Standard Sewing Mach. Co. of Ohio v. Jones

260 F. 170, 171 C.C.A. 206, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 2054
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 11, 1919
DocketNo. 2428
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 260 F. 170 (Standard Sewing Mach. Co. of Ohio v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Sewing Mach. Co. of Ohio v. Jones, 260 F. 170, 171 C.C.A. 206, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 2054 (3d Cir. 1919).

Opinion

WOOEEEY, Circuit Judge.

In 1905, Jones, the plaintiff below, entered into a written contract with the Standard Sewing Machine Company of Ohio, the defendant below, whereby he was given the exclusive right to sell on commission, in a specified territory, sewing machines of that company’s manufacture. The territory covered by the [171]*171contract included inter alia the State of West Virginia. It did not include the cities of Pittsburgh and Philadelphia.

The contract was extended by renewals to March 31, 1910, on which date it expired by its own limitation.

In 1908, the Standard Company, with the acquiescence of Jones, entered into a contract with Lloyd Souders & Company, a copart-nership, giving that firm the exclusive right to sell its machines in the State of West Virginia. This contract is similar in its main features to the contract with Jones, but differs from it in. two particulars, first, in restricting the exclusive territory to the State of West Virginia, and, second, in requiring that firm to sell within the term of the contract “or to purchase for their own account 500 Standard machines.” In return for relinquishing West Virginia as a part of his exclusive territory, the Standard Company undertook by an oral agreement to pay Jones two dollars on each machine which Sou-ders & Company sold or purchased under their contract.

This contract, like the one with Jones, was extended by renewal to March 31, 1910.

In June, 1910, Jones brought this action against the Standard Company for an accounting and for the recovery of commissions earned and withheld from him for machines sold under the written contract, although evidence was admitted and the case was tried as though he had declared on the oral contract also. By its answer, the Standard Company traversed all material allegations in the bill, and, by cross-bill, brought a counter-action against Jones for damages, based on facts, which, in so far as they are not disputed, are as follows: By the first of the year, 1910, Souders & Company had sold but 190 of the 500 machines ¡they had undertaken to sell or purchase within the term of their contract. It was evident they could not sell the remaining 310 machines before the contract would expire on March 31, following. Souders & Company were anxious to he released from their contract and the Standard Company was disposed to accede to their desire. But Jones, who had surrendered his West Virginia territory to Souders & Company in consideration of a commission of two dollars a machine payable by the Standard Company, on the" contract number of 500 machines, insisted, for obvious reasons, that the Standard Company enforce the contract. The Standard Company thereupon demanded of Souders & Company the performance of their contract. This placed Souders & Company in a difficult position, for they could not sell the machines in the few remaining months of the contract, and, being without funds, they could not purchase them for their own account. Jones came to their rescue, and on his representation that he could sell the machines for them in the East, Souders & Company set about to purchase them. But this was fraught with difficulties, both legal and financial. Jones still was the agent of the Standard Company with exclusive territory that did not embrace the East. The sale of Standard machines by him outside of his territory, while his contract was in force, suggested, at last, a breach of his contract. The Standard Company would not sell Souders & Company this large number of machines unless they paid for them on delivery. Souders & [172]*172Company were without funds to meet this requirement. To perform their contract Souders & Company had to borrow money. To get money, they entered into negotiations with Highland, a local banker, and obtained from him a promise to advance money to pay for the machines on the presentation of bills-of-lading. But Highland imposed as a condition of his money advances that he first be shown orders for the resale of the machines.

To meet the conflicting requirements of this circuitous transaction, the resale- of the machines, evidenced by written orders, was a primary essential. To effect this, Jones began negotiations with Spear & Company in Pittsburgh and Gimbel Bros., in Philadelphia for the purchase of the 310 machines which Souders & Company were bound to take under their contract. These negotiations, indisputably commenced by Jones in February or March when under contract wi$h the Standard Company, were completed by him in March, with his contract still in force, or in April, after his contract had expired, according as the conflicting testimony on this disputed point is believed. Spear & Company at Pittsburgh ordered and received 80 machines and Gimbel Bros, at Philadelphia ordered and received 230 machines.

In the territory of one or both of these transactions, the Standard Company had agents under similar contracts for exclusive territory, the agent in Philadelphia being John Wanamaker. When Gimbel Bros, put the Standard machines purchased through Jones on sale at cut rates, the Standard Company was forced to protect its contract with Wanamaker by taking the machines off the market. To do this, it purchased the machines from Gimbel Bros, (and likewise from Spear & Company) at prices and under an expense that caused it a loss. The Standard Company then brought the counter-action against Jones by its cross-bill in this case, whereby it seeks several recoveries on one ground. It alleges that Standard machines, the subject matter of its contracts with Jones and Souders & Company, were patented machines; that these contracts for the sale of patented machines were, therefore, patent licenses; and that Jones, in selling the machines outside of his exclusive territory, exceeded his license and infringed the patent. 'By the prayers of the cross-bill, the Standard Company asks for a decree finding infringement; ordering a disclosure of all sales made; directing an accounting for profits; and finally, awarding (1) damages for the infringement, and (2) “all damages * * * arising out of his (Jones’) breach of contract as aforesaid.”

The District Court allowed Jones commissions, inter alia, on these sales and disallowed damages to the Standard Company. The Standard Company appealed.

The confusion in this case will disappear when the true character of the contracts with Jones and with Souders & Company is determined and if the two contracts are kept separate and distinct throughout the discussion.

[1] The Standard Company maintains that, under a proper construction, both contracts are license agreements. This contention is based on the single fact that the subject matter of the contracts is (in part) patented articles, namely, sewing machines manufactured [173]*173under a patent. There is nothing in the contracts to suggest that they are license agreements beyond the circumstance that a part of their subject matter is patented articles. They contain no reference to the patent under which the machines were made and no reference to the machines as patented articles. The silence of the contracts on the subject of patents, patent rights, licenses and royalties, leads us to believe that it did not occur to the parties, or to any one of them, that they were entering into license agreements. If these contracts are to be construed as license agreements, it can only be upon the bald fact that a part of the articles covered by the contracts were patented, and that too, without regard to whether that fact was known to both parties.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 F. 170, 171 C.C.A. 206, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 2054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-sewing-mach-co-of-ohio-v-jones-ca3-1919.