Marston v. . Swett

82 N.Y. 526, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 398
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 16, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 82 N.Y. 526 (Marston v. . Swett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marston v. . Swett, 82 N.Y. 526, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 398 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The existence of a valid patent, protecting the device manufactured by the defendants, was the essential and material element underlying the contract between the parties. Assuming, as we must, from the finding of the jury, that the contract was what the plaintiff claimed, it is still apparent that the existence and validity of the patent was the basis of the agreement, and its principal if not its sole inducement. The patent itself, with a guaranty of its validity, was transferred by Mrs. Hawks, the original patentee, to the four parties, Marston, Huttall, Perry and Swett, burdened with a condition for the payment of royalties by the four assignees to the assignor, but with the express covenant contained in the instrument of transfer that the patentee should guarantee' the validity and priority of the patent and protect the purchasers in the exclusive enjoyment of the rights and privileges conferred thereby; in default whereof all payments of royalty were to cease. The relations of the four tenants in common of the patent to the original patentee being thus provided for, the thing that remained was an arrangement among themselves. That arrangement, as described by the plaintiff, was that the defendants Swett and Perry, with their partner Quimby, should manufacture and use the *530 patented device, which by virtue of their interest as tenants in common they had the right to do (Clum, v. Brewer, 2 Curtis, 524), and that Marston and Huttall, who had the same right, should surrender it to the defendants, and neither manufacture themselves nor license others to manufacture; in consideration whereof the royalties sued for were to be paid by the defendants. This agreement was evidently made with reference to' the existing fact of a supposed valid patent, without which it would not have been made at all. The contract of Marston and Huttall not to manufacture themselves and not to license others to manufacture, taken in connection with the patent supposed to be valid, disabled from interference the only parties who could prevent the monopoly, and it was that monopoly, such exclusive right of use, for which the defendants contracted and agreed to pay. This construction of the contract was expressly decided when the case was first before us. (66 N. Y. 211.) Judge Earl says: “The defendants desired the.exclusive right to use the invention, and hence made this agreement with plaintiff.”

The complaint alleges that from the making of the agreement to the first of October, 1869, the stipulated royalties were paid in. full, but that from that date to the first of January, 1872, the accruing royalties were not paid, and were sought to be recovered. On the first, as well as the second trial, the defendants put in evidence a decree of the United States Circuit Court for the northern district of Sew York, declaring the said letters patent “ void, invalid, and of no effect.” By that decree both parties before us were bound because parties to the litigation. That decree, however, was rendered on the 21st of January, 1873, and about a year later than the extent of plaintiff’s claim for royalties. On that state of facts we held that the invalidity of the patent thus declared when the demand for royalties had ceased was not a defense as against those which accrued while the patent was apparently valid and in force. The reasoning of Judge Earl on this point is very clear and forcible. He says that the defendants under the agreement “ actually enjoyed the exclusive right which they *531 sought; ” that “ during the time mentioned in the complaint they enjoyed all they could have had if the patent had been valid; ” that they held a patent which was respected as valid by everybody, and enjoyed a monopoly of the invention; ” that they could manufacture the patented article without competition, and the possession of the patent, apparently valid, enabled them to license others for a consideration.” From this reasoning flowed the inevitable conclusion that there was not a failure of consideration.

But on the second trial the situation changed, and a new element was sought to be introduced. The defendants offered to prove that on December 8th, 1869, the Patent Office declared an interference between Mrs. Hawks and one John H. Groodfellow, respecting the invention which is described in the patent in question, and that on the 19th of January, 1871, the Patent Office made a decision declaring that Goodfellow was the first and original inventor of the patented improvement and awarding priority to him, and directing the issue of a patent accordingly.

Two things are to be observed respecting the fact thus sought to be proved. First, that the decision upon the interference annulled the Hawks patent and rendered it void (Peck v. Collins, 70 N. Y. 376), and second, that it so became void and utterly worthless on the 19th of January, 1871, which was during the period covered by plaintiff’s recovery of royalties. So that, the offered evidence having been rejected, the plaintiff was permitted to recover royalties for the period from January 19th, 1871, to January 1st, 1872, almost an entire year, during the whole of which the patent was invalid and worthless, and so declared by a public and official decree.

The evidence thus offered was rejected under the plaintiff’s exception, and that ruling presents the most important question in the case.

Its correctness is defended, first, upon the ground that the evidence was only offered as bearing upon the probability of notice having been given by the defendants of their intention to discontinue the payment of royalties, and it is said that as *532 the notice they claimed to have given was, if at all, in J uly, 1870, and, therefore, six months before the decision of the interference, that decision could not possibly bear upon the probability of the previous notice.

But we are not prepared to assent to the attempted limitation of defendants’ offer. When first made it was general, and without limitation. The court replied to the offer by an explanation which amounted to a rejection of' the proposed evidence ; saying in substance that the judgment of the Circuit Court having declared the patent invalid, proof of notice in fact given would be an answer to the royalty. Treating his general offer as having been rejected, the defendants’ counsel then offered it as bearing on the question of the probability of notice. The court rejected it for that purpose as too remote. The counsel then repeated his offer generally, and without qualification. It was excluded, and he took an exception. The question, therefore, fairly confronts us, whether this evidence was admissible ?

It will be readily observed that the rejected evidence tended to disprove every one of the facts upon which in our former decision we rested our conclusion that the agreement to pay royalties was supported by an adequate consideration, so far, at least, as the period from January 19th, 1871, to January 1st, 1872, was concerned. We said the defendants actually enjoyed the exclusive right which they sought; but the evidence offered would have shown that the exclusive right had ceased to exist, and could no longer be enjoyed.

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.Y. 526, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marston-v-swett-ny-1880.