Pomeroy v. New York Hippodrome Corp.

197 A.D. 114, 188 N.Y.S. 734, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7411
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 27, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 197 A.D. 114 (Pomeroy v. New York Hippodrome Corp.) 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
Pomeroy v. New York Hippodrome Corp., 197 A.D. 114, 188 N.Y.S. 734, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7411 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinions

Greenbaum, J.:

The action was brought to recover royalties alleged to be due for the first five weeks commencing on or about September 1, 1919, under a license to defendant for the exhibition of a [115]*115stage device known as a “ Bubble Illusion,” of which the plaintiff claimed to be the inventor and owner.

The agreement was in writing dated May 16, 1919. It first recites the following preambles:

“'Whereas the inventor is the owner of [Italics ours] a certain Bubble Illusion upon which he has heretofore applied for Letters Patent in the Patent Office of the United States of America; and Whereas the producer desires to secure the exclusive license to manufacture and use the same as part of a theatrical production to be produced in the New York Hippodrome on or about September 1, 1919.”

It then provides that the parties agree as follows:

“First. The said inventor hereby grants to the said producer an exclusive license to manufacture and to use the said Bubble Illusion as part of a theatrical production upon the stage of the New York Hippodrome and for no other purpose for a period beginning with the date of this agreement and extending until the completion of the run of the production to be opened in the said theatre on or about the first day of September, 1919.

Second. The said producer hereby promises and agrees to pay to the said inventor beginning September 1, 1919, and continuing until the completion of the run of the said production, as royalty for the rights and licenses herein granted the sum of $50 weekly payable weekly for each and every week during the said term provided the said Bubble Illusion when constructed proves to be satisfactory to the management of the New York Hippodrome on or before September 1st, 1919.”

The complaint alleges the making of the agreement, the construction of the device, its acceptance by the defendant as satisfactory prior to September 1, 1919, and the due performance of the agreement by the plaintiff. The answer sets up certain denials and three defenses which may be summarized as (-1) a failure of consideration and false representations in stating that the plaintiff was the inventor and owner of the device and of the exclusive right to make, copy, use and vend such device and that it was a patentable invention, whereas in fact plaintiff had no right to grant a license owing to the grant of a prior patent to one Hanlon, which embodied the [116]*116basic features of the device in question; (2) that defendant repudiated and rescinded the license agreement and discontinued its use, and (3) that the device was not workable and was unsatisfactory.

Upon the oral argument before us plaintiff’s counsel conceded that the device which was the subject-matter of this controversy was an infringement upon the Hanlon patent and that the patent finally issued to the plaintiff amounted in effect to an improvement upon the Hanlon invention.

It follows from the concession that plaintiff was not entitled to any recovery. It appears without contradiction that Morange, the owner of the Hanlon patent, notified the defendant that the use of the plaintiff’s device would be an infringement upon the Hanlon patent. After this notice the defendant informed plaintiff that it would-discontinue using the apparatus unless plaintiff adjusted the matter with Morange. No adjustment, however, was effected.

The proofs are that when the parties entered into the agreement, proceedings were pending in the United States Patent Office upon the application of the plaintiff dated April 30, 1919, for a patent covering all the features of the Bubble Illusion ” as they were represented to the defendant; that the claims of the plaintiff were subsequently disallowed, so far as they covered certain elements, which were embodied in the Hanlon patent, and that on March 9, 1920, a patent was finally allowed to the plaintiff to the limited extent of what may be deemed certain so-called improvements upon the p'rior Hanlon patent.

So far as the record before us discloses, the plaintiff did not intend to defraud the defendant in the representations made to the defendant, since the plaintiff evidently believed that he was the inventor of all the features of his Bubble Illusion ” and expected to receive a patent which would confer upon him the exclusive right to the use of the Bubble Illusion ” in its entirety, as described to defendant.

This action was commenced on October 10, 1919. At that time the Patent Commissioner had not yet taken final action upon plaintiff’s application. On March 9, 1920, the patent was granted to the limited extent heretofore mentioned and on April 23, 1920, this case went to trial. The plaintiff [117]*117admitted upon his cross-examination that before the Patent Office had acted on his application, and hence before the license was granted to defendant, he knew nothing of the Morange patent.

On behalf of defendant, its general stage director, one Robert H. Burnside, through whom the negotiations culminating in the license were had, testified that plaintiff came to his office to interest defendant in the “ Bubble Illusion;" that he asked the plaintiff whether it was different from other illusions of which he had heard, specifying one at the Ziegfeld Follies and another at the Greenwich Village and the plaintiff said: “It was a totally different thing." This witness also testified that although he had heard of the Hanlon device, he had never in his life seen the patent and that he did not know that plaintiff’s contrivance infringed upon the Hanlon patent, until Morange spoke to him about the matter some time after the agreement for the license had been executed.

The proofs show that defendant spent a considerable sum of money in constructing the' mechanism in order that it might be ready for production by September first; that notwithstanding that it was built in accordance with the drawings and specifications received from the plaintiff and in conjunction and collaboration with him, it was impossible to produce one that was both workable and safe and that after several productions the witness declared it was' found to be unsatisfactory to the defendant and besides “ we didn’t want to have any further trouble or law suit with Morange."

The written agreement on its face distinctly declares that plaintiff was the inventor and owner of the “ Bubble Illusion." It purported to grant an “ exclusive license ” to defendant for its use during the season commencing about September first. All that the defendant was interested in was the “ Bubble Illusion ” as described by the plaintiff who expected to obtain letters patent therefor.

It transpired, however, that the plaintiff had no power to grant an exclusive license for the production of the “ Bubble Illusion" which was the thing agreed upon. Defendant could not lawfully use the “ Bubble Illusion " without securing a further license from the owner of the Hanlon patent. There was, therefore, no consideration for the contract, even if we [118]*118assume that the agreement was not procured by the fraud of the plaintiff.

In Herzog v. Heyman (151 N. Y. 590) the court said: “ It is insisted, however, that all that the plaintiffs agreed to sell, or the defendants attempted to purchase, were the letters patent No. 367,212, irrespective of the fact whether they were valid or not.

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Bluebook (online)
197 A.D. 114, 188 N.Y.S. 734, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pomeroy-v-new-york-hippodrome-corp-nyappdiv-1921.