New York Bank Note Co. v. Hamilton Bank Note Engraving & Printing Co.

56 A.D. 488
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 56 A.D. 488 (New York Bank Note Co. v. Hamilton Bank Note Engraving & Printing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Bank Note Co. v. Hamilton Bank Note Engraving & Printing Co., 56 A.D. 488 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Hatch, J.:

The result which has been reached in this case is so extraordinary in character when it is considered that the plaintiff recovered a judgment in its favor for the relief demanded in its complaint, that we are called upon to carefully consider the process and proceedings by which such result has been reached and see, if we may, whether the same is the proper result under the determination of this court upon the former appeal, or is due to an incorrect interpretation of its judgment. In other words, whether the' mistake, which has evidently been made, was made by this court or by the referee in construing the judgment. In order that we may have a fair view of the situation, it seems to be necessary to state the character of the interlocutory judgment which came before the court on appeal, the judgment of the court as entered thereon, and the proceedings which have been had thereunder. The primary, purpose of the action was to obtain an injunction restraining the defendant, the Hamilton Bank Note Engraving and Printing Company, from using two certain printing presses furnished by the Kidder Press Manufacturing Company in alleged violation of a contract made by the latter company with the plaintiff and of which the first-named defendant had notice, and as an incident thereto to recover damages by reason of such use.

This action having been tried at a Special Term, an interlocutory judgment was made and entered granting the injunction asked, and adjudging that the Hamilton Bank Note Engraving and Printing Company account to the plaintiff for the profits made by that defendant upon all tickets made by it upon each of the presses purchased ' by it from the defendant Kidder Company, and further that it be sent to a referee to compute the damages sustained against both defendants, and that the plaintiff have final judgment for the amount of the damages so found and for the relief demanded in the complaint, with costs and an extra allowance. The clause of this judg-' ment relating to the damages decreed is- that they “ shall be the [491]*491profits made by the defendant * * * upon all strip, tickets printed by it upon the two aforesaid presses purchased from the Kidder Press Manufacturing Company.” From this judgment an appeal was taken to this court, where the same was modified. From, this point difficulties multiply and incongruity begins. The case upon appeal is reported in 28 Appellate Division, 426. From the opinions delivered as the basis for the decision, it appears that the interlocutory judgment was modified in two particulars. First, instead of limiting the period in which damages might be recovered from the time when certain attachments were placed upon the machine which fitted it for more perfect use, the time was enlarged so as to include the date when the machine was first delivered and before the attachments were applied. The only effect of this modification was to give a more extended period of time in which damages might be recovered for the infringement which the judgment enjoined. ' Second, the rule .of damage stated in the opinions recognized as a primary proposition that the plaintiff was entitled to recover all the damage that it had sustained by reason of the use of the machine. It was then asserted that, in measuring this damage, the referee might take proof of the cost of the production of the tickets by the Kidder machine and the cost of production of the same tickets by any other machine or known process then in existence. By this modification the court simply recognized that the rule of damage to be applied entitled the plaintiff to recover the saving effected by the use of the Kidder machine over that of any other machine or known process then in existence for the printing of strip tickets which were printed upon the Kidder machine. With these modifications, the court declared in its opinions that it affirmed the judgment, without costs, and directed that the reference for an accounting proceed. So far, therefore, as this court expressed itself upon the question of damages it in no manner departed from the well-settled rule in awarding judgments of this character. It recognized and affirmed the right of the plaintiff to that part of the judgment which awarded the plaintiff an injunction, and the whole discussion went upon the ground that the defendant, the Bank Note Company, was called upon to account for the profits which it had made, if any; in addition, it sought to lay down a rule by which the referee appointed upon the accounting might be guided accordingly as the evidence should be developed.

[492]*492In actions of this character it is required that every, question affecting the rights of the parties upon the main issue shall be first settled by the interlocutory decree and before the account is stated, or the reference therefor is ordered. (Mundorff v. Mundorff, 1 Hun, 41; Hudson v. Trenton, L. & M. M. Co., 16 N. J. Eq. 475.) This being decided, the court must direct in its- decree the matters which shall bé embraced in the accounting, as may be required by the circumstances of the particular case. The practice upon the hearing before the referee is assimilated to the former chancery practice, which has been held applicable to such proceeding,, and which the Code has. not changed. (Mundorff v. Mundorff, supra ; Palmer v. Palmer, 13 How. Pr. 363; Ketchum v. Clark, 22 Barb. 319.) Upon such an accounting the 107th Chancery rule required that the party ordered to account should exhibit his accounts to the master. It was expected to' embrace the whole period for which it was ordered, set out the state of the account 'covering such period, and be verified by oath of the party presenting it. (2 Barb. Ch. Pr. 505-515; Story v. Brown, 4 Paige, 112.) When the account is presented, the plaintiff is at liberty to surcharge the same with any sums which he can prove ought to be added thereto, and he may examine the party presenting the account for that purpose. The defendant may also show matters, within the scope of the accounting, which tend to relieve him from the apparent amount which would otherwise b.e charged against him.

Haying in view these rules, it is evident that the court, so far as it expressed itself in its opinions, did not intend to change such orderly course of procedure, and by no language used therein did it do so. ¡Recognizing that the duty primarily rested upon the defendant, the Bank Note Company, to exhibit its account, and in order that such- defendant might have the benefit of the rule of law that the saving alone in the use of the Kidder machine' over any other was the proper measure, it jDointed out that it was at liberty to show by proof, if it could, that in fact there was no saving, by showing that other known machines could produce the tickets as well and as cheaply, and upon such basis the referee was furnished with an absolute rule from which to measure the damage as the same should, be required by the evidence produced. It is manifest that the plaintiff did not bear, and it is nowhere suggested otherwise in the opinions,. [493]*493any burden whatever in this respect.

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120 A.D. 396 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
56 A.D. 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-bank-note-co-v-hamilton-bank-note-engraving-printing-co-nyappdiv-1900.