Tyson v. Miller-Tyson Co.

23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 418, 15 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 177
CourtStark Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 418 (Tyson v. Miller-Tyson Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Stark Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyson v. Miller-Tyson Co., 23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 418, 15 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 177 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

NIMAN, Jo

This proceeding in error had its inception m an action brought in the court of common pleas by the Miller-Tyson Company against the plaintiffs in error, Frank Tyson, J. C. Corns and Atlee Pomerene, as trustee to enforce by specific performance an alleged parol contract, whereby it is claimed the said Frank Tyson agreed to assign the said Miller-Tyson Company his interest in certain letters patent.

The said J. C. Corns and Atlee Pomerene as trustee, were made defendants in said action, on account'of interest claimed by them in certain of the patents in controversy, and filed separate answers setting up the assignment to them by the said Frank Tyson of his interest in such of the patents as are therein enumerated, as collateral security for certain indebtedness, and asking that their respective' interests be protected.

Shortly after the filing of the petition in the court of common pleas, said the Miller-Tyson Company became bankrupt and the defendant in error, the Miller Pasteurizing Machine Company subsequently acquired, by valid assignment from the trustee in bankruptcy for said Miller-Tyson Company all such right as that company had in the patents described in the petition, and was duly substituted as plaintiff in said action.

The finding of- the court below was in favor of the plaintiff and a decree of specific performance was entered against the defendant, Frank Tyson, except as to certain pending applications for patents, and the defendants J. C. Corns and Atlee Pomerene as - trustee were found to have no interest in the letters patent referred to in their respective answers as against the plaintiff.

A reversal of thé finding and decree of the common pleas court is sought by this proceeding in error.

The alleged parol contract which formed the basis of plaintiff’s action below is set forth in the petition in the following language:

“That the said Tyson then and there, to wit: on or about June 14, 1909, ivas the owner of a large amount of the capital [420]*420'stock of the plaintiff company, and that he then and there verbally agreed with the plaintiff in consideration of the fact that the plaintiff had paid all the fees and expenses of every kind necessary or useful for obtaining said last named letters patent including as well patent office fees as fees paid the solicitor employed to attend the work incident to the procuring of said letters patent, and in consideration that the plaintiff would continue manufacturing,, experimenting, development and sale of said devices for pasteurizing milk under said letters patent, and all brine ice cream freezers under said letters patent respectively, and in consideration that plaintiff would defend suits brought for the infringement of said letters patent, to convey, transfer-and assign to the plaintiff by proper instrument or instruments of writing his undivided half interest in the letters patent first above mentioned, to wit :
“Nos. 8.04,687 and 804,688 and the said letters patent last above mentioned, to wit: Nos.. 903,030, 855,364, 903,028 and 923,609 for brine ice cream freezers and Nos. 853,659 and 896,959, 903,029 and 887,712 for pasteurizers together with any pending applications for patents or for any patents that he might thereafter secure upon their pasteurizers or brine ice cream freezers.”

It appears from the evidence that the Miller-Tyson.Company, the original plaintiff below, was organized in January, 1906; that at that time Frank Tyson and H. B. Stewart were the joint «owners of letters patent No. 804,687 for pasteurizing apparatus and No. 804,688 for pasteurizing liquids and Tyson was the owner of an invention for which letters patent 855,364 for ice cream freezers were subsequently secured; that on January 27, 1906, Tyson and Stewart entered into a written agreement with said Miller-Tyson Company, whereby it was given the exclusive right to manufacture and sell in the United States the pasteurizing apparatus and pasteurizingiliquids covered by said letters patent, together with all article or articles which are used or designed to be used in the pasteurizing, creamery, dairy, milk, butter or ice cream business which might be invented by said parties or ‘ either of them, or upon which they might obtain letters patent; [421]*421that said Tyson and Stewart received as payment for the rights given under this agreement $100,000 of the common stock and $20,000 of the preferred stock of the said company; that they weré further to receive a royalty of 10 per centum per annum of the gross sale price of the article or articles covered by the agreement; that said agreement provided that should the company fail for six consecutive months to manufacture a reasonable number of said pasteurizers or fail or discontinue manufacturing or go out of business, then in either event, all rights under said agreement should cease and determine as to the company and the interest in said patents revert to said Tyson and Stewart.

It further appears that Tyson became the superintendent of said Miller-Tyson Company and while in its employ made certain inventions and obtained letters patent therefor, and made application for others, all of which are included in the enumeration set forth in the petition; that the expense of experimenting and obtaining letters patent was borne by the Compaq- ; that during the first year of the company’s business, it was fairly successful, but in 1908 losses were incurred in excess of $35,000; that the company continued in financial trouble until on or about January 8, 1910, when bankruptcy proceedings were instituted against it and its affairs subsequently administered in the bankruptcy court.

The evidence discloses further that when the company began to lose money and its affairs became involved, the various persons who had invested money in the concern and who were members of the board of directors became dissatisfied with the license agreement with Tyson and Stewart and expressed a strong1 desire to have the company acquire the absolute ownership of the patents described in the petition. Efforts were made through the agenc3^ of Mr. Stewart, who was the president of the company, to induce Mr. Tyson to agree to assign all of his interest in said patents to the company. Arguments of various kinds based chiefly upon the financial condition of the company and the benefits that would accrue to all concerned if such assignment were made, were advanced by Stewart and finally a con[422]*422versation took place in the summer of 1909 between Stewart and Tyson, which together with a subsequent report thereof by Stewart to the members of the board of directors made in Tyson’s presence, and with his claimed assent, constitutes the contract which it was sought' to enforce in the court below by the decree of specific performance. Mr. Stewart’s testimony of this conversation is as follows:

“It finally got to the point to where I said to Mr. Tyson sometime in the latter part of May that the company could not proceed any further unless the patents were deeded over by him. At the time I told Tyson that it was the way to look at it; that the company, would have to liquidate one way or the other and he wanted to know what assurances he would have and what benefit he would get out of it, and I said that he was a stockholder the same as we were and we would do the best we could to finance it; that if his machine that he was experimenting with would work, I felt that it would be a much easier matter to carry the thing along than if it did not work.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 418, 15 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyson-v-miller-tyson-co-ohcirctstark-1912.