Pidot v. Zenith Radio Corp.

31 N.E.2d 385, 308 Ill. App. 197, 1941 Ill. App. LEXIS 1070
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 22, 1941
DocketGen. No. 41,274
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 31 N.E.2d 385 (Pidot v. Zenith Radio Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pidot v. Zenith Radio Corp., 31 N.E.2d 385, 308 Ill. App. 197, 1941 Ill. App. LEXIS 1070 (Ill. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burke

delivered the opinion of the court.

On December 22,1936, plaintiffs filed their complaint in the circuit court of Cook county and charged the defendant with breaching and violating a “confidence” by wrongfully appropriating original radio cabinet designs prepared by the plaintiffs at the request of defendant and in using the designs in the line of radio sets sold by the defendant, and praying for an accounting, for an injunction restraining the manufacture and sale of the design so wrongfully appropriated, and for an injunction requiring defendant to assign certain patents to the plaintiffs. Upon order of court plaintiffs filed a bill of particulars, which confines the charges of the complaint to the single design attached to the complaint as Exhibit A. (Received in evidence as plaintiffs’ exhibit 2.) The bill of particulars states that Exhibit A “illustrates a novel design created by plaintiffs . . . ; that plaintiffs during the month of November, 1935, disclosed to defendant how the basic features of the design illustrated in plaintiffs’ Exhibit A could be applied to and embodied in radio cabinets; that the design as a whole as illustrated in plaintiffs’ Exhibit A . . . has been wrongfully appropriated by defendant in each of the models of defendant’s radio cabinets, . . . ; that defendant’s radio cabinets, as illustrated in defendant’s catalogue and designated specifically in paragraph 10 of the complaint, embody either an exact or an approximate simulation of plaintiffs’ design as shown in said plaintiffs’ Exhibit A of the combination of rounded corners on the cabinets and rounded edges both at the vertical junctures of the side walls of the cabinets and at the horizontal junctures of the side walls with the top walls of the cabinets, together with a plurality of horizontally extended louvres.” Defendant answered and denied that it appropriated plaintiffs’ design, and on the contrary alleged that the designs of its radio cabinets'allegedly embodying plaintiffs’ design were conceived and developed independently thereof. Defendant also denied that plaintiffs’ design, in so far as it merely combined the particular features set forth in plaintiffs’ bill of particulars, was new or novel. The cause was referred to a master in chancery who found the issues in favor of the defendant and recommended that the complaint-be dismissed for want of equity. Objections to the report were overruled. These objections were ordered to stand as exceptions. The chancellor overruled the exceptions and entered a decree which approved the findings and conclusions of the master and dismissed the complaint for want of equity at plaintiffs’ costs. Plaintiffs prosecute this appeal from the decree and ask for a reversal and for the entry of a decree in their favor.

Plaintiffs’ theories are: First: As a matter of law based on the undisputed evidence on equitable principles governing relations of trust and confidence the defendant is obligated to account to the plaintiffs to prevent unjust enrichment of the defendant at the plaintiffs’ expense by means of a wrongful appropriation by the defendant of a novel and original design of radio cabinet as shown in the record as plaintiffs’ exhibit 2. Second: Considering all the evidence in the record, the clear and manifest weight of the evidence shows that the defendant is obligated to account to the plaintiffs on equitable principles governing relations of trust and confidence to prevent unjust enrichment of the defendant at the plaintiffs’ expense by means of a wrongful appropriation by the defendant of a novel and original design of radio cabinet as shown in the record as plaintiffs’ exhibit 2. Third: That the plaintiffs’ design of radio cabinets as shown by plaintiffs’ exhibit 2 was novel and original. Fourth: That the defendant by taking out patents on its infringement of plaintiffs’ design is precluded or estopped- from claiming that it is not liable for its wrongful appropriation of plaintiffs’ design on the ground that it is not novel or original. Fifth: That the defendant’s wrongful appropriation of plaintiffs’ novel and original design was an infringement of the design of plaintiffs’ exhibit 2. Sixth: That equity will prevent the defendant from taking advantage of •the confidential relationship between defendant and plaintiffs and will not suffer the plaintiffs to be wronged by the defendant without giving plaintiffs a remedy therefor. Seventh: That the plaintiffs are entitled to the specific equitable relief of an accounting and injunction requiring the defendant to convey certain patents to plaintiffs and an injunction restraining it from manufacturing any models based upon misappropriation of plaintiffs’ novel and original design. On the other hand, the defendant contends that “the findings of fact of the Master in Chancery having been approved by the Chancellor, this court should not disturb such findings unless they are manifestly against the weight of the evidence; . . . that it did not appropriate plaintiffs’ design for a radio cabinet, but on the contrary the designs of defendant’s radio cabinets were developed by certain of its employees in simulation of the hood of the Cord automobile independently of plaintiffs’ design and prior to the submission of that design to the defendant; that the features of plaintiffs’ design relied upon by them were not new and original and that neither the plaintiffs nor anyone else can obtain a monopoly of the right to use those features as distinguished from the manner or form in which the same are used in combination; that plaintiffs’ design is not so similar to the designs of defendant’s ‘Zephyr’ line of radio cabinets as to amount to or tend to establish any appropriation by defendant of plaintiffs’ design, and that to the extent that there are any features in common in the broad sense between plaintiffs’ and defendant’s designs that the same arise from the common source of inspiration, namely, the hood of the Cord automobile; that if any accounting should be directed the basis of such accounting should not be that plaintiffs are entitled to that part of defendant’s profits arising from the sale of its ‘Zephyr’ line of radios which the cost of the cabinet in which the radios are housed bears to the cost of the complete radio set, but that any such accounting should be limited to the usual and customary basis upon which designers of radio cabinets are paid, which the evidence shows is one half of one per cent of the cost of the cabinet, or in any event should be governed by the rule laid down in one of the cases most strongly relied upon by plaintiffs, i.e., Booth v. Stutz Motor Car Co., C. C. A. 7th, 1932, 56 F. 2d 962, that such accounting should be limited to that part of the profits from the sales of the ‘Zephyr’ line of radios which may fairly be attributed to the use by defendant of the features of plaintiffs’ design which were not common property.”

The master found that plaintiffs in the spring of 1935 organized a partnership under the name of Pidot & Waltman to engage in the business of interior designing and industrial styling, including the creation of designs for industrial production. Plaintiffs carried on their business at 549 North Michigan avenue, Chicago. The plaintiff, Samuel L. Pidot, in 1935, at the time of the organization of Pidot & Waltman, was primarily an interior decorator. He had done some industrial designing work to a minor extent, and did not begin designing furniture as a regular occupation until 1935, although in previous years he had styled furniture for clients in his interior decorating business.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 N.E.2d 385, 308 Ill. App. 197, 1941 Ill. App. LEXIS 1070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pidot-v-zenith-radio-corp-illappct-1941.