Nyhart v. Kubach

90 P. 796, 76 Kan. 154, 1907 Kan. LEXIS 231
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 8, 1907
DocketNo. 15,100
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 90 P. 796 (Nyhart v. Kubach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nyhart v. Kubach, 90 P. 796, 76 Kan. 154, 1907 Kan. LEXIS 231 (kan 1907).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Porter, J.:

Plaintiff brought this action to recover damages in the sum of $600, and interest, being the amount of three promissory notes which he claims to have executed and delivered to defendants in consideration of a void contract for an interest in a patent-right, and which notes it is claimed defendants transferred to innocent holders. The court sustained a gen[155]*155■eral demurrer to the petition, and plaintiff, having elected to stand upon his petition, brings error. .

The petition alleges that the National Fence Machine Company is a corporation with its principal place of business at Abilene, Kan.; that defendant ■Charles Kubach is its general manager; that in July, 1903, plaintiff and defendants entered into the following written contract:

“National Fence Machine Company of Abilene, Kan.,
Sole Owners and Manufacturers of the National Fence Machine,
Patented January 3, 1903, No. 489,139.
“TERRITORIAL LEASE.
“Know All Men by These Presents: That the National Fence Machine Company of Abilene, Kan., has this day, July 31, 1903, appointed Sylvester Nyhart and son of Atchison, Kan., their true and lawful general agent to sell their national fence machine, at wholesale and retail, in the following territory, to wit: Doniphan, Brown, Nemaha, Marshall, Pottawatomie and Jackson counties, state of Kansas.
“This Indenture Witnesseth: That for the sum of $600, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, the National Fence Machine Company of Abilene, Kan., hereby agrees to give, and does give the party of the second part six 'sample machines and the agency for the sale of the national fence machine for the term of .six years in the above territory. The company hereby agrees to furnish all machines ordered by said agent at two dollars and fifty cents ($2.50) each on board cars at factory, when ordered each machine to be made in a good, substantial and workmanlike manner. The agent shall make a report to the company at the end ■of each month. The company hereby further agrees to take notes for machines when same are quoted good by local bank.
Ship machine to order. By Chas. Kubach, Mgr.
Address all correspondence to SYLVESTER NYHART.
The National Fence Machine Co., LOUIS NYHART
Abilene, Kan.

The petition alleges the execution of the notes and their transfer to innocent holders; that Louis Nyhart, [156]*156plaintiff’s son, was only nominally interested in the contract; that the so-called territorial lease was a mere scheme for the purpose of avoiding the provisions of the statute making unlawful a sale of a patent-right in any county unless the person selling the same shall first file with the clerk of the district court of the county where the sale is made duly authenticated copies of the letters patent, with an affidavit showing that the letters patent are genuine and have not been revoked or annulled and that such person has the right to convey, and for the further purpose of avoiding the requirement of the statute that the person taking any obligation in writing in payment for such sale shall insert therein, before the same is signed, the words “given for a patent-right.” The failure of defendants to comply with any of the provisions of the statute is alleged. Plaintiff in his petition offered to return the six sample machines referred to in the contract.

The theory upon which the petition is drawn is that the contract constituted a sale of a patent-right within the words of the statute (Gen. Stat. 1901, §§ 4356-4358), and, being in violation of the statute, the contract is void.

Defendants contend, first, that the contract is not for the sale of a patent-right, but merely a sale of six sample machines and the appointment of plaintiff as agent with the right to sell under defendants’ direction and control.

The only suggestion of direction or control over the conduct of plaintiff is the provision that he shall report to the company at the end of each month, which would naturally be for the company’s own information and benefit. The so-called agency was not the ordinary one where employment on the one side and promise of service on the other is the only consideration. It was not revocable at the will of the principal, and the consideration was the notes given by plaintiff. Nor was the contract a lease. The form of the instrument is of. no importance; the substance determines the true na[157]*157ture of the transaction. As observed in New v. Walker, 108 Ind. 365, 9 N. E. 386, 58 Am. Rep. 40, “schemes, however cunningly contrived, or subterfuges, however ingeniously devised, will not enable the vendor of the patent-right to evade the statute.” (Page 370.) The six machines, according to the contract, were worth $2.50 each. The main part of the consideration for the notes, therefore, was the right to sell a patented article within the six counties for the period of six years.

It is vigorously contended that the company did not by the contract deprive itself of any substantial interest in the patent itself, and that therefore it was not a sale of a patent-right. Literally, the sale of a patent-right is the sale of the interest of the patentee or owner of the letters patent, and is consummated generally by a transfer of the letters patent. It is universally recognized, however, that a sale of the rights conferred,by the letters patent within a certain territory is a sale of a patent-right. And where the owner sells the right to use and to manufacture for sale and use during only a portion of the life of the patent and for, a prescribed territory it is a sale of a patent-right. These propositions are so well recognized that it would be useless to cite authorities. Under a statute practically identical with ours it was held, in New v. Walker, supra, that a contract transferring the right both to manufacture and sell was the sale of a patent-right, although there was in fact no sale of the patent itself.

Here was a sale of the exclusive right to sell for a period of six years within certain territory the thing patented, as much so as though the word “exclusive” had been written in the contract. The only right within that territory reserved to the owner under the letters patent was the right to manufacture and the remaining interest in the patent after the expiration of six years. The privilege of manufacturing an article may be of very slight value compared to the right to vend and sell. Whatever it was that was transferred [158]*158by the contract, it was something which the company claimed to have the right to sell by virtue of the letters patent. If it lacked full authority to sell what it sold, or possessed none for the reason that the patent had been revoked or annulled, the purchaser would be injured by the very fraud and imposition against which the statute was designed to protect him. (Mason v. McLeod, 57 Kan. 105, 45 Pac. 76, 41 L. R. A. 548, 57 Am. St. Rep. 327.) The reason, therefore, of the statute applies with full force to every sale of a partial interest in a patent-right as much as to the sale, of the entire interest. “That which is within the reason of the law, is a part of the law.” (The State v. Book Co., 69 Kan. 1, 15, 76 Pac.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 P. 796, 76 Kan. 154, 1907 Kan. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nyhart-v-kubach-kan-1907.