Sage v. Oil Country Specialties Manufacturing Co.

27 P.2d 542, 138 Kan. 501, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 230
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 9, 1933
DocketNo. 31,208
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 27 P.2d 542 (Sage v. Oil Country Specialties Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sage v. Oil Country Specialties Manufacturing Co., 27 P.2d 542, 138 Kan. 501, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 230 (kan 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Smith, J.:

This is an action to recover money and for an accounting. Judgment was for plaintiffs, ordering an accounting. Defendant appeals.

The petition states two causes of action. The first alleges that plaintiffs were the inventors of a “new and useful improvement in [502]*502chain-driven sand reels.” It alleges that plaintiffs had applied for a patent on their sand reel, and while the application for a patent was pending entered into a contract with defendant whereby plaintiffs granted defendant the exclusive agency and right to manufacture and sell the reel and made the defendant the exclusive agent of plaintiffs to make, sell and distribute the reels and parts of reels; that the reel was designated as the S. & B. Chain Driven Sand Reel; that on January 23, 1923, defendant agreed to pay plaintiffs a royalty on all of the reels and all parts of reels manufactured, sold or distributed by defendant, and that in pursuance of this contract the defendant manufactured, sold and distributed a great many S. & B. reels.

The petition further alleged that under the contract plaintiffs were entitled to inspect the books of the company, and that defendant refused to allow plaintiffs to make a full and complete inspection of its books; that on October 31, 1927, a dispute arose between plaintiffs and defendant as to the amount due and owing to plaintiffs by defendant, that defendant refused to pay royalties or permit an inspection of its books, and that defendant had sold a large number of S. & B. reels and parts not accounted for to plaintiffs. The first cause of action prayed judgment that the defendant be required to render an accounting for the number of S. & B. reels and parts manufactured and sold by it under the terms of the contract and for judgment for the amount due. The cause of action further alleged that on December 4,1923, letters patent were issued by the United States on the S. & B. reel on the application which had been made at the time the contract was entered into, and that the letters patent were still in full force and effect and owned by plaintiffs.

The second cause of action made all the allegations of the first cause of action a part of the second. This cause of action then alleged that on December 27, 1921, the date of the contract, defendant was not engaged in the manufacture, sale and distribution of chain-driven sand reels or parts or like or similar articles as the S. & B. sand reel.

It further alleged that by the contract the defendant owed plaintiffs a duty to make the manufacture, sale and distribution of the S. & B. reel profitable to plaintiffs and owed plaintiffs a duty not to do anything that would destroy the sale and marketability of S. & B. reels.

[503]*503It further alleged that some time prior to the filing of this suit defendant commenced the manufacture and sale and distribution of chain-driven reels and parts similar in construction embodying the same general principles and design and used for like or identical purposes as the S. & B. reel and had and were offering that reel as a substitute for the S. & B. reel.

The petition then alleged that in doing this defendant breached its contract with plaintiffs because it failed and neglected to make the manufacture and sale and distribution of the S. & B. reel a matter of profit to plaintiffs; that in so doing defendant engaged in a competitive enterprise and so breached its contract and duty as agent of plaintiffs.

The petition then alleged that there was a great demand by the public for S. & B. reels; that by the introduction of the competitive article by defendant, plaintiffs were greatly damaged because they would be put to a great expense in replacing the S. & B. reel on the market and in reestablishing the demand by the public for the S. & B. reel. The petition alleged that plaintiffs had been thereby damaged in the sum of $10,000.

The petition then alleged that from August 31, 1927, to the date of the filing of the petition defendant had sold about 500 chain-driven sand reels other than the S. & B. reel, and that on this account plaintiffs had been damaged in the amount of the royalties that they would have received had defendant sold S. & B. reels specified in the contract and that, therefore, plaintiffs are entitled to royalties on the other reels on the same basis that they would have been entitled to royalties on S. & B. reels, that is, $100 a reel. Plaintiffs prayed judgment for $60,000.

Defendant is a Kansas corporation with its principal and only place of business at Coffeyville, Montgomery county. This suit was filed in Sedgwick county. Summons was served on R. D. Ekstrand and C. B. Morton in Sedgwick county. Ekstrand was a mechanic and “trouble shooter” for the company. Morton was a salesman for the company.

Defendant made a special appearance and filed a motion to quash each of these services on the ground that service upon them was not service on the company. These motions were overruled. The overruling of these motions is one of the errors of which complaint is made. Further attention will be paid to that later in this opinion.

[504]*504In its answer to the first cause of action defendant admitted the signing of the contracts and alleged that the contract constituted an assignment or license under the patent; admitted that the letters patent were issued to plaintiffs on their invention and denied that the patent which was actually used was the one referred to in the contract. The answer further denied that defendant had refused to account to plaintiffs for royalties on sand reels covered by the contract and alleged that it had paid plaintiffs all royalties due.

The answer further alleged that during 1926 it became apparent that the S. & B. reel, in comparison with other reels that were on the market, was inadequate, complicated and subject to breakage of parts, and that on this account defendant, at a great expense, designed a new model embodying the plaintiffs’ patented device whereby the reel was greatly simplified and designated this improved reel Model 27 and has continued to manufacture this improved reel; that some of the parts of Model 27 upon which it has refused to pay royalty are identical with parts which had been used in constructing the old model.

The answer further alleged that defendant had entered upon the execution of the contract; manufactured and sold reels and paid money as royalty to plaintiffs thereunder; that in the execution of the contract it incurred great expense in redesigning a sand reel; it had employed salesmen and service men to keep the reels in repair, and advertised them; that after 1927 it became almost impossible to sell the S. & B. reel, due to the fact that other reels were better because they eliminated plaintiffs’ patented device, and that plaintiffs at no time since 1927 had done anything to make the patented device a success; that this was a breach of the contract on the part of plaintiffs.

For answer to the second cause of action defendant denied that it ever became the agent for the plaintiffs; denied that it ever manufactured and sold any sand reel embodying the plaintiff’s invention other than the one known as the S. & B. reel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 P.2d 542, 138 Kan. 501, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sage-v-oil-country-specialties-manufacturing-co-kan-1933.