May v. Board of Com'rs of Logan Co.

30 F. 250, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2441
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 30 F. 250 (May v. Board of Com'rs of Logan Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
May v. Board of Com'rs of Logan Co., 30 F. 250, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2441 (uscirct 1887).

Opinion

Jackson, J.

The plaintiff makes no claim against the defendant counties for the infringement or use of the patented apparatus previous to-the fourth day of October, 1873, the date at which the extended term of the patent commenced. The petition, which in all essential particulars maj7, be treated and regarded as a declaration in an action on the case, avers that the defendant counties, “on the fourth day of October, 1873, and up to and on the fourth day of October, 1880, and within and during the term of seven years mentioned in the certificate of extension of said letters patent, and after the granting of said letters patent and said extension, and before the bringing of this suit, and within the district and division aforesaid,” did unlawfully, wrongfully, and injuriously, and without license, make, use, and cause to be made and used, the paid patented apparatus, in and about the construction and use and operation of certain jails or prison buildings, known and designated as the county jails of said counties, in infringement of the exclusive rights secured to Edwin May by the original letters patent, and the extension thereof. The petitioner then claims, as the assignee of the'patentee’s right and cause of action for said alleged infringement during the extended term of the patent, damages to the extent of $1,500 against each of the defendant counties. The cause of action which the plaintiff, as assignee, is thus seeking to enforce originated on the fourth day of October, 1873. The present suits were commenced on the twenty-fifth day of September, 1886, within the period of six years from the expiration of the extended term of the patent, but more than six years after the right of action accrued.

The defendants demurred to the petition, and for grounds of demurrer assigned the following: First, that the action is barred by the statute of' limitations; second, that the boards of county commissioners nor the defendant counties in Ohio are not liable in an action for damages for the infringement of a patent; third, that the alleged cause of action did not survive the death of Edwin May, the patentee; fourth, that such cause of action was not assignable by the administrator of said patentee; fifth, that these actions are not maintainable by the plaintiff in her own name; and [253]*253sixth, tliat said cause of action was not assignable under the statutes of the state of Indiana; that the said circuit court of Marion county, Indiana, had no authority either to direct or to ratify and approve the assignment and transfer of said patent-rights and causes of action made by the administrator to the plaintiff; and that the assignment as made by the legal representative of the patentee did not include said alleged cause of action.

The third, fourth, fifth, and sixth grounds of demurrer, rebating to plaintiff’s title to the claim or cause of action sued on, and her right to maintain these suits in her own name, will he first briefly considered. It is hardly an open question at this day that a patentee’s right of action for an infringement of his patent survives to his personal representatives; and it is well settled that his executor or administrator may not only sue on such cause of action, but may assign and transfer the same to another. A patent-right, with all the incidents arising from infringement thereof, is personal property, and goes, upon the death of (he patentee, assignee, or grantee, to his executor or administrator. Section 4884, Rev. St., providing for the grant of a patent “to the patentee, his heirs and assigns,” does not change the law, or prevent the personal representatives from succeeding to all such rights. Shaw Relief Valve Co. v. New Bedford, 19 Fed. Rep. 753; Walk. Pat. §§ 396, 397, and cast's cited in notes. The objection that plaintiff cannot maintain these actions in her own name is not well taken. Under the Ohio Code of Procedure, an assignee of “a chose in action,” being the real party in interest, may sue in his or her own name without joining the assignor. While the fifth section of the act of June 1,1872, (Rev. St. § 914,) recognizes as permanent the distinction between the jurisdiction of law and of equity, it adopts or prescribes for the federal courts any state siatuto which authorizes suits to be brought in the name of the real party in interest. But, aside from this provision of the statute, it was settled by the supreme court as early as 1829, in the ease of Harper v. Butler, 2 Pet. 239, that the assignee of “a chose in action,” assigned by an executor in the state where lie had proved the will and taken out letters testamentary, and whore the testator lived and died, could maintain an action in another state, without joining the assignor and without a new probate, if the law of that state allowed an assignee of a “chose in action ” to instituto a suit thereon in his own name. See, also, Weed S. M. Co. v. Wicks, 3 Dill. 261, holding that an assignee of a “chose in action” can sue in his own name in the circuit court sitting in the state of Missouri, whoso law, like that of Ohio, permitted suit in the name of the real party in interest. This rule is also recognized in Wilkins v. Ellett, 108 U. S. 257, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 641.

But it is insisted that, under the statutes of Indiana relating to the administration of decedents’ estates, neither the administrator with the will annexed of Edwin May, nor the civil circuit court of Marion county, Indiana, had any authority to sell and transfer to the plaintiff the rights of action which she is seeking; to enforce in these suits. Sections 2217, 2260, 2270, 2281, 2289, 2299, 2301, 2308, of the Revised Statutes of [254]*254Indiana are referred to in support of these propositions. These sections, which it is not deemed necessary to set out in detail, relate to the administration of estates, the duties of the personal representatives, the manner of disposing of the assets, and the jurisdiction of the civil circuit courts, as courts of probate, in making sales of the personal property of the estate and settlements with the executor or administrator. They confer upon said probate court full authority to sell the property of estates, whenever it is deemed for the interest of parties concerned, or necessary to wind up the administration. In the present case, the administrator with the will annexed, George F. McGinnis, reported to said court in December, 1880, that all the real and personal estate of the decedent which had come to his hands or knowledge had been administered, except the rights of said decedent in certain letters patent, etc., and that it was for the best interest of said estate, as he believed, to sell said rights at private sale. It appears from the record of said proceedings, which, by consent of parties, rvas submitted by defendants in support of this demurrer, that said circuit court of Marion county, Indiana, thereupon authorized and directed said administrator to sell said patent-rights, which he accordingly did to the plaintiff, and in March, 1882, reported his action in the premises to said court, together with the transfer or deed of assignment which he had executed to the plaintiff. This transfer, which went beyond a mere sale of the patent-rights, and included the claims and demands of the estate arising thereunder, in terms sufficiently broad to cover rights of action for infringements of said patents, such as plaintiff seeks to enforce herein, was regularly approved by the court, and said sale and transfer were by proper decree ratified and confirmed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 F. 250, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-board-of-comrs-of-logan-co-uscirct-1887.