Teas v. Albright

13 F. 406, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2648
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedAugust 25, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 F. 406 (Teas v. Albright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Teas v. Albright, 13 F. 406, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2648 (uscirct 1882).

Opinion

Nixon, D. J.

The bill of complaint in this case was originally filed in the court of chancery of New Jersey, and sets forth that the complainant, being the owner of several valuable patents, did, on the first of February, 1876, enter into an agreement with two of the defendant, Oahoone and Albright, to make an assignment of the letters patent to them, in consideration of their paying to the complainant certain royalties from the profits derived from the sale of the goods manufactured under the said inventions.

It alleged that the complainant had never been able to obtain proper access to the books of account of the said defendants, although [407]*407the agreement stipulated that during all the time of its continuance their books should be open to his or his agent’s inspection, for examination; that he had received five several statements from Cahoone and Albright and their agents since the execution of the agreement, from which it appeared that the complainant had been credited with the total sum of $925.03, and charged with the sum of $787.16, and that the said statements were grossly erroneous and false, both as to the credits and charges; that for some time after the execution of the agreement the said Cahoone and Albright carried on the business of manufacturing the goods described in the said patents under the name of the Cahoone Manufacturing Company ; that afterwards one Samuel E. Tompkins was taken into the business, and it was transacted under the name of “Samuel E. Tompkins, Cahoone & Co.,” and that the books of these respective firms contain many items of which it is necessary for the complainant to have information, for the purposes of this suit, and in which the said Tompkins has some kind of interest; that the accounts between the complainant and Cahoone and Albright are mutual and complicated, arising from the unsettled differences existing between them as to the amount with which the complainant should be charged by the defendants, and from the way in which goods have been manufactured under the said patents—the defendants applying, in some cases, the principles of several patents to a single article of manufacture.

The prayer of the bill is that the defendants may make a full and true discovery and disclosure of and concerning all the accounts, transactions, and matters aforesaid, and that an account may be taken under the direction of the court of all dealings and transactions heretofore had between the parties, concerning the royalties and percentages claimed by the complainant under and by virtue of the said agreement, and that Cahoone and Albright may be charged with the aggregate amounts of said royalties, with lawful interest thereon from the time that the same became due, and that the said sum may be decreed to be paid by the said Cahoone and Albright to the complainant, no decree being asked for against Tompkins.

To the bill, Cahoone and Albright have signed a joint and several answer, and Tompkins a several answer.

The former admit that the agreement between them and the complainant was duly executed, and is in full force; that the patents were assigned to them by the complainant as alleged; that the patented improvements have been applied by them, in connection with other improvements owned and controlled by them, in the manufact[408]*408ure of harness goods, and that the only consideration for the assignment of the patents was that specified in the agreement. They deny the allegations of the bill, that they have refused to the complainant proper access to their books; that they have not rendered true semi-annual statements of the accounts; that they are indebted to complainant in any sum for royalties due on manufactured goods; and that the accounts between them and the complainant are complicated, or that it will be tedious and difficult to ascertain the amounts due from time to time, under a fair construction of the agreement; although they admit that, in manufacturing the goods for the market, they have necessarily made them in such manner as required the application of the principles of several patents to one article, including patents not embraced within the scope of the agreement:

They further allege that at the time of the execution of the agreement with the complainant they were engaged in earnest litigation with Tompkins concerning the validity of certain patents for improvements in saddle-trees, owned by the said Tompkins, and concerning alleged infringements of said patents, and that in consequence of said litigation, and the rivalry in business between them, great injury resulted to the trade of both parties; and that in October, 1877, an agreement was made between them to cease litigation and unite their business, and since that time said business has been carried on in the name of “Samuel E. Tompkins, Cahoone & Go.,” which firm has been entitled to use all of the patents owned by the defendants and by said Tompkins, including the improvements embraced in the patents assigned to them by the complainant; and that they, before the said change in their business, and the new firm, since the change, have applied and used these patents, to a greater or less extent, in manufacturing certain goods, in connection with other improvements covered by other patents owned by them, and that both before and since said change they have carefully kept account of all the goods which embraced any of the improvements covered by the patents assigned by the complainant, although such improvements have been in a great measure superseded and rendered useless by the control of the various patents'of Tompkins, with whom they were in litigation at the time of the agreement; and that such 1 books have been, at all reasonable times, open to the inspection of the complainant, and full statements and accounts therefrom have been from time to time furnished, to him., and made the basis of frequent payments, under the said agreement.

[409]*409Their answer also sets up that the firm of Samuel E. Tompkins, Calioone & Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 F. 406, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teas-v-albright-uscirct-1882.