McKay v. Mace
This text of 23 F. 76 (McKay v. Mace) 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.
Opinion
The right of the complainant to the relief which he prays depends upon the ascerlainmont of the date at which a license granted by him to the respondent expires. The construction of this license is not unattended with difficulty, growing out of the inaccuracy [78]*78of some of its phraseology, and the collocation of the phrase defining its duration, but with the assistance of an argument of uncommon vigor and clearness on both sides, we have reached a conclusion which, in our judgment, effectuates the intention of the parties, and a just solution of the controversy. The license is dated April 29, 1872. By its first clause the complainant “leased” to the respondents “the McKay sewing machine No. 1,278, * ® constructed according to the specifications, and embodying the invention contained and set forth in letters patent of the United States, granted to Lyman B. Blake on the sixth day of July, 1858, channeling machine No. 822 and bobbin winder No. 176; said machinery also embodying other patents which the said party of the first part now has or may hereafter obtain applicable to the said machine, or either of them.” By the second clause “the said party of the first part doth also hereby license the said party of the second part to use the said patent, above mentioned, granted to Lyman B. Blake on the sixth day of July, 1858, and also the patents granted to the said Lyman B. Blake on the fourteenth day of August, A. D. 1860, on the process of making a boot or shoe, and on the article so made, for the term of the existence of said patents, or any of them, and of all renewals and extensions of the same, said patents having been assigned by said Lyman R. Blake to said Gordon McKay, trustee; and also all patents which the said party of the first part now has or may hereafter obtain, whether as original patentee, or by assignment or license, applicable to said machine, and all extensions and renewals of the same.”
At the date of the license other patents than these individuated by specific designation were owned and controlled by the licensor, were actually embodied in the leased machine, and were essential to its profitable use. They were-the McKay and Mathies patent of August 12,1862, the McKay and Blake improvement patent of December 13,, 1864, and the Blake patent of September 6, Í870, for 17 years, and expiring September 6,1887. These patents were within the general description of the licensing clause, and are therefore comprehended by its terms, as fully as if they had been specifically identified. The Blake patents of 1860 were extended until August 14,1881, when they finally expired. Since that date the respondents have continued the use of the leased machines and the above recited patents without the payment of the royalties agreed upon, or rendering any account of them, according to the requirements of the license, upon the hypothesis that it was then terminated by its own limitation. Considering the clauses of the license above quoted by themselves, this contention is not without at least plausible warrant. The right to use all the patents referred to is conferred by the license, without restriction, but the duration of such-use is apparently referred to “the term of the existence ” of the Blake patents, or any of them. The phrase which limits the term of the license is connected with the description of the Blake patents, and is expressly applicable to them, and it is not, therefore, [79]*79unreasonable to bold that the entire license is terminable by the expiration of these patents. '
On the other hand, the consideration is not without great weight that the licensor could not have intended to concede to the licensees the uncompensated use of, patents, which imparted to the leased machines their chief value, and had many years to run after the lapse of two years, when the Blake patents expired, or even after the possible extension of them for seven years, for the meager consideration of a moderate royalty, payable only during these periods. However this may bo, the parties have, in a subsequent part of the license, declared their own understanding of its terms, and that is decisive of its meaning. In subdivision 3, under the eighth head in the license, it is agreed “that this lease and license shall continue (provided the lessees comply with the terms thereof) until the expiration of all the letters patent which the lessees arc hereby licensed ho use, or any extensions as renewals of the same.” This language is unambiguous, and applies to all the patents, whether specifically or generally described, the right to use which is authorized by the license. In this category are several patents, as before stated, which were embodied in, or ingrafted upon, the leased machine. The youngest of them, the Blake patent of September (>, 1870, continues in force until September 6, 1887, and must therefore be taken as the measure of the duration of the license. Of the remaining ground of defense it is sufficient to say that it is unsustained. Nor is a more extended discussion of the pleas to the jurisdiction of the court required. The parties are citizens of different states: and the bill prays for a discovery and account. These are recognized heads of equity jurisdiction, and are cognizable in this court, although the groundwork of the relief sought is a contract touching the uso of letters patent, because adequate relief cannot be obtained in a court of law.
There must therefore be a decree in favor of the complainants for discovery and an account, as prayed for; and counsel will accordingly prepare one.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
23 F. 76, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckay-v-mace-uscirct-1884.