M. J. Lewis Products Co. v. Lewis

57 F.2d 886, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2041
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 24, 1931
Docket6727
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 57 F.2d 886 (M. J. Lewis Products Co. v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M. J. Lewis Products Co. v. Lewis, 57 F.2d 886, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2041 (E.D. Pa. 1931).

Opinion

KIRKPATRICK, District Judge.

The plaintiff by this suit in equity seeks to restrain the defendant from making, selling, or using certain types of cabinets for housing electric meters, switches, and fuses, as to which cabinets applieations for patents have been filed and are pending; no patents having as yet been issued.

The bill discloses several distinct grounds upon which the relief is sought, and the facts alleged in support of each will be taken up separately.

• 1. The bill avers in substance that the defendant, while in the plaintiff’s employ, agreed to assign to the plaintiff all inventions which he might make while so employed; that while so employed he made three inventions relating to meter cabinets, applied for patents upon them, and assigned the inventions and the patent applieations to the plaintiff, thereby transferring to the plaintiff “the entire and absolute property therein”; and that, having left the plaintiff’s employ, he is now engaged in making and selling meter cabinets, like those covered by the *887 patent applications, in competition with the plaintiff, and to the plaintiff’s injury.

While the law recognizes certain rights in an unpatenied invention, they do not include the right to prevent others from making, selling, and using' the invention. “ * * The discoverer of a new and useful improvement is vested by law with an inchoate right to its exclusive use, which he may perfect and make absolute by proceeding in the manner which the law requires.” But, “ * * * this right is created by the patent, and no suit ean be maintained by the inventor against any one for using it before the patent is issued.” Gayler v. Wilder, 10 How. 493, 13 L. Ed. 504. “ * * * This court have always held that an inventor has no right of property in his invention, upon which he ean maintain a suit, unless he obtains a patent for it. * * " ” Brown v. Duchesne, 19 How. 183, 195, 15 L. Ed. 595. “The patent * * * may be said to create a property interest in that invention. Until the patent is issued, there is no property right in it; that is, no such right as the inventor can enforce. Until then there is no power over its use, which is one of the elements of a right of property in anything capable of ownership.” Marsh v. Nichols, Shepard & Co., 128 U. S. 605, 612, 9 S. Ct. 168, 170, 32 L. Ed. 538.

Eights in an unpatented invention may be transferred, but the transferee takes nothing more than the original owner had; that is, nothing beyond the inchoate right.to a patent for the invention, when and if issued. By-Products Recovery Co. v. Mabee, 288 F. 401, 404. A patent application “is practically a law suit brought by the inventor to persuade or compel the government to make a grant of a monopoly to which he thinks himself entitled.” Mills Novelty Co. v. Monarch Tool & Mfg. Co. (C. C. A.) 49 F.(2d) 28, 31.

It is clear, therefore, that the averment of the bill to the effect that the plaintiff became vested with “the entire and absolute property” in the inventions and patent applications gives it no standing' to maintain this suit. The sale of the inventor’s rights as above defined is, however, governed by the general principles of the law relating to bargains and sales (Cook v. Sterling Electric Co. [C. C.] 118 F. 45; Ingle v. Landis Tool Co. [D. C.] 262 F. 150); and if there be in the agreement or assignment declared upon in this bill any covenant by which the defendant undertakes to refrain from making and selling meter cabinets embodying the inventions, 1 see no reason why breach of it may not bo restrained. Can such covenant be found?

Certainly, as the facts are stated, there was no express agreement by the defendant to relinquish this right which he had in common with all the world. By the assignment the plaintiff has acquired a new idea and the right, if and when a patent issues, to restrain the defendant and all others from using that idea. Did it impliedly bargain for more?

There have been eases in which covenants on the part of the transferor not to use or disclose the idea which was the subject of the transfer have been imported into the assignment by implication. Such implied covenants may arise from the inherent nature of the thing transferred, or the relation of the parties to the transfer.

Thus, in Pomeroy Ink Co. v. Pomeroy, 77 N. J. Eq. 293, 78 A. 698, an inventor who had assigned secret formulas and processes for making ink was restrained from selling the same formulas and processes to others. Now the possessor of a secret process which is not discoverable from mere inspection of the product may not have the legal right to exclude the public from its use, but he is practically able to do so so long as it remains a secret, and that fact gives it most of its value. The secret may be said to be the whole subject-matter of the sale, and, when the inventor sells or discloses the secret to others, he is destroying the very essence of the thing which he had sold to the plaintiff. Obviously an obligation not to disclose it will usually bo an implied term in such contracts.

In Westervelt v. National Paper & Supply Co., 154 Ind. 673, 57 N. E. 552, a similar implied term was found in a contract to assign an invention for a machine, but the machine was intended for use in the plaintiff’s factory and there was no thought of marketing it. The court said (page 554 of 57 N. E., 154 Ind. 673) : “It appears from the complaint that said machine cannot be constructed, except by the use of information furnished by Taggart in violation of Ms duty and agreement with appellee.” In other words, the sale was practically that of a trade secret, although it happened to he a patentable article as well.

In the ease at hand, the principles which protect the purchaser of a trade secret do not apply. The invention appears to be for a simple structure which is being market *888 ed widely by the plaintiff, and there is nothing in the bill to suggest that any one of the plaintiff’s customers or anybody else who obtains one of the cabinets cannot copy it and proceed to manufacture and sell in quantity. Inasmuch as that right is open and accessible to the whole world, it would seem that if for any reason the plaintiff desired the defendant not to exercise it, it would have so contracted expressly.

There are also eases in which a confidential or fiduciary relationship existed between the plaintiff and the defendant, which relationship in itself was sufficient to move the court to restrain the plaintiff from entering into competition with the defendant. Thus in New Haven Sand Blast Co. v. Dreisbach, 102 Conn. 169, 128 A. 320, the defendant, who had agreed to assign to the plaintiff corporation future improvements on certain patents, began, under a subterfuge, to manufacture and sell articles covered by his contract, while he was still president of the plaintiff company and acting as such. Obviously the relationship between the parties was tlje real basis upon which the injunction issued.

It appears from the present bill that the defendant did not begin the manufacture and sale of meter cabinets until after he had left the employ of the plaintiff company.

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Bluebook (online)
57 F.2d 886, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-j-lewis-products-co-v-lewis-paed-1931.