Neenan v. Otis Elevator Co.

180 F. 997, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5547
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedJune 2, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 180 F. 997 (Neenan v. Otis Elevator Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neenan v. Otis Elevator Co., 180 F. 997, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5547 (circtsdny 1910).

Opinion

HAND, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The complainant’s contention that the defendant has canceled the agreement under the right reserved in the eighth paragraph is certainly unfounded, and may be dismissed without serious consideration. This leaves as unperformed by the defendant the provision of the ninth and tenth paragraphs, and to determine whether it is in default on those paragraphs their meaning first must be determined. The ninth paragraph does not mean, as the complainant insists, that the defendant shall construct elevators each year whose royalty shall amount to $3,000. The guaranty is no more than a promise that in any case the complainant shall receive $3,000. I do not, of course, mean that the complainant has no independent interest in the erection of elevators, or that the defendant could monopolize his patent, and refuse to exploit it mala fide. That situation is covered by the tenth paragraph; but under the-ninth the defendant only agrees that, ‘in case its bona fide efforts to exploit the invention shall not result in royalties equal to $3,000, it will nevertheless pay that amount, and so insure the complainant of a certain minimum of royalties regardless of the success of his invention. This meaning is the usual one attached to the word “guarantee,” a word commonly used to cover the default of another, upon his own obligation. It should not usually be interpreted as an undertaking by the guarantor to perform the obligation itself. While in this contract the performance guaranteed consisted of certain acts of the guarantor itself, still, if the Obligation extended to the performance of those acts, it should have been so written. To omit a direct obligation and to substitute an agreement of guaranty indicated an intention, not to promise to perform the acts guaranteed, but to make a payment in case they were not performed.

There remains, therefore, the question of the tenth paragraph. I agree with the complainant’s construction that, if the test was made and proved satisfactory, the defendant by this stipulation agreed actually to put the apparatus into practical use, and that it would be none the less in default on its part if it failed to do so, even though it had done its best to install the invention. The condition of the test could only have been to ascertain in advance whether the apparatus could be used practically, and, as it proved satisfactory and the defendant had signified its election “to continue to manufacture the elevators” by the payment of $8,000 as was provided in the seventh paragraph, it was certainly too late thereafter to say that it could not find a place for the apparatus. This stipulation in the tenth paragraph is, however, limited by very vague terms as to the time within which performance must be made; and, besides, the degree of performance is also left undetermined; The words are “within such further reasonable time as is [1000]*1000• convenient to put said apparatus into practical use.” .The phrase “within such further reasonable time as is convenient” does not, of ' course, extend the time- during the whole length of the patent. To adopt such a construction would be to deprive the’ covenant of- any-meaning. I think there would be no question of this if the words “as is convenient” were omitted; and I do not regard them as contributing any definite extension of the time. Indeedl, I can see very little that they add to the words “within such reasonable time.” They can hardly be held to .signify more than that defendant should not disarrange its ordinary business for the purpose of putting in- the complainant’s elevators.

Therefore, the tenth paragraph appears to me to bind the defendant to find a place within which it can put the apparatus into practical use within a reasonable time, and the four years which have elapsed since the test proved the apparatus satisfactory is a reasonable time. I must conclude, therefore, that the defendant is in default upon the- contract. Before accepting the apparatus, it should have ascertained whether its business opportunities justified it in assuming that it could find a place to install the apparatus, for, although it may honestly and bona fide at the present time find that it was mistaken in its judgment or in the value of the apparatus, that is a mistake the responsibility of which it must bear. In short, I cannot interpret the stipulation as no more than a promise to use the apparatus, if in any case it might from time to time find it useful. But, although this construction puts the defendant in default, it by no means justifies the relief in equity which the complainant demands. As I have already said, the stipulation in no way indicates the number of elevators which the defendant should install, and that omission,, indeed, was probably necessary from the nature of the business. Therefore the default in question would have been answered by the installation of a few elevators, because although the defendant promised absolutely to put in some elevators, and impliedly promised to put in all that it reasonably could with due regard to its business interests, still, if it had put in two or three, it would not have been in default upon the absolute part of its covenant, and to show a default upon the implied part the complainant must show that .it has unreasonably or in bad faith refused to put in others. In other words, although its obligation was absolute to put the apparatus "into some practical use within a reasonable time, the degree of such use necessarily depended upon the. opportunities, of, the defendant’s business. Now, in so far as concerns the breach, of what I have called the absolute part of the defendant’s obligation — that is, the requirement to put the apparatus to some practical use- — it is.not. enough to'base.a rescission upon. That part qf the covenant certainly, does not go to the whole consideration as it must if rescission, is .to be granted. Kauffman v. Raeder, 108 Fed. 171, 52 C. C. A. 126; Howe v. Howe & Owen Ball Bearing Co., 154 Fed. 820, 83 C. C. A. 536; - It is ho doubt .true-that it is impossible to assess the damages upion that breach, but if I'am right in -construing the'absolute undertaking .to be wholly indefinite, in-degree, qnd if it would be satisfied .by any. small-performance, obviously it was very far from.going to the whole consideration, and the impossibility of assessing damages will not be enough".

[1001]*1001To succeed, therefore, the complainant must show that the implied and substantial part of the stipulation has been violated, and that the defendant has failed to exert itself in good faith to install his apparatus wherever in reason it was feasible. That covenant was the real inducement for the assignment of his patents, and it was from the royalties so arising that he was to be paid. In proof of such a default he instances the four buildings which have been mentioned in the statement of facts. There seem to have been good reasons in each case why the defendant should not have put in the complainant’s elevators. In the case of the Ritz-Carleton Hotel, I do not think the defendant need have put in 18 or 20 elevators of a type which it had only tested in its factory. As I have said, that test in my judgment bound it to try the elevators practically, but it is one thing to make practical use and another to put in upon one contract a great bank of so many. In the case of the Metropolitan Tower, it cannot be said that Brown’s letter which controlled the architect was the act of the defendant at all, and, even if it were, there were obviously good reasons which justified the defendant declining on such an extraordinary building to put in a device necessarily as yet somewhat experimental.

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Bluebook (online)
180 F. 997, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neenan-v-otis-elevator-co-circtsdny-1910.