St. Louis & O'Fallon Coal Co. v. Dinwiddie

53 F.2d 655, 11 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 195, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1806
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedNovember 10, 1931
DocketNo. 1723
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 53 F.2d 655 (St. Louis & O'Fallon Coal Co. v. Dinwiddie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Louis & O'Fallon Coal Co. v. Dinwiddie, 53 F.2d 655, 11 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 195, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1806 (D. Md. 1931).

Opinion

WILLIAM C. COLEMAN, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity brought to determine the plaintiff’s right to certain inventions, made by certain of the defendants while employed by the plaintiff to conduct tests for the purpose of determining the commercial possibilities arising from the production of insulating brick, semi-coke smokeless fuel, and a variety of crude by-products, through the method of low-temperature distillation of coal.

The bill of complaint asks for relief by injunctions, preliminary and permanent, restraining defendants from using, selling, assigning, or otherwise disposing of, and from disclosing except to the plaintiff or its representatives, those inventions, embodied in four applications for United States letters patent filed by the three individual defendants and now held, by virtue of assignment, by the fourth, or corporate defendant, the Bashioum Producer Retort Company, a holding company formed and owned by the other defendants; and also that the court decree that plaintiff alone has full and complete equitable title to all of these inventions. The suit was brought originally against defendant Dinwiddie alone, but later the other three‘defendants were, by agreement, made parties to the proceeding, and similar suits, which the same plaintiff had instituted against certain of the defendants in other jurisdictions, have not been pressed, pending a decision in the present proceeding.

[656]*656The defense of the two principal defendants, Cuno and Bashioum, is twofold: First, that they were never employed to'make the inventions which are involved in the present controversy, but that these were conceived outside and independently of their employment by the plaintiff; second, that defendant Dinwiddie, while acting as agent for the plaintiff, made representations as to the terms and conditions upon which defendants Cuno and Bashioum would be protected in their inventions, upon which these two defendants acted, and which are binding upon the plaintiff, because such representations were within the scope of defendant Dinwiddie’s apparent, if not actual, authority.

Defendants consented to the issuance of a preliminary injunction. The ease was thereupon heard upon the bill and answer. A large amount of oral and documentary testimony was presented, lengthy arguments had, and briefs filed.

Prefatory to a summary of the history of the employment of the three individual defendants by the plaintiff company, out of which the present controversy arises, it is necessary to understand the so-called' Kern processes, and the reason for the plaintiff becoming interested therein, and later employing these three defendants in connection therewith. For a number of years prior to 1928, the low-temperature distillation of cheap coals had been developed in Great Britain and Germany to the extent of proving its great commercial value. One Ludwig Kem, a German chemist, assisted by his two sons, had invented a number of processes for the production of insulating brick by low-temperature distillation of coal. These proc•esses he had patented in Germany and other foreign countries, and they were also covered by numerous letters patent and applications for letters patent in the United States. And so it was that in the spring of 1928 the Messrs. Kem came to the representatives of the Adolphus Busch Estate of St. Louis, of which the plaintiff company is a subsidiary, claiming- they had developed various novel and economical processes, by low-temperature distillation of bituminous coal, for the production of insulating brick and its various byproducts, including tar, benzol, ammonium sulphate, and many others, and also of a smokele'ss fuel known as semicoke, and sought financial support necessary for the development of these processes, and for the production and marketing of the products of these processes. Their representations so appealed to the trustees of the Busch Estate, who were seeking the most profitable ways to utilize the extensive coal properties that belonged to the plaintiff company, that through the plaintiff company they entered into two formal written agreements with the Kerns, the first relating to the Kem processes for the production of insulating brick and other insulating materials and their by-products, by low-temperature distillation of coal; and, the second, a supplementary contract, extending the terms of the original agreement, in a manner very important to the present controversy, as hereinafter explained. This second agreement was made some four months later, after the defendants’ employment by the plaintiff had advanced to a point where defendants realized there was perhaps even greater commercial potentiality in the manufacture of smokeless fuel than of insulating brick, under the Kem processes.

The vital parts of the two agreements, considered as an entity, are as follows: First, should examination of the Kerns’ title to the patented and other inventions in question prove satisfactory, provision was made' for a preliminary test period consisting of two parts: (1) A laboratory test to determine whether the products and by-products of these inventions were capable of being profitably manufactured for commercial purposes; (2) an investigation of whether, “under the state of the art, the inventions used in such laboratory manufacture have been or can be covered by letters patent of the United States issued or to. be issued to the chemists [the Kerns] or their assigns, sufficient in scope and protection to obtain a patent monopoly that will control the manufacture on a commercial scale of the said products and byproducts.” During this preliminary test period, specified weekly payments to the Kerns were provided for. Second, if the results of these two investigations proved satisfactory, plaintiff agreed to construct a manufacturing test unit of specified capacity, and with it to conduct an experimental test for the purpose of both “demonstrating the manufacturing possibilities to be developed through the said inventions and services of the chemists” (the Kerns) and also “of testing the market possibilities” of the experimental output, “and the net profits to be expected from such manufacture on a larger scale.” Third, if the results of both the preliminary test and the manufacturing test proved satisfactory, the plaintiff agreed to elect, within a specified period of time, whether or not it would exercise the exclusive option given it to acquire the patented and other inventions of the Kerns. Fourth, if it elected to exercise such option, then various enumerated patents and [657]*657applications for patents were to be transferred to a corporation to bo formed by the plaintiff for the development, manufacture, and marketing of the products and byproducts of these inventions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 F.2d 655, 11 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 195, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-ofallon-coal-co-v-dinwiddie-mdd-1931.