Mutchnik v. M. S. Willett, Inc.

337 A.2d 72, 274 Md. 610
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 4, 1975
Docket[No. 166, September Term, 1974.]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 337 A.2d 72 (Mutchnik v. M. S. Willett, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutchnik v. M. S. Willett, Inc., 337 A.2d 72, 274 Md. 610 (Md. 1975).

Opinion

Murphy, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By a “Licensing Agreement” dated June 11, 1968, Melvin Mutchnik and his father, Henry Mutchnik (the Mutchniks), granted M. S. Willett, Inc. (Willett) an exclusive license until June 10, 1978, to manufacture and sell a metal table slide which they had invented and for which they had applied for a patent. For well over a decade prior to the agreement, the Mutchniks had designed and sold various table slides and other furniture items which Willett had manufactured for them. Under their licensing agreement of June 11, 1968, Willett agreed to pay $9,000 to the Mutchniks and to release them from any claims “relating to . . . [Willett’s] manufacture of the dies for said slide, the tooling in connection therewith and the production of such slides by it, as well as the raw materials, goods in process and finished goods inventories of such slides... [in Willett’s] possession.” In consideration of Willett’s promise, the Mutchniks agreed to “transfer and assign ... [to Willett] all of their right, title and interest in such dies, tooling, production and inventories.” The agreement further specified in paragraph 9 that Willett would:

“(b) . . . pay Licensors [the Mutchniks] ... a royalty of five percent (5%) of the highest gross *612 invoiced prices charged by Licensee' [Willett] and/or its sublicensees for such, slides......In the event Licensee and/or any of its; sublicensees; shall' manufacture and/or sell any other slidessuch royalty shall also apply to and be payable, on the same basis, on the manufacture'and/or sale of such other slides. (Emphasis, supplied'..) 1
“(c) The amount, of such royalty shal. be: no less than Five Hundred Dollars; ($500.00)' per month . ...”

By declaration filed on January 15>, 1973, Melvin. Mutchnik, individually, and as; assignee of Henry Mutchnik. (who died January 1,1971) sued Willett, allegingthat Willett, had breached the licensing.agreement by failingto make'the' required royalty payments, after May 1, 19.691 Willett';filedi an answer and counterclaim;; by way of defenses, it asserted; that because the agreement, was; “a patent; license, which: required royalty payments; on. items other' than., those: described and claimed in the: patent,”' the agreement; constituted “a patent misuse;, is ilegal and; is; void atoinitiot.” In its counterclaim, Willett; demanded retura of all' money-paid under the agreement and an award fon treble 1 ,, exemplary and punitive damages.

At the trial before the Circuit Court for Baltimore County (Proctor, J. sitting, without a jury), WilLefifs President, John McCaughey, testified that Willett had expended over $40'„©ffiO as of June 1968 in the production of dies to produce table slides for the Mutchniks upon the understanding that Willett could only expect to receive $16,000 from the Mutchniks if they purchased the dies. 1 Asked why Willett expended $40,000 on such dies when it knew it could only get back $16,000 from the Mutchniks, McCaughey said that Willett had acted “on our own because we had dealt with . . . [the Mutchniks] for many years and expected to be manufacturing slides for them for an indefinite amount of time.” He explained;

*613 “[W]e found in going into the project we were put in a situation where we had to make them for a certain price regardless of our increased cost. We were willing to go further to try to become more sophisticated in our tooling approach to make the product cheaper, to cut out hourly charges which basically we are saying the labor.”

McCaughey testified that even though the dies were costing Willett more than it could hope to recover from the Mutchniks, it expected to make money in the long run “off the production.” He said:

“]I]n doing stamping work we don’t build tooling to make money. We have to establish a certain price for tooling estimated at the beginning of the project and ask the customer to pay that. Frequently we spend more than we estimate. If we feel the sale of the product will be there we will eventually get it back in the manufacture of the product itself. We were primarily interested in producing stamping, not tooling.”

McCaughey testified that beginning in April of 1968, Willett negotiated with the Mutchniks “to form some type of business together”; that in June of 1968, the Mutchniks told Willett that “they had this attorney, Herb Miller, and we had to communicate with him that we should not communicate with them.” McCaughey said: “Herb Miller acted like all this was completely new to him at that time. He didn’t know us, anything about us, and he had another party he was entertaining an offer from.” McCaughey testified that Willett was “put on alert. .. [that the Mutchniks] were dealing with other people” and that on June 10, 1968, a meeting was arranged between Willett and the Mutchniks “to conclude an agreement.” McCaughey testified that Willett’s attorney and Miller, Mutchniks’ attorney, were both present at the meeting; that Miller “basically ran the meeting, brought up point by point what do you think of this, what do you think of that”; and that a written agreement was drafted by Miller in long *614 hand “which was basically what had been discussed, and it was signed that night.” In signing the agreement on 'Willett’s behalf, McCaughey said, “I felt I had signed what was the best we could get under the conditions.”

On this evidence, the. lower court concluded that Willett’s defense of patent misuse had been sustained. It held that the provisions of paragraph 9 (b) of the licensing agreement, along with other evidence in the case, demonstrated that the Mutchniks would not have executed the agreement unless Willett had agreed to pay royalties, not only on the slides which incorporated the teaching of the patent, 2 but on any other competing slides, whether patented or not. The court said that this constituted an illegal “conditioning” of the grant of the license under the controlling cases rendering the licénsing agreement unenforceable. In so concluding, the court noted that the Mutchniks had advised Willett that “someone else [was] interested in a license of the slide patent, and that, inferentially, if . . . [Willett] wanted to get on the bandwagon it had better sign up fast.” The court observed that Willett had expended $40,000 in tooling up for the manufacture of the slides, knowing that if it were not granted a license to use the patent, it could only recover $16,000 from the Mutchniks for the dies. Since the Mutchniks knew of these expenditures, and knew that Willett could lose its investment, the court found that the Mutchniks had exercised “leverage” in insisting on the inclusion of the total-sales royalty provision of paragraph 9 (b) in the agreement. From the court’s judgment that the licensing agreement was unenforceable, null and void for “patent misuse,” Melvin Mutchnik appealed. 3

The doctrine of patent misuse prohibits extension of a patent beyond the scope of the monopoly granted by tliie government.

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337 A.2d 72, 274 Md. 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutchnik-v-m-s-willett-inc-md-1975.