National Ventilated Awning Co. v. Farm Equipment Co.

96 F. Supp. 106, 88 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 44, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1964
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedDecember 16, 1950
DocketCiv. No. 1760
StatusPublished

This text of 96 F. Supp. 106 (National Ventilated Awning Co. v. Farm Equipment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Ventilated Awning Co. v. Farm Equipment Co., 96 F. Supp. 106, 88 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 44, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1964 (N.D. Tex. 1950).

Opinion

DOOLEY, District Judge.

The Court hereby makes and files in above cause Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, as follows:

Findings of Fact.

I.

The plaintiff The National Ventilated Awning Company (NVA), a Texas corporation, offices at Dallas, Texas; the plaintiff Slats-O-Wood Awning Company (SOW), a Texas corporation, offices at Houston, Texas, and as transferee has been substituted for the original plaintiff Haw-[107]*107ley Manufacturing Company (HMC), recently dismissed; the defendant Farm Equipment Company (FEC), a Texas corporation, offices at Fort Worth, Texas; the defendant Jack Corn, President of FEC, also does business as Corn Aluminum Awning Company and is a resident of Fort Worth, Texas. The Kool Vent Metal Awning Corporation of America (KVA), is a Pennsylvania corporation.

II.

This Court has jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter of this cause.

III.

On February 9, 1937 Letters Patent No. 2,069,893 was issued to Albert T. Matthews of Georgia, on an application filed December 7, 1932, for an invention relating to awnings. On February 7, 1939, the said Letters Patent was surrendered, and on April 18, 1939 Reissue Letters Patent No. 21,053 was duly granted to said Albert T. Matthews, with an undivided one-half interest therein assigned to Thornton T. Graham of Ohio.

IV.

In September 1930, some time after Matthews had first conceived the invention of the aforesaid patent, he made and installed on a window at his home in Georgia an awning embodying such invention, but it was for experimental purposes only, and said installation did not constitute public use more than two years prior to the filing of the original application for said patent.

V.

On March 6, 1940, tlie said Matthews and Graham granted to Joe W. Hawley an exclusive license in writing, (plaintiffs’ Exhibit 4) for the manufacture, sale and use of awnings embodying the invention of said patent within the States of Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Arkansas, and, by mesne assignments, said license passed to the dismissed plaintiff HMC, and from it to the new plaintiff SOW.

VI.

Effective January 1, 1949, the said Matthews and Graham sold and assigned to the plaintiff NVA the entire right, title and interest in and to said Reissue Letters Patent No. 21,053, including the right to recover for past and future infringements thereof, and the title thereto is now in the said plaintiff, and said plaintiff NVA also acquired and holds the licensors’ interest and rights in and under the license from Matthews and Graham to Hawley, noted in the last above finding.

VII.

The last mentioned license provides that in event said Matthews Letters Patent is infringed the licensee shall call such fact to the attention of the licensors, “and if the licensors bring suit to enjoin such infringement, all costs of such suit shall be borne by the licensors and all money recoveries obtained therein shall be retained by the licensors”.

VIII.

The said Reissue Patent No. 21,053 relates to the construction of permanent ventilated awnings designed to supplant the old and well known canvas type of awning, and the patented structure has had marked commercial success and numerous licenses have been granted thereon throughout the United States.

IX.

The plaintiffs allege that claims 3, 4, 5, 9 and 10 of the said patent have been and are being infringed by the said defendants.

X.

The defendants have manufactured and sold, prior to the filing of this suit, three different types of ventilated awnings, referred to as the “Original”, “Intermediate”, and “Current” awnings, which are shown in plaintiffs’ Exhibits 14, 18 and 15.

XI.

The defendants have set up a number of prior art patents, both domestic and foreign, placing particular reliance on the Morein United States Patent No. 439105 and Brisbane No. 57080, and the Gribbon British Patent No. 7118, but none of the cited patents, either singly or in combination with any other of said patents, anticipates or detracts from the Matthews invention, or invalidates the claims in suit, as settled by stare decisis.

[108]*108XII.

The awnings of one Heflin, 'relied on by-defendants to show prior use anticipating the Matthews patent, do not sustain said defense, and same were first constructed and came into use in or about the year 1935.

XIII.

The patent in suit and particularly the above claims thereof are valid.

XIV.

The three types of awnings aforesaid manufactured and sold by the defendants all infringe the said several claims of the patent in suit.

XV.

Awnings manufactured and sold under the said patent by plaintiffs’ licensees have carried the statutory notice of the patent, and furthermore the defendants have been notified by plaintiff of the infringement of the patent.

XVI.

Under the terms of a written contract between them dated May 1, 1949 (plaintiffs’ Exhibit 29), the KVA in writing assigned and transferred to the Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Company, in the dual capacity of trustee and escrow agent, all of its patent and trademark property, including the Houseman Reissue Letters Patent 20,975, and contemporaneously said trustee executed an assignment and transfer of the same property to the plaintiff NVA, whereupon said executed assignments, together with an unexecuted assignment and transfer reading from said trustee to KVA for the same property, together with other papers in connection with the transaction, were put and continue ini the custody of said escrow agent, however, NVA presently became owner of said properties during the remaining life of the said Matthews patent, subject to contingencies which determined whether NVA permanently remained owner or said properties would revert to KVA at the term end of said patent, and NVA at the same time granted to KVA a license to sub-license others for the purpose of manufacturing and selling awnings and other structures of the “Kool Vent type” under the Matthews patent already owned by NVA and under the Houseman and other patents just then acquired from KVA.

XVII.

Under the authority of said contract KVA, acting in concert with the plaintiff NVA, executed and delivered about 20 licenses, containing the provisions of plaintiffs’ Exhibit 31, to different awning manufacturers in various parts of the country; but none for any territory in either Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas or Louisiana.

XVIII.

In the particular that said Exhibit 31 describes “a structure referred to as ‘jammed’ wherein ventilation is excluded”, said license embraced articles old in the art and long in the public domain.

XIX.

Under date of November 2, 1949, KVA sent to each of its licensees, by registered mail, a notice in the text of plaintiffs’ Exhibit 33.

xx;

The plaintiff SOW concededly cannot stand immune to the impediment raised by any misuse of the patents in question chargeable to NVA.

XXI.

The plaintiff NVA has been and is misusing its patents as more fully stated in the second conclusion of law herein.

XXII.

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Bluebook (online)
96 F. Supp. 106, 88 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 44, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-ventilated-awning-co-v-farm-equipment-co-txnd-1950.