Russell v. Wall Wire Products Co.

78 N.W.2d 149, 346 Mich. 581, 111 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 51, 1956 Mich. LEXIS 347
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 4, 1956
DocketDocket 64, Calendar 46,805
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 78 N.W.2d 149 (Russell v. Wall Wire Products Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell v. Wall Wire Products Co., 78 N.W.2d 149, 346 Mich. 581, 111 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 51, 1956 Mich. LEXIS 347 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This is not a complicated case. If it seems so it is because we must undertake certain technical descriptions which are difficult to follow without careful examination of the devices themselves, and the patents relating thereto, which were made available to the Court, as well as the trial court.

In essence this is a case of alleged stealing, not the kind of stealing condemned in the criminal code, but the gentler kind that is called the appropriation and use of another’s secret. This is what happened :

The plaintiff (who died after commencement of suit, but who will be referred to herein, for purposes *583 of simplicity, as though still alive) was á part-time inventor, manufacturer, and distributor. As an employee of the Midwest Wire Products Company he served as a distributor of industrial stacking baskets, •which, as will be more fully explained in some detail, are baskets in which parts may be conveyed or processed, and which may be placed one upon another without damage to the contents thereof. After leaving Midwest he invented a new industrial stacking basket which he advertised (with a picture of a type thereof) and in which he sought, unsuccessfully, to interest several companies as a buyer or licensee thereof. It was his efforts to interest defendant in his basket that led to this suit. Learning that Borg-Warner had requested bids on a large amount of industrial baskets, plaintiff called Mr. E. L. Russell, the vice-president and sales manager of defendant, and arranged an interview, which was held on January 20, 1950. It is plaintiff’s claim that at this time, under a pledge of secrecy, he disclosed all details of a unique and novel basket of his invention to officials of the defendant, furnishing sketches, samples, and photographs thereof, making such disclosures without the protection of a license or other agreement solely because of the time limitations imposed by the Borg-Warner bid requirements. “We haven’t got the time, we’ve got to settle this thing at once.” (It should be interjected that defendant’s version of this interview is framed in terms of markedly variant conclusions: That Messrs. Russell and Malone [president of defendant] were strangers on January 20, 1950, discussing a business deal for the first time. The meeting was not friendly; it was not an atmosphere conducive to confidential disclosure. The defendant was not Russell’s agent, trustee, guardian or in any other sense a fiduciary. It did not solicit his services or ask him to call. It knew at least as much about the wire basket manu *584 factoring business as he did. And, finally, that there is no evidence that Russell possessed any special skill or taught the defendant anything.)

At any rate, plaintiff’s basket was discussed, as were possible licensing and sales agreements. It was also agreed that plaintiff would make the trip to Borg-Warner, at Muncie, 'Indiana, with defendant’s officials-in an attempt to get an order from such company and would demonstrate to them his basket. This he did. The trip, however, was fruitless. No order was obtained.

The matter of sales and licensing agreements having been raised at this time, it may be well to dispose of them, at the expense of the chronology involved. It is not necessary that we review the offers made find rejected, the counteroffers suggested and described. As the trial court observed “The testimony indicates considerable difference as to what they all discussed,.but the end result was that no complete meeting of the minds was reached and that no signed agreement resulted.” It was defendant’s position that an oral agreement had been reached with plaintiff “for 5% on a general open sales agreement. I had incorporated 3 companies. One was the General Electric Company, the second was Ford at Cincinnati, and the third was Warner Gear at Muncie, Indiana. Those are the only 3 companies which we had that verbal agreement on.” ' It was claimed to be pursuant to this alleged agreement (which plaintiff denies making), tor a-5% sálés commission tor 1 year on basket orders “whether they were to our design or to his design,” that defendant mailed plaintiff commission checks on baskets later sold to "General Eletítrih -'As to a licensing agreement, the final steps were taken late in 1950. Again, without ' tracing' the intermediate steps, in the words of the trial court:"

*585 “In October, 1950, Mr. Edgar Reitz,' then attorney for plaintiff, prepared a license agreement, exhibit 15, and sent it t.o the defendant. In- the letter of transmittal he stated he . had prepared it in accordance with his understanding of the conversations and discussions that had previously been had between the parties. This draft of a license agreement submitted to defendant, the defendant refused to execute, and terminated any and all negotiations between the parties.”

It is plaintiff’s testimony that he learned in July of 1950, several months after the Muncie trip, that defendant was obtaining orders' “for this type of basket” from the General Electric Company. Plaintiff asserts that this basket embodies a form of plaintiff’s invention, disclosed, as above related, under a pledge of confidence. The defendant, on the contrary, asserts that its baskets do' not embody the so-called Russell invention, but rather follow the teachings of the Spear patent, which were in the public domain, by expiration of patent, in August,' 1950. Thus the controlling issue is framed. The, trial court found for defendant and the case comes-to us on a general appeal. ¡;

It is essential to recovery upon plaintiff’s theory that he establish a disclosure in confidence, to the defendant, of a trade secret, or a pattern or device partaking of the nature thereof, and the wrongful misappropriation of such secret by defendant to the plaintiff’s damage. The essence of the, wrong is the breach of confidence, the betrayal of the trust placed in the recipient. As phrased in 4 Restatement, Torts,- § 757, p 4:

“The theory that has prevailed is.that the protec-, tion is afforded only by a general duty, of good faith and that the liability rests upon breach.of this duty; that is, breach of contract, abuse of confidence or' *586 impropriety in the method of ascertaining the secret.”

Obviously, however, before there can be the betrayal of anything in the nature of a trade secret by its misappropriation, there must be a secret, and here it is that we find the core of the controversy before us. The plaintiff insists that he invented a new industrial stacking basket. A stacking basket, as was noted, is a basket used to contain industrial parts, so designed that one basket may be “stacked” on another without damage to the contents, and so locked in place that a large pile thereof will maintain stability as a unit. The Spear patent is an example thereof:

“The Spear patent number to which I refer is 1,922,605 and that patent issued on August 15, 1933.
“It illustrates a basket having an upper frame and a lower frame and side members and bottom members which will hold whatever you want to put in the basket. The particular material of which the basket is made is of no particular significance here. It might be made of wire mesh or sheet metal or wires.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.W.2d 149, 346 Mich. 581, 111 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 51, 1956 Mich. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-wall-wire-products-co-mich-1956.