Ruckstell Sales & Mfg. Co. v. Perfecto Gear Differential Co.

28 F.2d 407, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1496
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedOctober 5, 1928
DocketNo. 1621; No. K-31-J
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 F.2d 407 (Ruckstell Sales & Mfg. Co. v. Perfecto Gear Differential Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruckstell Sales & Mfg. Co. v. Perfecto Gear Differential Co., 28 F.2d 407, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1496 (N.D. Cal. 1928).

Opinion

JAMES, District Judge.

On exceptions by defendants to report of special master recommending decree in favor of plaintiff.

The above-entitled causes were brought, one in the Northern district of California and one in the Southern district.

In the Northern district ease, the Per-fecto Gear Differential Company is the sole defendant. Plaintiff in that case set up first a cause of action for breach of a patent license contract. It was there charged that defendant had, in violation of the obligations assumed under the contract, made licenses to others for the manufacture and sale of a patented device of substantially the same kind as that which plaintiff was authorized to make and vend. A second cause of action set up in the Northern district ease charged acts of unfair competition.

In the case brought in the Southern district, infringement of patent rights held by plaintiff under the license was charged against the defendant above named. In this case there were added, as parties defendant, Planator Gear Shift Company, a corporation, Starr Transmission Corporation, and certain individual defendants. The prayer in each case was for an injunction and damages, with the added petition in the Northern district ease that defendant, Perfecto Gear Differential Company, be required to execute assignments of certain patents acquired subsequent to the date of the contract of plaintiff’s license. Upon the issues being made up, a written stipulation was filed providing that both causes be referred to Harry M. Wright, Esq., as special master. The stipulation in terms recited that the master was “to take the testimony and report the same to the court with his findings and conclusions thereon, subject to a full review by the court.”

The causes were so heard, and, the master’s report being returned, exceptions were presented. It was then stipulated that the exceptions in both cases should be heard by the judge of this court. An order of designation regularly followed. Oral argument was made, and extensive briefs have been filed. ,

The master struck out the evidence offered to support the charge of unfair competition in the Northern district case, and found for plaintiff as to the cause for in-junctive relief, for damages, and that de-. fendant Perfecto Gear Differential Company be required to assign patent rights. In the Southern district case he found infringement, as alleged, and that plaintiff should have an injunction and damages.

A close examination of the record of the evidence and the argument of counsel has entailed considerable labor, because a full understanding of the mechanical devices and their relation to appropriate parts of an automobile is necessary before an intelligent construction can be given the license contract, upon the terms of which plaintiff wholly depends for a recovery in these cases.

The. question as to whether the court should fully review and consider the evidence and form an independent judgment as to the rights of the parties, regardless of the conclusions of the master, is first argued. The position of the plaintiff is that the stipulation was for a trial before the master hy general consent, which would make his report conclusive where the evidence shows a conflict. The defendants, on the other hand, contend that the conditional term of the stipulation that the reference he ‘ ‘ subject to the full review of the court” requires that the court consider all the evidence and announce its own conclusions, regardless of the fact that the master’s findings may rest upon conflicting evidence. It is quite plain that the conditional term referred to was inserted for some purpose; and it is evident that the intent was to reserve more than the right to except to [409]*409the report on questions of law only, -winch, the parties would have had without reserving it. I have taken the defendants’ view of the matter in considering the exceptions.

In referring to the parties, texcept where a more particular description is required, the plaintiff will be designated as Ruckstell Company and the defendant as Perfecto Company. Reference to other defendants will be particularly made.

Each action has the same alleged basis, to wit, the violation of a license contract made between defendant Perfecto Company and plaintiff. The main issue is brought within a small compass. The master, in a most careful report, reviewed the evidence, and quite frankly declared that his conclusions might not be free from some doubt. That he made his conclusions only after a painstaking examination of the facts and the applicable law, the text of his report adequately demonstrates.

The defendants’ counsel, in their opening brief, succinctly state their position in this wise: “While defendants’ exceptions are expressed in a variety of forms, they resolve themselves largely into exceptions to the master’s interpretation of the contract of August 1, 1922, and the relief he recommends. ’ ’

Not only does the construction to be given the contract involve an understanding of the character of the mechanical devices, license to manufacture and vend which was granted by Perfecto Company to plaintiff, it involves further an understanding of the situation of the parties respecting their separate businesses, and the circumstances attendant upon the drafting of the contract; the latter as throwing some light upon the intent of both.

The Perfecto Company, at and subsequent to the date of the contract made with plaintiff, was a dealer in.patent rights. It owned and licensed rights to others, but appears not to have engaged directly in the manufacture of patented articles. In the field of mechanical art covering transmission gears used in automobiles, it was actively interested, and intended to so continue.

The devices concerned in this controversy are mainly those adapted for use in the Ford automobile. Desirable results are obtained by introducing additional reduction gears in the line of power transmission between the main set of gears with which the automobile is ordinarily equipped and the axle. A shift rod leading to a lever at the driver’s seat enables the auxiliary gears to be released or locked. When locked, they revolve as a whole with the propelling mechanism of the machine, and have no effect to change power or speed. When released, they interpose their reducing action, which is to increase power at the expense of speed.

One combination of gears has acquired the name “planetary,” from the fact that it consists of a central or “sun” gear about, and in contact with which revolve other gears (the number may be more or less) which move in the same circular orbit. The latter are the “planets.” The main gears with which the Ford automobile was equipped until a very recent date by the manufacturer were of this precise type. It will .be readily understood that the gears of such an auxiliary device, when put into use, will modify each of the speed and power effects of the normal gear equipment.

Prior to the making of the contract entered into by the defendant with the plaintiff, the evidence shows that some devices had been used on Ford automobiles having the general purpose as hereinbefore stated, and that their use had not been attended with success; in part, perhaps, because the manufacturer was disinclined to allow its agents to use or recommend to the purchasers of the automobile any such auxiliary accessories.

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Bluebook (online)
28 F.2d 407, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruckstell-sales-mfg-co-v-perfecto-gear-differential-co-cand-1928.