Sedberry v. Gwynn

222 S.W. 783, 282 Mo. 632, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 139
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 2, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 222 S.W. 783 (Sedberry v. Gwynn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sedberry v. Gwynn, 222 S.W. 783, 282 Mo. 632, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 139 (Mo. 1920).

Opinion

GRAVES, J,,

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, refusing to vacate a previous order appointing a receiver to take charge of defendant’s business. The pertinent facts are few. March 15, 1918, the plaintiff filed a petition in said circuit court, in which he prayed:

“Wherefore, plaintiff prays judgment that defendant may be decreed to deliver to plaintiff all apparatus, appliances and parts that may be ordered by plaintiff under said contract, and to otherwise fully comply with and -carry out the terms of said contract; that the defendant he enjoined from selling any of said apparatus, appliances or parts thereof to any person or persons other than plaintiff or from disposing of said inventions and patents to any third party, or from otherwise placing it beyond his power to comply with his contract with plaintiff; that defendant be enjoined from enticing away or interfering with or employing plaintiff’s salesman or in any other way interfering with or-injuring plaintiff’s business; that defendant be ordered to account to plaintiff, as provided in said contract, for all sums to which plaintiff is entitled on sales of said goods made by defendant as above set forth and for all other sums of money which may be due to plaintiff under said contract and for all moneys due to plaintiff which defendant has collected; that plaintiff may recover his costs herein, and for such other and further relief as to this Honorable Court may seem proper.”

*637 By the petition it was charged that the defendant was the owner of certain letters-patent from the U. S. Government to use and vend certain vulcanizers, known as the “Gwynn-Bacon Vulcanizers;’’ that plaintiff had a written contract as to the sale of'- the same with defendant, who was manufacturing them; that defendant had declared that said contract was void, and was threatening to sell his business, including his patent, to another, so that plaintiff could not get from him the vulcanizers to carry on his (plaintiff’s) business in the sale thereof; that prior to defendant’s cancellation or ignoring of such contract, plaintiff had orders for goods which could not be filled bv him, but were being filled by defendant with plaintiff’s customers: that the conduct of defendant was destroying plaintiff’s business, which was dependent upon his contract with defendant.

The answer admitted that defendant was doing business under the name of “Gwynn-Bacon Vulcanizer Company,” which was accompanied by specific denials of many things charged in the petition. The answer admitted the execution of the' contract pleaded by plaintiff, but averred that certain provisions therein rendered said contract void, as one in restraint of trade.

Motion was made to strike out portions of the answer, which was sustained, which is duly preserved in a term bill of exceptions. Reply was a general denial. Such is a very general outline of the case made by the pleadings.

On May 19, 1919, a trial of the issues under the pleadings was had, and the court entered the following decree:

“Now on this day come the plaintiff and the defendant, and this cause being called for hearing upon the issues raised under the pleadings herein as to the right of plaintiff to an injunction against, and an accounting by, defendant, and the evidence of both plaintiff and defendant upon said issues having been introduced and heard by the court, and arguments and briefs of counsel for plaintiff and defendant, upon said issues, having *638 been heard and considered by the court, and said issues having been fully submitted to the court for adjudication, the court thereupon finds said issues in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant.

‘ ‘ The court further finds the facts to be as follows:

“1. That plaintiff and defendant are residents and citizens of the City of St. Louis, State of Missouri, and that defendant William Gwynn has been since on and before the filing of the petition herein, doing business in said city and state under the name and style of OwynnBacon Yulcanizer Company.

“2. That at all times mentioned in the second amended petition herein said defendant was and is the owner of a certain invention relative to pressure-closed electric switches, covered by letters-patent of the United States No. 1015225, dated January 16, 1912, by virtue of which defendant enjoys the exclusive right to make, use and vend appliances or apparatus embodying-said invention; that said invention was and is an essen-. tial feature of commercial appliances known as ‘ Gwynn - Bacon Yulcanizers, ’ and that said vulcanizers cannot be made, used or sold" without the license or consent of said defendant and cannot be procured upon the open market, by reason of the monopoly enjoyed by the defendent by virtue of the ownership by defendant of said invention and letters-patent.

“3. That on November 3, 1916, the defendant being the owner of the exclusive right to make, use and vend vulcanizers of the type referred to, as aforesaid, entered into a contract in writing with plaintiff, for a good and sufficient consideration, which contract was and is a lawful, valid and subsisting contract as to all the terms and conditions thereof between plaintiff and defendant. A copy of said contract is annexed to the original petition herein and marked ‘Exhibit A,’ and is hereby referred to and made a part of this decree. That in and by said contract defendant agrees, among other things, to sell to plaintiff, at the prices and on the terms specified in said.contract, a sufficient number and a *639 mount of said vulcanizers, repair parts, and appliances therefor, mentioned in said contract, to fill all orders therefor sent by plaintiff to defendant.

“4. That said contract further provides that upon receipt, of an order for any of the goods covered by said contract, the defendant would promptly execute the same by supplying the required goods, either direct to the purchaser, or to plaintiff, as the latter might direct; that said goods should be boxed in first class condition by the defendant and should be free from defects, thoroughly tested before leaving the factory, and should be guaranteed (in the case of vulcanizers) by the defendant for one year from date of purchase; that all goods should be delivered by the defendant to the transportation company in St. Louis at the expense of the defendant; also that the plaintiff in billing said goods to the consumer might bill under his own name or under the name of any partnership or corporation he might organize, and that he shall have the exclusive right to use, in connection with said billing, the name GwynnBacon Vulcanizer, or of any of the other Gwynn-Bacon products covered by said agreement; also that the defendent should promptly forward to the plaintiff an invoice of all goods shipped, whether shipped to the plaintiff direct, or to the consumer direct.

“5. That said contract further provides that all goods shipped by the defendant, either to the customer or to the plaintiff, during any one calender month, are to be paid for by the plaintiff on the 20th of the succeeding month.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
222 S.W. 783, 282 Mo. 632, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sedberry-v-gwynn-mo-1920.