Taylor Gas Producer Co. v. Wood

125 F. 337, 60 C.C.A. 215, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4172
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 15, 1903
DocketNo. 24
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 125 F. 337 (Taylor Gas Producer Co. v. Wood) 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
Taylor Gas Producer Co. v. Wood, 125 F. 337, 60 C.C.A. 215, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4172 (3d Cir. 1903).

Opinion

GRAY, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff below, who is plaintiff in error here, brought suit for the alleged infringement of a written contract between plaintiff and defendant, dated September 11, 1890. Under the terms of this contract as written, the plaintiff corporation, being the owner of certain letters patent of the United States and Canada, for improvements in gas producers, granted to the defendant “the exclusive license, right or privilege under the terms and conditions hereinafter expressed * * * to make, and vend to others to be used, gas producers or apparatus for making gas, containing or embodying the inventions described or contained or claimed in the hereinbefore recited several letters patent, or some of them, within and throughout the United States and Canada.” In consideration of the grant of this license, the defendant covenanted to pay, from the date of the license and agreement, certain royalties during a period of three years, ending October 1,1893, graded from $20 to $35, according to the size and capacity of the producers or apparatus to be manufactured. After the said 1st day of October, 1893, these royalties or license fees were to be from $25 to $50. In the third article of said agreement, it is provided as follows:

“Third: That furthermore in consideration of the license aforesaid, the said Walter Wood, party hereto of the second part, hereby agrees to make and sell or cause or procure to be made and sold to others to be used after [338]*338the third and during each subsequent year of this license and agreement, not less than one hundred gas producers or apparatus for making gas containing or embodying the inventions set forth or described and claimed in the said hereinbefore recited several letters patent or account for and pay royalty to the said corporation, the Taylor Gas Producer Company, party hereto of the first part, in each and every year after the third from the date of this license and agreement, a royalty or license fees on not less than one hundred gas producers or apparatus for making gas containing or embodying the inventions set forth or described and claimed in the hereinbefore recited several letters patent or some of them, whether that number of gas producers or i apparatus for making gas or not has or have been made by the said Walter Wood, party hereto of the second part, or by his procurement or authority during that year.”

The defendant acknowledged the validity of each and every of the letters patent, and agreed not to dispute or set up any defense against the validity thereof in any controversy arising out of the license.

It is admitted on both sides that the terms of the original contract, in the matters herein recited, were altered by subsequent oral agreements between the parties thereto and the controversy between them, relates to the extent and scope of said alteration. The defendant contends that, shortly after the expiration of the first year in which the minimum royalty clause was operative, the president of the plaintiff corporation, being duly authorized in the premises, agreed with the defendant, who was one of the directors in said corporation, that since the ist of October, 1893, and thereafter, he was to be charged at the uniform rate of $25 for every apparatus manufactured by or for him, instead of the larger sums stipulated for in the written contract, and that the agreement with reference to a minimum royalty, which was to go into effect on and after October 1, 1893, should be abrogated. That the consideration for this alteration and modification of the original agreement, was the fact that the patents covered by the contract were being constantly infringed, and that the plaintiff corporation had failed, or was unable, to protect them. The plaintiff corporation, on the other hand, contends, and so states in its declaration, that while the terms and conditions of the written contract were acted upon by the defendant until about the 15th day of October, 1894, the said contract was then, by resolution of the board of directors of the plaintiff corporation, and with the consent of defendant, altered and modified, so that the royalty and license fee to be paid by the defendant was reduced to the uniform sum .of $25 for each producer made, sold or used by said defendant, but that the stipulation in regard to a minimum royalty remained in force, under which stipulation the defendant was bound to pay said royalty upon 100 producers' or furnaces during each calendar year, whether manufactured, sold or used by him, or not.

Upon this view of the contract, as modified, suit has been brought, on which a claim of $10,000 is made for the minimum royalty during the years of 1898, 1899, 1900 and 1901. During this period, the inference is justified, that no producer had been made or sold by the defendant. Both sides agree that the contract as written had, by oral agreement and understanding, been altered and modified so as to substitute a uniform royalty of $25 on each producer manufactured or sold in lieu of the higher graded royalties prescribed in the original [339]*339contract, but they disagree as to there being any alteration or abrogation of the minimum royalty clause of the contract. This was the principal question in controversy at the trial, upon which evidence was adduced on both sides. The jury found a verdict for the defendant, whereupon a motion was made for judgment for plaintiff, non obstante veredicto, “in accordance with the stipulation entered into by and between the counsel for the respective parties during the trial of this cause.” This stipulation is as follows:

“It is hereby agreed between counsel for plaintiff and defendant that if the court shall upon a review of the entire evidence produced on the trial held November 13, 1902, be of opinion theré is not sufficient evidence to submit to the jury the question as to whether or not the cause of the contract in suit relative to the minimum amount of royalties to be paid has been abrogated or waived by agreement of the parties, express or implied, that then the verdict, if for the defendant, is to be changed to a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount claimed as if upon an instructed verdict to the jury to that effect, reserving to each party the right to appeal or writ of error as to the correctness of the ruling of the court on this and all other points in the case. This stipulation is entered into in order to avoid difficulty on the question of practice which forbids a judgment for plaintiff non obstante veredicto despite a finding by the jury for the defendant.”

This motion for judgment was refused by the court below, and the single question presented upon this writ of error is, was there sufficient evidence to justify a submission to the jury of the question, whether or not there was a binding agreement to abrogate the minimum royalty clause of the contract in suit? The plaintiff in error makes two main contentions as to this question. First, that there was no sufficient evidence of such an agreement in regard to the minimum royalty; and second, that, if such an agreement were made, no consideration sufficient in law to support it has been shown. All the evidence in the case is embraced in the testimony of two witnesses,—William J. Taylor, president of the corporation plaintiff, and Walter Wood, the defendant, and in the correspondence between them, and in certain minutes of the plaintiff corporation.

The learned judge of the court below, in denying the motion of plaintiff for judgment, non obstante veredicto, said:

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125 F. 337, 60 C.C.A. 215, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-gas-producer-co-v-wood-ca3-1903.