephones and switches to Europe, from place to place in Europe and the retransportation of said exhibit from Europe to Baltimore, cost of passage of Richard J. Leupold and an expert electrician to Europe, and the traveling and living expenses of the said Leupold and the said electrician in Europe, and their return passage from Europe.

The above mentioned $2500 is received upon the following terms- and conditions that it shall be subject only to the draft of the said Leupold, for his expenses and expenses of said electrician, and the above mentioned exhibit, that in event of the sale of any of the patent-rights in and for all or any of the countries above named, that, then so much of said $2500 as shall remain after the payment of the expenses above described, shall be delivered to the Automatic Telephone Ex *283 change Company as part payment of the purchase price. In the events of failure to sell any of said patent-rights in any of the countries above mentioned, that the balance of the said $2,500, after the deduction therefrom of all the expenses above referred to, shall be returned to the said Richard J. Leupold, but in no event shall the said $2500 be diminished by draft as above provided for below the amount necessary to be expended to safely retransport said exhibit to Baltimore, Maryland, U. S. A.

Signed. Joshua Horner.”

Witness : Morris J. Mitchell.

The Baltimore Company thereupon on March 10th, 1898, issued to the appellant the following written authority to sell its foreign patents on a commission of ten per cent of the sales price.

“Whereas the Automatic Telephone Exchange Company Limited, of Washington, D. C., has by power of attorney dated March 11th, 1898, empowered Richard J. Leupold and Brown, Shipley & Co., bankers to sell all the patents, rights and privileges in and to a system of automatic telephone service and for Great Britain, France, Germany, Belgium and Austria-Hungary, or any of them, collectively or separately, and whereas the said-are solely appointed to receive the purchase price or prices therefor and whereas the said Automatic Telephone Company Limited, has agreed to allow the said Richard J. Leupold ten peí centum (xo per cent) commissions upon the purchase price or prices received by sale of said patents, rights and privileges in andfor said countries or any of them, the consideration' of said ten per centum (10 per cent) commissions being services rendered and to be rendered by the said Richard J. Leupold in effecting a sale of the said patents, rights and privileges in the above named countries, or any of them.

Now therefore, in the event of the sale of the patents, rights and privileges above described in and for the countries above mentioned, or any of them, the said Brown, Shipley & Co., are hereby empowered and directed to pay to the said Richard J. Leupold ten per centum (10 per cent) of the purchase price received from the sale of the said patents, rights and privileges in and for the countries above named, or any of them ; and it is hereby understood that in the event of a sale of the patents, rights and privileges above described in and for the countries above named, or any of them, having *284 been effected by any one or ones whomsoever at any time before the twenty-fifth day of September, eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, that the said Richard J. Leupold shall be nevertheless entitled to commission of ten per centum (io per cent) of the purchase-money or monies received from the sale or sales of the said patents, rights and privileges in the countries above named, or any of them, just as fully as though he, the said Leupold, had negotiated and effected said sale or sales.”

This paper was executed and acknowledged by the Baltimore Company, the certificate of acknowledgment being dated March ioth, 1898.

The appellant claimed and so testified that there was an understanding when he paid the $2,500 that it was to be returned to him in case any of the patents were sold, and he said he had a letter to that effect, but he did not produce the letter and we think his rights as to this $2,500 should be measured by the terms of the written receipt taken b} him, for the money, and by him produced in evidence.

Armed with the authority already referred to the appellant went to Europe taking with him an electrical engineer and an experimental telephone exchange as an exhibit which were paid for out of the $2,500 supplied by him and started to exploit the invention there. With the aid of his father, who was engaged in the consular service of the German empire, and certain friends of the latter he succeeded in interesting the officials of that government having charge of its telephone service in the automatic exchange and finally secured an agreement for a sale of the patents thereon for the use of that service.

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Bluebook (online)
53 A. 937, 96 Md. 280, 1903 Md. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leupold-v-weeks-md-1903.