MacHen v. Budd Wheel Co.

143 A. 482, 294 Pa. 69, 1928 Pa. LEXIS 342
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 15, 1928
DocketAppeal, 179
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 143 A. 482 (MacHen v. Budd Wheel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacHen v. Budd Wheel Co., 143 A. 482, 294 Pa. 69, 1928 Pa. LEXIS 342 (Pa. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice, Schaffer,

Plaintiff seeks to recover damages for the breach of a word of mouth contract of employment. The jury gave him a verdict for $450,000 and defendant appeals from the judgment thereon. On a previous trial, he recovered $250,000, which was set aside on the ground that his measure of damages was not properly proved.

Appellee in the year 1919 was employed by defendant as a salesman at a salary of $4,000 per year. While so employed he claims he invented a patentable process of lulling tapered steel discs for making tapered disc automobile wheels. He communicated the idea to defendant’s president, Edward C. Budd, later writing him a letter on February 3, 1919, in which he suggested the payment of a small royalty in consideration of his assigning the patent to the company. Two days later Budd replied in writing saying defendant had an invariable rule that it would not under any circumstances pay royalties to an employee, adding that if plaintiff’s idea should prove of value they would probably have to compensate him if they took over his invention. Shortly after the receipt of this letter, plaintiff saw Budd in his office. The conversation began, so plaintiff says, by Budd telling him that he and the vice-president had been discussing, him, plaintiff, and wanted to increase his salary *73 but were unable to do so because tbeir company was not making money. Budd then produced an application for a patent and requested plaintiff to sign it and also to execute an assignment thereof to defendant, which plaintiff refused to do. Budd then said “Well, then, if you will turn this over to us, it will insure your future in the company, and we will agree to raise your salary from time to time in proportion to the increased use of the invention.” Budd added that he would give him two days to decide what to do. “You will either turn this over to us, based on my offer, or you will get out of the company.” At the end of the two days, plaintiff again went to defendant’s office, met Budd and said to him, “Mr. Budd, I have thought over your offer, and I have decided to accept it. I will turn this over to you based on your offer that my future will be assured in the company and that my salary will be raised from time to time in proportion to the increased úse of the invention, and I am going to look to you to carry out your part of the contract.” To which Budd replied “I am very glad that you have come to that conclusion. You will never have cause to regret it,” and handed over to plaintiff the application for the patent and the assignment, which plaintiff executed. Budd denied the conversation as detailed by plaintiff, but, the jury having found in the latter’s favor, we take the terms of the contract as given by him. A few months later plaintiff was discharged from the company’s service, the employee who so notified him stating that Budd had told him to say to plaintiff that if by the first of the following month he had not secured another position, he, Budd, would pay him an extra month’s salary. Plaintiff said nothing about having a contract of employment with defendant and replied “all right.” Not having secured employment, plaintiff wrote asking for the extra salary. In this letter, no mention was made of the alleged contract. He received no reply.

*74 Defendant made application for tlie patent under the assignment from plaintiff, but it was refused by the patent office. In the meantime Budd and one of defendant’s employees named Ibach had been conducting experiments in making a disc wheel using plaintiff’s basic idea but other methods than his to produce results. The application for plaintiff’s patent, following the action of the Commissioner of Patents in rejecting the claims contained therein, was not pressed and abandoned and a new patent embodying his fundamental idea was applied for by Budd and Ibach and was granted. Certain features of plaintiff’s claim for a patent were set forth in the Budd-Ibach application in almost the precise language of his application. Defendant procured patents for plaintiff’s invention in Great Britain and in France.

At the time of plaintiff’s discharge in October, 1919, defendant had manufactured no disc wheels under his or the Budd-Ibach plan. In that year it made 339 disc wheels; in 1920, 17,625; in 1921, 65,200; in 1922, 395,-971; in 1923, 827,510; in 1924, 1,054,675; in 1925, 1,-570,873 and in 1926, the year before this case was tried, 1,658,765.

Plaintiff learned that defendant was manufacturing disc wheels in quantity, and on January 4, 1921, filed a bill in equity in the United States District Court seeking the cancellation of his assignment and reciting his alleged contract of employment as the consideration therefor and his dismissal. When he began this proceeding, plaintiff supposed the patent had been granted, whereas the fact was that the two applications, his and the Budd-Ibach, were being prosecuted in the patent office side by side. Plaintiff did not learn that his patent had been refused until his case in the district court was on trial in May, 1923. Plaintiff’s bill was dismissed by the district court for reasons which will hereafter be adverted to. As originally filed, the Budd-Ibach application may not have fully covered plaintiff’s basic process and Avould seem to have been more particularly for a *75 machine to apply the process; as amended, shortly after plaintiff began suit in the district court, however, it did cover plaintiff’s basic idea and process. By this defendant protected itself against the use of the process by others on a different kind of machine. The Budd-Ibach patent was issued January 16, 1923. Budd himself testified that under the process described in the patent they had manufactured all the wheels. Our conclusion is that the wheel's were made under the process devised by plaintiff, although by a machine differing from that which he contemplated and that defendant had incorporated plaintiff’s process in the Budd-Ibach patent.

In no event could the verdict before us be sustained, because of errors committed on the trial. The trial judge admitted testimony as to the salaries paid to defendant’s president, vice-president, secretary and treasurer, and works manager. It was not by their salaries that plaintiff’s compensation was to be measured under the contract as he states it, but by the salaries of salesmen. The present worth of such a salary and reasonable increases thereof not exceeding salaries paid in the department of the business in which he was employed, less such sums as he had earned and might earn in the future, would measure the extent of plaintiff’s loss by defendant’s breach of that part of the contract respecting his continued employment, if he is entitled to recover at all. The trial judge was mistaken in permitting the salaries of the executive officers to be shown, telling the jury that they could measure the amount of plaintiff’s recovery by the “compensation paid by defendant to persons holding such position as the plaintiff would be qualified to fill, in such an organization.” This left them free to measure the salary which they might conclude he should receive by the salaries of the chief executive officers of the corporation.

It was also erroneous to admit testimony of the profits made by defendant in the year 1925 of $1,185,000. This and the evidence of salaries paid the executive officers of *76

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Bluebook (online)
143 A. 482, 294 Pa. 69, 1928 Pa. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/machen-v-budd-wheel-co-pa-1928.