Norfolk & New Brunswick Hosiery Co. v. Arnold

49 N.J. Eq. 390
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 49 N.J. Eq. 390 (Norfolk & New Brunswick Hosiery Co. v. Arnold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norfolk & New Brunswick Hosiery Co. v. Arnold, 49 N.J. Eq. 390 (N.J. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

The question now before the court is, whether an injunction heretofore granted in this case shall be dissolved or not. The main object of the suit is to procure a decree declaring that a contract made by the female defendant with the complainant, on the 10th day of April, 1882, was obtained by fraud, and adjudging, for that reason, that the contract is void, and shall be surrendered for cancellation. The contract in question granted to the complainant the exclusive right to use three patents, belonging to the female defendant, in the manufacture of certain articles of merchandise, and also the exclusive right under any other patent, which had been, or might thereafter be, granted during the continuance of the contract, to the female defendant or her husband, for any invention whatever appertaining to or useful in making any kind of underwear for human beings, and also the exclusive right to use a sewing machine called the anchor-stitch sewing machine. For the rights so granted, the complainant agreed to pay the female defendant an annual royalty of $12,000 in semi-annual payments. The royalty, at this rate, was to commence on the 1st day pf January, 1883, and cease cn the 22d day of November, 1898. At the latter date the contract will expire by its own limitation. All of the royalties which fell due prior to January last, 1891, have been paid, except about $10,000. To collect those which remained unpaid, the female defendant brought a suit against the complainant in the Snpreme Court of New York, for Queen’s county, in February, 1891. The injunction sought to be dissolved restrains the further prosecution of this suit. Both parties are citizens of this state.

The fraud on which the complainant rests its right to have the contract annulled consists entirely in false representations alleged to have been made by the male defendant, while acting as the agent of the female defendant in negotiating the contract. No fraud, perpetrated by her own personal speech or act, is imputed to the female defendant. If any misrepresentations were made, the bill shows, on its face, that they were made by the agent and not by the principal. The power delegated to the agent is not shown. There is no proof of the scope or extent of his agency. [392]*392In this posture of affairs, it might, under other circumstances, be a question worthy of very careful consideration whether the ease made by the bill is not, in this respect, so radically defective as to lay no foundation whatever for relief against the female defendant. For present purposes it will, however, be assumed that the representations, alleged to be false, were made by her authority, and that she is responsible for them.

Two kinds of misrepresentations are charged. The first consists of statements alleged to have been made by the male defendant, respecting the action of the patent office at Washington, on applications for patents which he had previously made, and which were still pending there when the contract was negotiated. None of these statements are shown to be false. The complainant, in fact, admits that it was impossible for it, when its bill was filed, to show that they were false, for it says that, until the issue of letters patent, the records of the patent office, respecting a pending application, are kept secret from all persons except the applicant. For present purposes, this branch of the complainant’s case may, therefore, be dismissed without further remark. It constituted no part of the ground on which the injunction was granted.

The second class of misrepresentations consists of statements charged to have been made respecting the capacity and efficiency of a sewing machine. One of the patents, which the contract gives the complainant an exclusive right to use, is for an improvement in the mode of uniting the edges of knitted goods. The bill calls this device on anchor-stitch seam. The parties, in making the contract, unquestionably dealt on the basis that this seam was to be made by a sewing machine. The male defendant, while negotiating the contract, claimed that he had invented a sewing machine that would apply this stitch in making the seam. The contract calls this machine an anchor sewing machine, and by it the female defendant bound herself to furnish to the complainant, at a reasonable price, as many such machines as it might desire, the machines to be returned to her on the termination of the contract. The complainant’s whole case, so far as its right to an injunction is concerned, rests exclusively upon false [393]*393representations alleged to have been made respecting this machine. The bill avers that it was represented to the complainant, during the negotiation of the contract, that the male defendant had completely invented a sewing machine, designated as an anchor sewing machine, which was practically operative and capable of producing the anchor-stitch seam in the usual and ordinary •course of manufacture, and that with such machine the operatives of the complainant could, in the regular course of its manufacture of underwear, make this seam with greater commercial economy, profit and success than by any other method of seaming and stitching then in use by the complainant. The complainant denounces each of these representations as false. It further says that for more than four years it faithfully tried to practically and successfully operate the defendants’ machine, but that the machine finally proved utterly incompetent to make good the representations which had been made concerning its capacity and operativeness. The complainant states as the reason which induced it to experiment with the machine, and to keep it on trial for so long a period as four years, was, that the male defendant, for all that time, kept promising that he would, very soon, by a new invention or discovery, perfect the machine in the respects in which it was defective and make it do all that it had been represented it would do. But the complainant says that the machine never could do what it was represented, when the contract was made, that it would do, and that nothing the defend.ants have since done to it has so changed or improved it as to make it competent, to do the work successfully which it was represented it would do. The result is, as the complainant says, •that both the patented stitch and the machine are worthless.

It is thus seen that the foundation upon which the complain.ant rests its right to relief is, that it was induced to enter into •the contract, which it seeks to have annulled, by fraudulent representations made concerning, to use the language of the bill, the capacity and operativeness of the sewing machine which the female defendant agreed to furnish to the complainant. I shall ■not stop to consider whether the material averments of the bill, •constituting this branch of the case, are fully proved or not, but [394]*394shall, for the purposes of this discussion, assume that they are. A simple reading of the bill will, even if it is read carefully,, lead the reader to believe that the complainant, when it made the-contract, knew nothing about the machine, nor about its capacity or efficiency, except what it obtained from the defendants’ representations. This, however, is not the fact. From the answer and proofs of the defendants it appears, and the fact is now entirely free from dispute, that the complainant had used the machine for more than a year prior to the making of the contract. It had had the exclusive use of it for all that time, and! had, for such use, paid a much larger royalty than the contract hr question requires it to pay.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 N.J. Eq. 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norfolk-new-brunswick-hosiery-co-v-arnold-njch-1892.