Monsanto Chemical Works v. Jaeger

31 F.2d 188, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1039
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 23, 1929
Docket1892
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 31 F.2d 188 (Monsanto Chemical Works v. Jaeger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monsanto Chemical Works v. Jaeger, 31 F.2d 188, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1039 (W.D. Pa. 1929).

Opinion

THOMSON, District Judge.

This is a bill in equity praying for specific performance of two written contracts, one relating to sulphuric aad and tbe other relating to phthalie anhydride.

The plaintiff owns and operates two- manufacturing plants, one at East St. Louis, 111., and the other at St. Louis, Mo. At tbe former plant, one of its' products of manufacture is sulphuric acid and at tbe latter phthalie anhydride.

Tbe defendants axe experienced chemists, and axe tbe inventors and discoverers of certain new processes and eontaet masses for the manufacture of sulphuric acid and phthalie anhydride. Tbe chemists being desirous to sell, and tbe company to purchase, tbe exclusive rights to use said processes and contact masses and all their United States and foreign patents, when and as issued on tbe same, written contráete were entered into to effect such purpose, tbe one relating to sulphuric acid and tbe other to phthalie anhydride, which agreements form tbe basis of this suit. Each agreement consisted of two parts, designated respectively an “option agreement” and a “purchase agreement”; both documents relating to sulphuric acid being dated June 26, 1925, and those relating to phthalie anhydride both being dated July 23, 1925. In both option agreements the company was given the right to investigate such processes and contact masses to determine whether they were satisfactory. Eor this purpose the chemists agreed, in the sulphuric acid contract, to start immediately the preparation of their contact masses and the testing of these masses in the laboratories of the company and diligently proceed with the work until a sufficient amount of the eontaet mass or masses had been prepared for the company’s semicommercial test. At least one of the contact masses prepared was to be a nonplatinum containing mass, which will give, on laboratory test, a conversion of S O2 to S O3 of from 97.3 per cent, to 98.5 per cent. During the time for preparation of such eontaet mass or masses, the company . agreed to pay the chemists a salary of $500 each per month, and certain other designated expenses extending over an estimated period of three months from the date of the agreement. This salary, if the company exercised its option of purchase, to be deducted from any royalty payments due under the purchase agreement. The company agreed to furnish the chemists a laboratory for preparation of their eontaet masses and testing the same, and to supply, at its own expense, such small equipment and supply of chemicals as are reasonably required. The period of four months was given for the delivery of the contact mass to the company for its semieommereial test. At the time of such delivery, the chemists to furnish the company full data for calculating the cost of manufacture of their eontaet mass or masses on a commercial scale, guaranteeing to the company that the cost' of a eontaet mass equal in all respects to that delivered for test will not exceed a given sum per pound or litre, for material or labor required to manufacture such mass.

In case such eontaet mass could not "be produced by the company at a, cost equal to, or less than, that specified in the guaranty, the company to he released from its obligation to pay royalties under the contract, and shall discontinue the use of said eontaet mass. The chemists conveyed to the company an exclusive option for the purchase of all their processes for sulphuric acid contact masses and their preparation, and an exclusive option to all United States patents and foreign patents which may be later granted on their inven *190 tions on sulphuric acid contact masses, “the terms of which purchase are set forth in the proposed purchase agreement attached to this option agreement and initialed by the parties.” The option runs for a period of four months from the date of the delivery of the contact mass for the company’s tests. If the company accepted the option, it was to notify the chemists in writing before the expiration of said four months.

The purchase agreement prepared and signed as aforesaid, contemporaneously with the option agreement, was to carry into effect the proposed purchase specified in the option agreement, in the event the company exercised its option of purchase within the time limit specified, namely, on or before June 26, 1926. In that event, “the chemists agree to comply immediately and will assign to the company an exclusive license to all patents, domestic and foreign, which have been, or may be, granted to the chemists on their inventions concerning contact masses for sulphuric acid, and on the processes of manufacturing such contact masses. The chemists will immediately file patent applications on all inventions they have made concerning all contact masses for sulphuric acid manufacture, and will do everything possible to insure the prompt granting of the patents. ** * * ” “The chemists will, at the request of the company, carry out any additional research work which the parties agree is necessary to allow the filing of other patent applications to properly protect their mutual interests, and it is agreed that the cost of such research work shall be paid for by the company.” Then follow terms as to the royalties which shall be paid to the chemists for the period of five years, provisions for licensing other sulphuric acid plants, and other provisions not important in the determination of the present issue.

In like manner, the phthalie anhydride option agreement provided for the company’s right to investigate the processes and contact masses for its manufacture; the chemists agreeing to start immediately the preparation of such masses and their testing in the laboratories of the company, proceeding diligently with the work until a sufficient amount of the contact mass or masses had been prepared for the company’s semieommereial test. The mass prepared was expected to give, on test, a yield of 100 parts sublimed phthalie anhydride quality equal to Monsanto specifications. The mass or masses were to be prepared in the laboratories of the company, the latter supplying, at its own expense, such small equipment and such supplies of chemicals reasonably required to make the contact masses which the company desired to test on a semieommereial scale in co-operation with one or both chemists.

Very generally stated, the chemists proceeded under the sulphuric acid contract, furnished the contact mass or masses, the same were tested by the company, the necessary descriptive data was furnished for the use of the company, and the latter, on June 8,1926, notified the chemists that it exercised its option of purchase under the contract.

During the period prior to June 21,1926, the defendants drew up and filed in the Patent Office joint applications for letters patent, ten in number, covering a wide range of invention.

The phthalie anhydride contract was not carried into effect, the chemists leaving the premises on June 21, 1926, and the company having given no notice of its intention to accept the option of purchase. Each party attributes to the other the failure to consummate the agreement.

The issues here involved may be briefly stated as follows:

(1) As of what date does the sulphuric acid contract speak, June 26, 1925, its date, or June 8, 1926, the date of acceptance?

(2) What did the chemists agree to sell by virtue of the written provisions of that contract?

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Bluebook (online)
31 F.2d 188, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monsanto-chemical-works-v-jaeger-pawd-1929.