Schalkenbach v. National Ventilating Co.

129 A.D. 389, 113 N.Y.S. 352, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1306
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 11, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 129 A.D. 389 (Schalkenbach v. National Ventilating Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schalkenbach v. National Ventilating Co., 129 A.D. 389, 113 N.Y.S. 352, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1306 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

This is an action for an injunction to restrain the defendant from manufacturing and selling glazed structures embodying plaintiffs inventions, specified in an agreement in writing between the parties, and to have the contract declared terminated as of January 1, 1907, and for an accounting under the contract and for damages for a breach of it. The injunction order which was issued on the [390]*390summons, complaint and affidavits, enjoins the defendant from manufacturing, selling, delivering and erecting glazed structures embodying plaintiff’s inventions, and from making estimates and bids and entering into contracts therefor. The agreement was made on the 1st day of June, 1904. It recites that the plaintiff has invented certain'new and useful improvements in glazed structures, covered by certain letters patent, and by an application for letters patent, and certain others for which he is about to apply for letters patent, and that the defendant was willing to undertake the manufacture • and sale thereof. The defendant was given the sole and exclusive right to manufacture and sell glazed structures embodying any or all of the plaintiff’s inventions described in the contract for the term of five years from the date thereof, and it agreed to undertake the manufacture and sale of the glazed structures “ or such of them as it may find useful, and to continue such manufacture and sale during the term of this agreement, or so long within said term as. it shall be found profitable to do so,” and to account to the plaintiff for twenty-five per cent of the profits accruing from said business and to pay the same at the end of each year. The plaintiff agreed to devote his entire time and his best efforts ” to the business during the term of the agreement in whatever capacity ” the defendant might elect and to give to the business the sole and exclusive use of any and all other new and useful improvements in glazed structures that lie might thereafter invent during the term of the agreement. The defendant further agreed to advance to the plaintiff the sum of $150 per month during the term of this agreement, or so long within said term as he shall continue faithfully to discharge his duties hereunder, and so long within said term as it shall be found profitable to continue said business of manufacturing and selling glazed structures, such advances to be a first charge against his share of the profits.” By the agreement the plaintiff gave to the defendant an option to purchase outright on or before the expiration of the time of this agreement, a three-fourths interest in said described business and the good will thereof, and in said inventions, patents, pending applications for patents, etc., etc., for the sum of fifty-thousand.($50,000) dollars cash.” In the event of the exercise of this option, the plaintiff agreed to accept twenty-five per cent of the capital stock of the company to be organized for conducting the [391]*391business “ as representing his remaining one-quarter interest therein.” The last clause of the agreement provided that in the event of a discontinuance of the agreement at any time before the expiration of the term of five years “ the dies and machinery made or pur- ' chased specially for this business may, at the option of the first party [plaintiff], be turned over to him on a fair valuation of such dies and machinery at that time.”

The plaintiff alleges that after the execution of the contract the defendant entered upon the manufacture and sale of glazed structures thereunder, embodying his inventions, and that he began to devote and continued to devote his entire time and best efforts to the business, but that the defendant, in violation of the agreement, neglected and refused to render annual accounts of the manufacture and sale of said glazed structures thereunder during the years 1905 and 1906, although such accounts were duly demanded. The plaintiff further alleges that on or about the 1st day of January, 1907, be was notified by defendant that his services were no longer required; that no further advances would be made to him and that he was discharged, no reason being assigned therefor and the defendant failed to. give a reason on being requested so to do; that he thereafter duly tendered his services and demanded the advances agreed to be made to him under the contract, but the defendant refused to accept his services or to make the advances; that after his discharge he offered to purchase the dies and machinery as provided in the contract, but the defendant refused to sell the same; that in March, 1907, the defendant delivered to plaintiff an account purporting to show that the manufacture and sale of glazed structures had been unprofitable from the outset and was then unprofitable, and thereafter plaintiff notified defendant that on account of its violations of the contract and of the business being unprofitable, he elected to discontinue the agreement; that the defendant, in violation of the agreement, has ever since continued the manufacture and sale of said glazed structures and has failed and refused to employ plaintiff or to make the advances provided for in the agreement, or to render an account of such manufacture and sale. It is further alleged in the complaint that the defendant threatens to make contracts for the use of said glazed structures which cannot be fulfilled within the five years; that if the work has been unprofitable, it is [392]*392owing to the incompetence and negligence of the defendant and its agents; that defendant has also violated the contract in that it has failed to pay the costs, fees and expenses of filing new applications for obtaining letters patent on improvements in said glazed structures made by plaintiff, and that notwithstanding this fact the defendant has embodied and is embodying those improvements in its estimates and contracts and threatens to continue doing so; that defendant has omitted in a number of large contracts, and still omits and refuses and threatens to continue to omit and refuse to use lead strips forming one of the most important parts of the plaintiff’s invention, they being used under the surface bearing caps which render the structures water tight, and that the use of such lead strips has made the plaintiff’s invention well and favorably known to the trade, and their omission has greatly damaged and will continue to damage the good repute of the invention. The plaintiff further alleges performance of the agreement on his part, and that he has sustained damages in the sum of $100,000 and has no adequate remedy at law.

The learned counsel for the appellant contends that the complaint, in so far as it asks for injunctive relief, is predicated not upon the contract but upon an infringement of the plaintiff’s patent rights. This argument is based upon the allegation that the plaintiff elected to terminate the contract on account of the defendant’s violation thereof. If, as the plaintiff alleges, the defendant violated the contract he had a right to cancel it, as he alleges that he did, and this would be effectual without the aid of a court of equity. (Henderson v. Dougherty, 95 App. Div.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 A.D. 389, 113 N.Y.S. 352, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schalkenbach-v-national-ventilating-co-nyappdiv-1908.