Scapa Dryers, Inc. v. Abney Mills

269 F.2d 6, 122 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 118, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5308, 1959 Trade Cas. (CCH) 69,392
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 30, 1959
Docket17281
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 269 F.2d 6 (Scapa Dryers, Inc. v. Abney Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scapa Dryers, Inc. v. Abney Mills, 269 F.2d 6, 122 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 118, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5308, 1959 Trade Cas. (CCH) 69,392 (5th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

*8 JONES, Circuit Judge.

Hindle, Son & Co., Ltd., is an English corporation which, among other activities, manufactured looms for the weaving of dryer felts. Dryer felts are thick, wide and long. They are used in the paper making industry and require replacement at periodic intervals. The Hindle looms were patented in England, the United States and other countries. These patents were issued to and held by J. H. Hindle and Thomas Hindle, his son. Thomas Hindle procured patents on dryer felts and associated items. Similar patents were issued to Thomas Hindle and Sam Lord. In 1931 the Messrs. Hindle had made an agreement with Ayers, Limited, a Canadian corporation, 1 by which the Hindles were to assign a one-third interest in certain Canadian patents, were not to grant licenses for the manufacture of dryer felts or offer looms for sale in Canada without the consent of Ayers, nor sell looms in the United States without prohibiting their re-export to Canada.

The Brandon Corporation, a South Carolina corporation, was a textile manufacturer. It included dryer felts as one of its products. In 1936 it negotiated with the Hindles for the purchase of Hindle looms and their exclusive use in the United States. A written proposal of the Hindle Company was made to Brandon but 2 it felt it could not spare *9 the money that would be required to buy the Hindle looms. Its interest did not vanish, however, and early in 1939 there was a renewal of discussions. The negotiations on behalf of Brandon were commenced in 1939, as they had been in 1936, by Edward H. Hall. Hall was a representative of Morey Paper Mill Supply Company which handled the selling of dryer felts produced by Brandon pursuant to an arrangement with Woodward, Baldwin & Co. which controlled Brandon and acted as its general sales agent. The negotiations, which had their origin in correspondence, culminated in a conference held in July, 1939, in New York City between the Messrs. Hindle and the president and other representatives of Brandon. As a result of this conference Hindle and Brandon executed the so-called 1939 Memorandum. This Memorandum provided for the sale and delivery by the Hindle corporation to Brandon of two looms at stated prices. The times and place of payment were designated, a paragraph was included which obligated the Hindle corporation to supply Brandon with further looms at then existing prices “plus or minus any intervening difference in the cost of manufacture”. A provision captioned “Exclusive Franchise — U. S. A.” 3 was *10 incorporated. The primary issues of this litigation depend upon the interpretation and legal effect to be given to this provision. Except for a supplemental letter, which is not here material, the 1939 Memorandum is the only written agreement between the Hindle corporation and Brandon, or its successor in interest, Abney Mills, which bears upon this controversy. Assignments of the patents described in the Memorandum were made to Brandon.

Brandon merged with Abney Mills, the appellee, and all of Brandon’s rights under the Memorandum became vested in Abney Mills. The United States patents on looms which had issued to the Hindles had all expired in 1948. In 1948 the appellant, Scapa Dryers, Inc., was incorporated in Georgia. Its stockholders are Scapa Dryers, Ltd. and Ayers Limited. Scapa Dryers, Ltd., is an English corporation manufacturing dryer felts in England on Hindle looms. The Messrs. Hindle are associated with it. Ayers Limited is the Canadian corporation which manufactures dryer felts on Hindle looms. The Hindles are not connected with Ayers. Scapa Dryers, Inc., the appellant, set up a plant in Waycross, Georgia, where it embarked upon the manufacture of dryer felts on Hindle looms. This suit followed. Abney Mills asserted that by the 1939 Memorandum, of which the Georgia Scapa corporation had knowledge, it acquired an exclusive right to the use of Hindle dryer felt looms in the United States in perpetuity or for as long as it should maintain its corporate existence under its perpetual charter, that Scapa of Georgia wrongfully and tortiously interfered with the contractual relationship and deprived it of the economic advantage resulting from the agreement incorporated in the Memorandum. Damages, an accounting and injunctive relief were sought. The appellant contended that the Memorandum, properly construed, granted Brandon and Abney, its successor by merger, no exclusive franchise beyond the life of the patents, and if the agreement be construed as attempting to grant an exclusive perpetual franchise it would be contrary to public policy, violative of the anti-trust laws, and unenforceable.

Testimony, oral and documentary, was received. Thomas Hindle testified that the Hindles did not intend to grant to Brandon an exclusive right to use Hindle looms for any period beyond the term of the patents. The President and General Manager of Brandon, Mr. C. E. Hatch, testified that he expected that the exclusive franchise would be perpetual and based his expectations solely on the language of the agreement. It will be remembered that the 1939 renewal of negotiations on behalf of Brandon with the Hindles was made by Hall and much of the correspondence for Brandon was written by him. On April 10, 1939, he requested authority from Thomas Hindle to make patent investigations in the United States. In the course of the letter it was said, “It strikes me that we will actually be paying the franchise cost for what these patents are worth in this country, and we feel a careful investigation of these patents is entirely in order, and hope you may see our point.” Again, during the same month he wrote,

“The first reactions of Mr. Hatch and Mr. Baldwin are too much money involved. They have, some time ago, got price on one loom from Compton & Knowles of Worcester, Mass., and of course this price is way below your loom prices. Furthermore, they point out that the only felt Patent which it seems we will definitely need under our program, will be the Porous Matt felt, because the ordinary asbestos felts, such as are made by Hill, and which would also be made on your looms, are not Patented nor Patentable.
“Therefore, the 5,000 pounds franchise cost seems to pare down to the one Porous Matt Patent, which may still simply be Patent applied for in the United States, plus the franchise on the Patented looms themselves. I must admit that when this is boiled down to these facts, *11 and unless I am incorrect, the franchise price does seem high.”

Other letters by Hall were of the same tenor suggesting that the franchise payment was to be for the patents and hence for the duration of the patents. Mr. Hatch wrote to his company’s attorney on August 2, 1939, saying, “There is no question but that a loom can be built by any other manufacturer which will satisfactorily weave Cotton Dryer Felts without infringing on any existing patents. We have never thought that owning the United States patents to the Hin-dle Looms would prohibit other felt manufacturers making satisfactory Dryer Felts, but we do believe that we will have a four or five year jump on the other manufacturers and this is all that we can hope for”.

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269 F.2d 6, 122 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 118, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5308, 1959 Trade Cas. (CCH) 69,392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scapa-dryers-inc-v-abney-mills-ca5-1959.