Radio-Craft Co. v. Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co.

7 F.2d 432, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3562
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 2, 1925
Docket3065
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 7 F.2d 432 (Radio-Craft Co. v. Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Radio-Craft Co. v. Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co., 7 F.2d 432, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3562 (3d Cir. 1925).

Opinion

DAVIS, Circuit Judge.

Edwin H. Armstrong was the patentee and owner of United States letters patent No. 1,113,149, for the use of regenerative circuit, with electron discharge tubes, in radio apparatus. On September 20, 1921, he granted a license under the patent to the Radio-Craft Company, Inc., to manufacture and sell radio apparatus. The controversy before us arose over the meaning of paragraph 3 in the license agreement. It provides that:

“The licensor hereby grants to the licensee a nonexclusive, nontransferable license to manufacture the apparatus and to sell the apparatus of the licensee’s manufacture, as follows: (a) To radio amateurs for irse in radio amateur stations; (b) to radio experimenters and scientific schools or universities, for use in experimental and scientific school or university radio stations.”

The Westinghouse Company, assignee of Armstrong, charges that the licensee has infringed the patent, in that it purchased and has had manufactured for it radio apparatus which it has sold to distributors, jobbers, and dealers, and riot to radio amateurs, experimenters, etc. The defendants contend that paragraph 3, as interpreted by the light thrown upon it by other parts of the agreement, gives the Radio-Craft Company the right to have others manufacture apparatus for it and to sell it through the usual channels of the trade, just so the apparatus finally reaches only radio amateurs, etc. It is therefore necessary to construe the agreement.

Must the Radio-Craft Company itself manufacture ancl sell the apparatus of its manufacture directly to radio amateurs, radio experimenters, and scientific schools or universities, or may it have the apparatus manufactured for it and sell it through the usual channels to distributors, jobbers, and retail dealers, who in turn sell to radio amateurs, etc.?

Paragraph 3 in terms permits sales to radio amateurs, to radio experimenters, and scientific schools or universities, without reference, express or implied, to other possible purchasers. If the licensor'was interested only in the uses to which the apparatus was to be put, and intended to grant the right to sell to distributors, jobbers, and dealers, who in turn would sell only to radio amateurs, etc., the failure to use some language in this paragraph, indicating his intention, is inexplicable. What the license does not expressly, or by fair implication, permit, it prohibits. In other words, it left in Armstrong the whole market, except that to the three classes mentioned in paragraph 3.

Considering this paragraph alone, it is clear that the parties intended to restrict and did restrict the' licensee’s vendees to these throe classes. The licensee, however, inay use agents or employees or other means to effect its sales. The business methods of the licensee, how it may do its selling, are not before us. The language used in this paragraph is clear and simple, and in our judgment, not only justifies, but forces, the conclusion here reached. Do other parts of the agreement render this conclusion untenable?

The defendants say that the reservation, in paragraph 4, of the right to determine whether or not a sale of apparatus by the licensee comes within the category of licensed uses, set forth in paragraph 3, is a modification of the restriction as to purchasers. We do not think that the language supports such construction. The licensor was interested, not only in the purchasers, but also in the uses for which the apparatus was sold, and to which it was to be put. If a doubt arose as to those uses, he reserved the right to determine that question for himself. It does not follow, because express mention was not here again made of the restriction as to purchasers, that the licensor intended to broaden the restriction in paragraph 3. If this had been the intention of either parly, some language expressive of such fact would have been used.

*434 Again defendants say that, because the licensee covenanted in paragraph 5 to pay the licensor 5 per cent, of its selling price of the apparatus for the uses set forth in paragraph '3, and covenanted not to manufacture or sell any apparatus to purchasers for purposes other than those uses, and did not also there covenant not to sell to persons other than those set out in that paragraph, it is reasonable to presume that Mr. Armstrong was concerned with the use to which the apparatus was to be put, rather than the persons to -whom the manufacturer directly sold, and he must therefore have-intended to broaden the restriction, and grant the right to sell through the usual trade channels. They further say that the failure to require the names of purchasers in the returns provided for in paragraph 6, while the quantity and description of the apparatus sold was required to be listed, indicates an intention to permit sales to others than those expressly named in (a) and (b) of paragraph 3.

The weakness of these arguments is that they are unnecessary presumptions, based upon silence, which cannot destroy plain, positive provisions, of the agreement. If either party had in mind what is now urged, it is reasonable to assume that some language expressly indicating that fact would have been used. It is difficult to. see how the licensee could sell apparatus to distributors and pass legal title to it, and then assure the licensor that the apparatus would be resold only to radio amateurs, etc., without making any express provision for such transactions in. the agreement, or without making any reference whatever to such a plan. Whether or not such a provision could be made legally effective, the significant fact is that the agreement contains nothing, except by strained construction- and illogical and unnecessary inference, to indicate that the parties had in mind such an arrangement, and we think that the language does not imply one.

Defendants also urged that the words “billed out,” as used in paragraph 6, are applicable to sales to the trade generally, and not to individual purchasers, and so justify their contention that sales may be made to others than the three classes mentioned. But these words are just as applicable to apparatus sold to radio amateurs as to distributors. Apparatus to one or many may be “billed out,” whether the sale comprises little or much. In any event, those words were used to define what constituted a sale within the meaning of the agreement, and we do not think that any persuasive argument one way or the other can be based upon their use.

The license granted the right to manufacture and sell “the apparatus of the licensee’s manufacture.” Does this authorize the licensee to have the apparatus manufactured for it by others, or must it manufacture in its own plant by its own employees? It is the general rule.that an unrestricted license to manufacture and use or sell implies authority to contract with others to supply what may be lawfully used or sold. Johnson Railroad Signal Co. v. Union Switch & Signal Co., 55 F. 487, 5 C. C. A. 204; Marconi Wireless Telegraph Co. of America v. Simon (D. C.) 227 F. 906. In the last case cited, Judge Hough said: “A licensee to make and use is not (in the absence of specific language in his license) limited to making with his own hands, in his own shop, or by his own employees. •.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 F.2d 432, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/radio-craft-co-v-westinghouse-electric-mfg-co-ca3-1925.