National Conduit Manuf'g Co. v. Connecticut Pipe Manuf'g Co.

73 F. 491, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2649
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut
DecidedApril 1, 1896
DocketNo. 814
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 73 F. 491 (National Conduit Manuf'g Co. v. Connecticut Pipe Manuf'g Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Conduit Manuf'g Co. v. Connecticut Pipe Manuf'g Co., 73 F. 491, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2649 (circtdct 1896).

Opinion

TOWNSEND, District Judge.

This is a bill for infringement of patent No. 395,584, for conduit for electric wires or cables, granted January 1, 1889, to Edward H. Phipps, assignor to Edward S. Perot and James P. McQuaide. The facts bearing on the issues raised are as follows: The patentee is the president, treasurer, and chief stockholder of the defendant corporation. It and its predecessors have, since I860, continuously manufactured sheet-iron, cement-lined pipe, identical in structure with that now alleged to infringe said patent. The use of said pipe, however, was originally limited to the conveyance of water. It is now extensively manufactured, both by complainant and defendant, as a conduit for electric wires. In July, 1887, said Phipps received a large order for said pipe from the Phoenix Company to be used in the construction of an electric subway. About this time he consulted a patent solicitor as to the possibility of obtaining a patent for^the use of such pipe for electrical conduits, and, as incident thereto, for a certain bridge construction thereof. While this application was pending he formed a partnership, in August, 1882, with said Perot and McQuaide (now the president, and secretary and treasurer, respectively, of the complainant corporation) ; he agreeing to contribute the patent on said pending application, if allowed, and said order, and certain machinery. Shortly after-wards said Phipps retired from said firm, the other members paying him, for his share therein, a certain sum in cash, and giving their notes for the balance of the purchase price; Phipps retaining said application as security for the payment of said notes. By a subsequent agreement the notes were surrendered, upon the payment of a certain sum, the application was assigned to McQuaide and Perot, and they organized the complainant corporation, and continued the ■ business of manufacturing said conduits. Some months before Phipps retired from said firm, said application was rejected by the patent office, upon citation of anticipations; and, although Phipps knew this fact, he did not communicate his knowledge thereof to either Perot or McQuaide, but wrote them that his patent solicitor “has heard from Washington, and he thinks things look very favorable.” In this condition of affairs, Phipps agreed to assign said appli1 cation, “still pending in his name.” Perot and McQuaide claim tha t they did not then know that said application had been rejected, and they made no inquiries in reference to it, as the prosecution of the application had been wholly intrusted to Phipps. They knew, however, before entering into the original partnership, that the pipe manufactured by Phipps, and contracted for by said Phoenix Company, and claimed in said application for electric conduits, had been used for many years for wáter pipe. The evidence shows that all the parties understood that Phipps expected to be able to obtain a patent which would cover the use for electrical conduits of the pipe which they proposed to manufacture. Perot and McQuaide further [493]*493claim that they considered said application as of great value, and that without it they would not have paid a dollar for Phipps' interest in the partnership. It appears that they settled the last one of their notes, for $1,000, given therefor, by a shipment of pipes to Phipps after they knew that the application had been rejected.

In disposing of the various legal questions herein presented, it is unnecessary to determine the truth of the claims made by complainant and denied by defendant. It may be assumed that the conduct of Phipps was incompatible with the trust relations existing between the parties, and that complainant might have had its remedy by an appropriate action for relief, brought upon a discovery of the facts. These transactions occurred, and Perot and McQuaide knew of the rejection of said application, as early as May, 1888. But although Perot says he complained to Phipps’ father, in 1889, of “the dishonorable manner in which his son was acting,” and said “that he had attempted to infringe upon a patent which he had gotten up and sold to us,” yet Perot continued to write friendly letters to Phipps long-after May, 1888, said note for $1,000 was accepted as aforesaid, and fraud is not alleged in this action. Phipps, after retiring from said partnership, manufactured and sold pipe for electrical conduits identical with that which he had originally manufactured for water pipe, and in 1892 he organized the defendant corporation. The defendant, inter alia, denies the validity of said patent. Counsel for complainant contend that, by reason of the foregoing facts, defendant is es-topped to make said defense. To this claim defendant makes several answers, which will be considered in their order. It claims that it is not estopped, because there was neither a general representation of the validity of said application, nor any specific representation, other than a mere opinion upon a question of law, which neither Perot nor McQuaide ever attempted to investigate, and that they knew said pipe, as water pipe, was old. Bill; the foundation of the estopped against a vendor patentee is the fact tiiat he has received and retained a valuable thing in consideration of the statements contained in the application for, or specification of, the patent. Babcock v. Clark son, 11 C. C. A. 351, 63 Fed. 607. It is therefore unnecessary that the vendee should prove other representations. It is immaterial herein that the vendor may have made representations affecting the question as to the probability of obtaining a patent, because said patent afterwards issued. It is immaterial that the parlies knew such water pipe was old, provided they under-stood that the vendor claimed that its use for electrical conduits covered by said application was new, and tbe consideration was paid upon such understanding. Such a sale is, in effect, upon the consideration of an agreement by the vendor that, whatever may be the status of the patent as to the public, he (the vendor) will not thereafter interfere with the vendee’s rights in the invention covered thereby, during the life of said patent. Irrespective, then, of the representations of Phipps, he is now estopped to deny the statement in said original application, that his “invention consists in a conduit for electric wires or cables, composed of a sheet-metal tube or shell, and a lining of cement therefor.”

[494]*494But counsel for defendant argues that at the time of the final assignment the citation of references showed that the first claim was Amid, and therefore there is no presumption of consideration received, or title conferred, as to said claim. But Perot and McQuaide were ignorant of the facts. The prosecution of the application was in Phipps’ charge, and they were not called upon to make further inquiry after Phipps’ statement that his solicitor had “heard from Washington, and he thinks things look very favorable.” It is further claimed that they paid the last one of their notes after they knew the application had been rejected. WhateA'er might be the effect of such payment upon an action for fraud, there is nothing therein.necessarily inconsistent Avith this claim of estoppel. They might reasonably have concluded that haA’ing paid all of said purchase price, except $1,000, their only way to secure the benefit of said patent was by the payment of said sum, to prevent further competition by Phipps. Defendant further argues that, even if it be assumed that Phipps did fraudulently conceal the rejection of said application, and did receiA'e a large sum from Perot and McQuaide as the price therefor, yet that complainant has waived said fraud.

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Bluebook (online)
73 F. 491, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-conduit-manufg-co-v-connecticut-pipe-manufg-co-circtdct-1896.