Pottle v. Thomas

12 Conn. 565
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 15, 1838
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Conn. 565 (Pottle v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pottle v. Thomas, 12 Conn. 565 (Colo. 1838).

Opinion

Williams, Ch. J.

The general principles laid down in the charge to the jury, are unexceptionable ; as that fraud, or the want of consideration, will render a note void. But a question arises, whether upon a view of the circumstances of this case, something more should not have been said to the jury. Indeed, upon the facts admitted or found, it appears to us, that the question what effect the stipulations between these parties ought to have in the case, and also the fact of consideration, are mere questions of law, upon which the jury should have had the opinion of the court. The jury have indeed found, that there was no consideration for the note; and it has therefore been supposed, that nothing was left for the court. But if the facts presented show, that there was what in law would constitute a consideration, then it is very evident, that justice has not been done; and we are bound to grant a new trial, either because the jury have found a verdict contrary to the facts proved, or because the court should have instructed them, that those facts shewed a consideration.

Do not the facts shew, that there was a consideration for this note ? The plaintiff has a valid and legal patent for certain machinery, which, in some places, had been found useful; and he sells a right to the defendant to use this machinery in the town of Woodbridge. Now, it is apparent, that the value of the right to use such patent in a particular place, may depend upon circumstances wholly independent of the intrinsic value of that right. Thus, a most valuable improvement in machinery, to be moved by water, would be of no use in a section of country where there were no water privileges, Whitney’s cotton gin, so immensely important in our Southern country, would be of no value, if its use were to be confined to New-England. And yet, if an inhabitant of Con~ [570]*570necticut should embark in the experiment of raising cotton, and purchase a right to the cotton gin for this state, he would find some difficulty in showing that the note given therefor was void, although he proved unsuccessful in raising cotton. The machine would be no less adapted to the object in view, than it would be in Georgia. The failure would not arise from the want of value in the thing sold, but from the fact that it was not adapted to the wants of the country, in which it was to be used. That risk is one, which the purchaser, not the seller, must run. The market value of an article, in his own country, is ordinarily best known, by him who purchases for that market; and in the absence of fraud, the seller cannot be accountable for it. Should a Southern merchant purchase woollen goods, to be retailed in the Southern states only, could he say, when called upon for payment, that the consideration had failed, because he could find no purchasers, his goods not being adapted to the climate? There, the articles sold, were in themselves valuable ; but where they could be sold to advantage, was a matter of calculation. The purchaser and seller would each speculate upon this subject, at his pleasure ; and neither would be responsible for the failure of the calculations of the other. So too, if a patent was taken out for a useful improvement in steam-boats, and the patentee should sell the right, for a particular state; would an objection from the vendee be allowed, that upon trial it was found, that the waters of that state were not adapted to boats of that description, in which this machinery would be useful ? Or, if a great improvement should be introduced, by some new implement of agriculture, — such as a mowing or raking machine, — and its utility could be attested by thousands, and a sale of a right should be made for a country where the inhabitants were so attached to the scythe or the rake, that no sales could be made; would that fact affect, in any manner, the contract of sale? Would the vendor be made accountable for the taste or the judgment of the people of that district? Would it not be enough for him to show, that the thing parted with was all it purported to be, — a new and useful invention ? And if so, would not the vendee be left to the result of his own speculations? Now, in this case, the patents were valid patents. The machines, where they were needed, were useful. When then it is said, that they were of no value to the plaintiff, noth[571]*571ing more is found than that, for some reason or other, they were not saleable in that place. But another fact, which is also found, shows, that the want of value could not have arisen from any intrinsic defect in the patents, but from some other circumstances.

To hold, then, that this note is void for want of considera* tion, would be to make the plaintiff responsible for the failure of the defendant to sell a machine, which had proved valuable elsewhere. For although the jury have found, that it was of no value to him and useless, yet it is also found, that it has proved useful elsewhere. The fact that it was not valuable in that place, may have arisen from the fact that no grain was raised there, which required the use of this machine ; or from the taste or prejudice of the inhabitants ; for neither of which is the plaintiff in any measure answerable, unless by virtue of a special contract to that effect. The verdict of the jury, when connected with another fact found, that this patent had proved useful elsewhere, only proves, that in this place, it was useless.

The case then is merely this; that the plaintiff sold to the defendant the right to use a valid patent in the town of Wood-bridge, which had proved a useful one in some places. This gave the defendant a right to all the profits he could make by such nse. What they were was uncertain, at that time. They might be considerable; and they might be nothing. They have turned out to be nothing. Can we, therefore, say, that this right was then worth nothing ? If the patent had proved useful elsewhere, was not its success in that place, a matter about which the parties had a right to calculate, each for himself, as well as for the chances of a prize in a lottery 1 In Barnum v. Barnum, 8 Conn. Rep. 469. we held, that the sale of a ticket, which had actually drawn a blank, at the time of sale, and which was then in fact worthless, was a good consideration for a note. There, the party got what he stipulated for — the chance that the ticket had drawn or would draw a prize. Here, the defendant got exactly what he stipulated for — a right to use, and of course to make a profit from, if he could, within certain limits, a patent, which had proved valuable elsewhere. And in the absence of fraud, we see not how he can say, that the consideration has failed, because his speculation has proved unsuccessful, any more than the purchaser of a ticket, which had drawn a blank. How a useful patent [572]*572will, in a limited time, succeed, in a particular place, is always a matter of doubt; and the purchaser takes the right, subject to this doubt; and if successful, he has the undoubted right to retain the profits; and if unsuccessful, he cannot, of course, resort to his vendor, or cast the loss upon him. If indeed the want of success arises from the fact that the patent is invalid ; and if the invention is neither new nor useful, it is invalid; then, he may say, he has received nothing. But how a person Who has obtained the use of a new and valuable invention, can say he has received nothing, and there was no consideration, it is difficult to imagine.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Conn. 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pottle-v-thomas-conn-1838.