Puim v. Callahan

286 P.2d 526, 135 Cal. App. 2d 70, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1329
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 15, 1955
DocketCiv. No. 20802
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 286 P.2d 526 (Puim v. Callahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Puim v. Callahan, 286 P.2d 526, 135 Cal. App. 2d 70, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1329 (Cal. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

WHITE, P. J.

Plaintiff is an inventor of three patented devices known as: (1) the Puim fork lift vehicle, referred to in the testimony and hereinafter in this appeal as" the “universal loader.” It is a hoister type of vehicle. A more minute description is unnecessary for the purposes of this appeal ;

(2) the buck-rake loader attachment for tractors, being a fork-lift device designed for attachment to tractors and referred to in the testimony at the trial as a Puim fork-lift or universal fork-lift attachment, and hereinafter referred to as the fork-lift attachment;

(3) the hold-down clamp which is a two-pronged steel device that is attached to the top of the fork-lift part of the universal loader, or to the top of the fork-lift attachment, and which may be moved down upon the load picked up by the fork-lift attachment to clamp or hold the load in place. It will hereinafter be referred to as the hold-down clamp. Defendants assert that only one of the devices was patented and that upon the other three, letters patent have not been issued by the Patent Office. However, as pointed out by plaintiff, since defendants “are standing upon and affirming the license agreement, they may not be heard to question the title of the licensor under whom they claim.”

Defendant Callahan Engineering Company is a partnership comprised of the individual defendant Martin E. Callahan and Juanita S. Callahan.

On July 19, 1951, plaintiff and defendants entered into an agreement whereby defendants were granted an exclusive license to manufacture and sell the aforementioned three devices in consideration of the payments by defendants to plaintiff of 4 per cent of the net sales thereof in the month following date of delivery.

The license agreement was to remain in force so long as defendants continued to manufacture and sell said devices, barring conditions beyond the control of licensee and acts of God, and if licensee ceased the manufacture of the licensed [72]*72items for a period of 90 days, licensor had the option to cancel said license.

The initial meeting between plaintiff and defendant Martin E. Callahan took place at San Jose, California, on July 14, 1951. At that time a pencil memorandum of the aforesaid license agreement was prepared. During the negotiations for the license agreement, plaintiff told defendant Martin E. Callahan that he, plaintiff, desired a provision in the contract that if defendants didn’t manufacture or sell all of the licensed items for a stipulated time, to wit: 90 days, the license agreement would automatically be void, or that he could cancel the license agreement. Defendants agreed to manufacture and sell all of the items, and if defendants failed so to do for a period of 90 days, the plaintiff would have the right to cancel the license agreement. Plaintiff and defendants made a “package deal” and plaintiff had the right to cancel the license agreement if defendants did not manufacture for a period of 90 days all three devicbs covered by the license agreement.

At the conclusion of the negotiations for the license agreement, defendant Martin E. Callahan asked plaintiff to come to Los Angeles from San Jose for about four or five weeks to help defendants get started on the manufacture of the devices. Plaintiff thereupon informed defendants that he was interested in working for defendants if the compensation was satisfactory, and defendants asked plaintiff how much he wanted. Plaintiff stated that he wanted $125 per week. Defendants countered with an offer to pay him $100 per week, which plaintiff accepted. Plaintiff requested an advance from defendants to enable him to defray his expenses to go to Los Angeles from San Jose, and defendants advanced him $100. Plaintiff, pursuant to such arrangement, came to Los Angeles within a few days, arriving here about, but prior to July 19, 1951.

Defendants commenced to manufacture the fork-lift attachment and hold-down clamps within one to three weeks after plaintiff came to Los Angeles. Two sample or pilot models of the fork-lift attachment and a pilot sample or model of the hold-down clamp were made first by the defendants to take the “bugs” out and to be certain such devices were in good working order before making production runs thereof.

The universal loader is the largest of the items covered by the license agreement, and from the date of the execution of the agreement to and including July 8, 1953, the de[73]*73fendants never manufactured a universal loader or a sample or pilot model thereof. The defendants asserted a variety of reasons for their failure to manufacture the universal loader or a sample or pilot model thereof. While defendants asserted they could not manufacture the universal loader because the plans thereof were incomplete or inadequate, and that they required plaintiff’s services to prepare plans and drawings nevertheless, it is contended that defendants proceeded to manufacture the hold-down clamp and fork-lift attachment without drawings. Plaintiff also offered testimony that defendants could have completed a universal loader by the end of the year 1952, that after defendants, on July 8, 1953, received the notice of termination and cancellation of the license agreement from plaintiff, the latter was employed by another machine works and prepared from memory a complete set of plans and completed construction of the universal loader in less than six months.

Plaintiff worked for defendants from July 19, 1951, to July 8, 1953. No conversation concerning plaintiff’s working for defendants was had during the two-year period of his employment other than that heretofore mentioned, which occurred at the time of the execution of the license agreement, wherein plaintiff agreed to come from San Jose to Los Angeles for four or five weeks upon payment to him of $100 per week, but no arrangement was made regarding plaintiff’s compensation if he remained longer than originally contemplated. However, during the aforesaid two-year period, plaintiff received each week the sum of $100.

Defendants contended at the trial that the foregoing weekly checks were advanced against royalties and not paid as salary. Under the license agreement plaintiff was entitled to a royalty of 4 per cent on the net sales and was not required to work for defendants as a prerequisite to receiving such royalties. Defendants contended that the payments of $100 per week made to plaintiff as an advance against royalties was a device adopted for income tax reasons. In addition to plaintiff there were approximately six other persons working for defendants, to whom weekly checks were issued and for whom no deductions were made for withholding taxes, old age benefits, social security, etc.

Concurrently with the service by plaintiff upon defendants of the notice terminating the license agreement, plaintiff did not report for work and the record reflects that the $100 weekly payments were stopped at that time.

[74]*74In his notice to defendants terminating the license agreement plaintiff demanded an accounting.. When no accounting was rendered this action ensued.

The court found that it was not true that plaintiff was employed by defendánts as a mechanical technician from July 19, 1951, to July 3, 1953, at a salary of $100 per week.

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Bluebook (online)
286 P.2d 526, 135 Cal. App. 2d 70, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/puim-v-callahan-calctapp-1955.