Trask v. Mills Novelty Co.

52 F. Supp. 723, 57 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 368, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1969
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedMay 6, 1943
DocketNo. 1453
StatusPublished

This text of 52 F. Supp. 723 (Trask v. Mills Novelty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trask v. Mills Novelty Co., 52 F. Supp. 723, 57 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 368, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1969 (N.D. Ill. 1943).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

In this case Allen Trask, a citizen of Minnesota, sues Mills Novelty Company, a [724]*724Corporation of Illinois, for damages for breach of a contract attached to the complaint. The cause was taken under advisement following trial. I have carefully reviewed the transcript of the testimony taken at the trial, the depositions offered by the plaintiff, the documentary evidence received as exhibits from both plaintiff and defendant, and the briefs and- arguments filed by counsel.

Arranging the documentary exhibits chronologically without reference to whether they were introduced by plaintiff or defendant, and considering the history thus given, together with the deposition of Mr. McNeal and the testimony of Mr. Trask, a clear picture of this situation is presented.

The contract which forms the basis of this suit was entered into between plaintiff and defendant on May 2, 1935, and relates principally to the manner in which the plaintiff shall be compensated for certain of his inventions which he had theretofore sold and assigned to the defendant.

The plaintiff is a mechanical engineer who shortly following his release from the army after the last war commenced development and experimental work on hermetically sealed refrigeration compressors. In 1931 he went to work for the Excelsior Motor Manufacturing & Supply Company of Chicago where he continued his experimentation and completed some working models. In November of 1934 he left the Excelsior Motor Manufacturing & Supply Company and was employed by the defendant. His duties were to do engineering work in general and development of his refrigeration compressor in particular. At the time of his employment an oral understanding was had that should the development of the compressor proceed as both parties hoped, that the defendant would pay royalties to the plaintiff on any of his compressors that it might manufacture. On May 2nd, 1935, the written agreement which is the basis of this suit was entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant. At that time application for letters patent had been filed and are referred to in the contract. The plaintiff was then receiving a salary of $75 per week from the defendant and the defendant was furnishing all necessary equipment and material and other assistance in the development of the compressors. This cooperative relationship continued and resulted ultimately in the granting of letters patent No. 2065162 on December 22, 1936, and No. 2106775 on February 1, 1938. It is agreed by both plaintiff and defendant that the financial contribution of the defendant to the development of the compressor and the issuance of said patents totals approximately $32,000.

The plaintiff continued working for the defendant and subsequently was appointed its chief engineer and his salary increased to $100 per week. In January of 1936, he was told by Mr. Mills of the defendant corporation that,he could discontinue his development work on the compressor and devote himself entirely to other work for the reason that the defendant felt that its plans for manufacturing the compressor units would have to be abandoned as commercially impracticable. He was also told that he might try to find some other manufacturer to take a license on manufacturing his compressor. Subsequently some further experimental work was done on the compressor in the defendant’s factory under the direction of the plaintiff who continued as chief engineer of the defendant company.

Shortly thereafter, the Universal Cooler Corporation of Detroit, Michigan, evidenced an interest in the compressor and negotiations with that corporation were commenced by the plaintiff on behalf of the defendant. On August 19, 1936, the defendant in a letter signed by the plaintiff as its Chief Engineer (defendant’s Exhibit 2) set forth the terms on which the defendant would be willing to grant the Universal Cooler Corporation a license to manufacture compressors under the patents referred to herein. Negotiations continued and the Universal Cooler Corporation took an option for which it paid $2,500, received material, machinery, dies, tools, plans, etc., from the defendant and experimented with the device. In March of 1937 the plaintiff left the defendant’s employ. At that time no agreement had been concluded with Universal Cooler Corporation. Negotiations continued between the defendant and Universal Cooler Corporation. In some of these negotiations the plaintiff took part and in others he did not. The negotiations are clearly and completely reflected in the chronological review of the documentary evidence hereinabove referred to. At one stage of the negotiations an agreement between the defendant and Universal Cooler Corporation seemed imminent if royalty payments could [725]*725be reduced. At that point the plaintiff agreed to take a reduction in royalty payments which would be due him under his contract with the defendant and in October of 1937 signed a contract to that effect {plaintiff’s Exhibit 11), but this contract was never executed by the defendant and no agreement on this point was consummated.

Meanwhile, however, Universal Cooler Corporation made further changes in the proposed agreement with the defendant which were unsatisfactory to the defendant. Although various terms were discussed from time to time throughout the entire period of negotiations, the only definite counter-proposal to the defendant’s offer of August 19, 1936 (defendant’s Exhibit 2) was a proposed license agreement prepared in rough draft by Universal Cooler Corporation on December 9, 1937, and offered to the plaintiff at or about that time (plaintiff’s Exhibit 8). It is this proposal which plaintiff here contends should have been accepted by the defendant and which forms the basis of this suit. The terms of this proposed agreement were not satisfactory to the defendant and it therefore •rejected the same. Some further negotiations were had with Universal Cooler Corporation relative to an outright purchase of the patents, but these did not materialize into an agreement and on April 19, 1938, Universal Cooler • Corporation .definitely terminated the negotiations .(plaintiff’s Exhibit 10).

The plaintiff contends that since the defendant never manufactured any compressors embodying the patent rights referred 'to, that the defendant has evidenced its in•tention not to use the said patents, that the ¡Universal Cooler Corporation made a rea-sonable offer for a license under the said -patents and that the defendant neglected .and refused to enter into a contract with Universal Cooler Corporation, which -neglect and refusál constitutes a breach of 'his contract with the defendant and re- ■ suits in pecuniary damage to the plaintiff.

The defendant admits the contract of May 2, 1935, but denies that it has refused .and neglected to manufacture and sell any . compressors thereunder and asserts that it is still considering the manufacture and sale of such compressors when conditions warrant. It further denies that it had any obligation under the said contract to grant . a license to anyone, and even if it had, that i the negotiations with the Universal Cooler Corporation did not produce a fair and reasonable license agreement.

The plaintiff relies on paragraph 6 of the contract of May 2, 1935, which reads as follows: “In the event the Company shall decide not to employ the inventions set forth in patent applications Serial Nos.

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Bluebook (online)
52 F. Supp. 723, 57 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 368, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trask-v-mills-novelty-co-ilnd-1943.