Shellmar Products Co. v. Allen-Qualley Co.

87 F.2d 104, 32 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 24, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 2788
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 1936
Docket6007
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 87 F.2d 104 (Shellmar Products Co. v. Allen-Qualley Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shellmar Products Co. v. Allen-Qualley Co., 87 F.2d 104, 32 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 24, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 2788 (7th Cir. 1936).

Opinion

SPARKS, Circuit Judge.

For want of equity, the District Court dismissed appellant’s bill of review to modify a decree entered by it on April 10, 1929, Allen-Qualley Company v. Shellmar Products Company, 31 F.(2d) 293, which was affirmed by this court, Shellmar Products *105 Co. v. Allen-Qualley Co., 36 F.(2d) 623. The bill sought to modify that part of the decree which enjoined appellant, the defendant in the original action, from making, using or selling a certain type of wrap for food products such as candy bars, and from using, revealing or making known the processes and machinery used in its manufacture. The wrap, the machine, the essential feature of the process, and the decree, together with the circumstances under which it was entered, are fully set forth in the opinions hereinbefore referred to.

It is contended by appellant that this record discloses that everything which the court originally held to be the secret invention of Allen-Qualley was disclosed to the world through United States patents to Royal, No. 1,814,967, and to Novick, No. 1,865,037, and British patent to Robinson, No. 313,423, the last being applied for and issued in behalf of Royal. It is asserted by appellant that these patents, although not published until after the original decree of April 10, 1929, was entered, were granted for inventions made prior to the date of Allen-Qualley’s invention. Hence, appellant argues that Allen-Qualley’s right of secrecy was extinguished by the disclosures of the patents referred to, and that equity will not continue injunctive relief to protect a right of secrecy which no longer exists. It may be conceded that the three patents relied upon by appellant fully disclose the Allen-Qualley product and process, and the Royal and Robinson patents also disclose the Allen-Qualley apparatus.

At the original trial, appellant, in an effort to show that Allen-Qualley had no secret which could be considered as the basis for a confidential relationship, presented evidence that the process involved had already been published. That evidence included the public practice, in April or May, 1929, at the plant of Thomas M. Royal and Company in Philadelphia; the sale of wraps, made in accordance with Allen-Qualley’s teachings, by the Milwaukee Printing Company, a licensee of Allen-Qualley, now the Milprint Products Corporation; the Olsen patent, No. 1,640,-052, issued August 23, 1927, on an application filed December 21, 1925, and purchased by appellant before the original trial without the knowledge of Allen-Qualley; and the Cameron Slitting and Rewinding Machine, claimed to have been used by appellant in making a continuous web from which “Revelation” wraps were cut. The original decree awarded an accounting for damages; enjoined appellant as stated; and ordered an assignment of the Olsen patent to Allen-Qualley upon its reimbursing appellant for the amount paid by the latter for the patent. The damages subsequently were agreed upon and paid, and the patent was assigned pursuant to the decree. On July 17, 1931, the District Court, pursuant to the settlement of damages and the assignment, entered an order declaring and adjudging the decree of April 10, 1929, to have been satisfied in full, except as to the injunction which was ordered to remain in force.

On February 27, 1928, prior to the original decree, Olm and Mair, who were AllenQualley’s employees, filed their application for a patent covering the secret process here involved for the Revelation wrap, as it is called, which was designed .by them in the early part of 1927. This application was assigned to Allen-Qualley. It came into interference with the application of Royal, so far as claims relating to bags formed of the composite wrapping material were concerned, and priority was conceded to Royal of all subject matter common to the interfering applications. No United States patent has been granted on the Olm and Mair application, but a Canadian patent, No. 291,371, was granted thereon to AllenQualley on July 16, 1929, on its application filed on September 17, 1928.

Prior to the original trial, and before the taking of testimony began, appellant had secured the issuance of Canadian patent, No. 283,944, to Miller, its employee, and it was reissued in 1933. Both fully disclose the process here involved, and the applications were based on the confidential information received by appellant from Allen-Qualley. Furthermore, before the original trial, appellant, through Olsen, Jr., filed application for a Canadian patent corresponding to the United States patent to Olsen, referred to in the original decree. That application resulted in the issuance of Canadian Letters Patent, No. 297,343, to appellant on February 4, 1930. The facts with relation-to the application and issuance of these two Canadian patents were not known to the District Court when the original decree was entered.

*106 For convenience, a chronological list of pertinent facts is set forth in the margin. 1

For the purpose of protecting their interests, the appellees Rameo, Inc., and Mil-print Products Corporation, by leave of court, intervened as co-parties with AllenQualley in the proceedings to review. Rameo, Inc., asserted that the interests of Allen-Qualley in the Revelation wraps, and the inventions, processes, patents and patent applications relating thereto, and the interests of Thomas M. Royal and Company in the Revelation bags and the inventions, processes, patents, and patent applications relating thereto, were assigned to Royal-Allen-Mair, Inc., and were subsequently assigned in June, 1935, by the latter corporation to Rameo, Inc.

Rameo, Inc., was created to consolidate the interests of Thomas M. Royal and Company, assignee of Royal, Allen-Qualley, Continental Paper and Bag Corporation, and Royal-Allen-Mair, .Inc., in and to the patents, inventions and processes relating to the art of fabricated wrappers. It is now the owner of the Olm and Mair application of February 27, 1928, the Royal patent and the Olsen patent, and holds an exclusive license under Novick.

Milprint asserted that it was the exclusive licensee of Allen-Qualley, and its assignee of the right to make, use and sell the Revelation wrap; that Royal-AllenMair, Inc., as assignee of Allen-Qualley’s right, title and interest to royalties under the license, entered into an amended license *107 agreement continuing the exclusive license to Milprint, and that it was subsequently assigned by Milprint to Rameo, Inc.

Allen-Qualley filed its answer and counterclaim, demanding that appellant be required to assign to it the Miller and Olsen Canadian patents. That answer and counterclaim were ordered filed as and for the answer and counterclaim of all the appellees. The District Court held that the new facts presented on review were merely cumulative of evidence offered at the original trial, and that because of appellant’s breach of the confidential relations, it was not entitled to relief from the injunction, regardless of the public disclosure of Allen-Qualley’s secret by the subsequently issued patents. The decree further ordered appellant to assign the Miller and Olsen Canadian patents to Allen-Qualley.

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Bluebook (online)
87 F.2d 104, 32 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 24, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 2788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shellmar-products-co-v-allen-qualley-co-ca7-1936.