United States Light & Heating Co. v. J. B. M. Electric Co.

194 F. 866, 114 C.C.A. 612, 1912 U.S. App. LEXIS 1235
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 29, 1912
DocketNo. 140
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 194 F. 866 (United States Light & Heating Co. v. J. B. M. Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Light & Heating Co. v. J. B. M. Electric Co., 194 F. 866, 114 C.C.A. 612, 1912 U.S. App. LEXIS 1235 (2d Cir. 1912).

Opinion

WARD, Circuit Judge.

This is a bill in equity praying for the reformation of an assignment of an application dated September 30, 1907, No. 404,271, for letters patent, executed by the J. B. M. Electric Company inadvertently under the name of the “J. B. M. Company,” and also that a subsequent assignment thereof by the same company to the Gould Coupler Company be canceled as a cloud upon the complainant’s title, and that the revocation by the inventor of his power of attorney accompanying the said application he annulled.

The defendant filed a cross-hill, praying that the aforesaid assignment, as well as an assignment of the same date, No. 404,272, be declared void and canceled of record, or that the complainant be ordered to reassign the same. The introduction of an entirely new matter not mentioned in the original bill was improper, and we shall therefore not consider the rights of the parties with reference to application No. 404,272. It is to be noted that the cross-oili alleges no fraud or duress, but only charges that the assignment = was executed by the president of the J. B. M. Company without consideration and without authority.

The present parties are assignees, with no greater rights than their assignors, and we shall hereafter speak of the assignors. The complainant’s assignor, the Bliss Electric Car Fighting Company, was engaged in the manufacture of devices for electric lighting, and John W. jepsori, Alexander McGarry, and George R. Berger were associated together as partners in the invention and promotion of devices for electrical distribution. January 8, 1907, these parties entered into an agreement, whereby Jepsou and his associates assigned to the Bliss Company four applications for patents, Nos. 312,223, 276,276, [868]*868314,531, and 288,055, and the Bliss Company agreed to manufacture, sell, and pay royalties upon devices under the same. The agreement provided as to future inventions:

“Tenth. It is understood and agreed that said party of the second part shall have the right to manufacture, use, sell and rent any and all improvements that said parties of the first part may make, either jointly or severally, upon the aforesaid inventions, and also the right to manufacture, use, sell or rent any apparatus devised by said parties of the first part, either jointly or severally, which may be in any way applicable to systems embodying any features of the aforesaid inventions, or which may in any way fall within the scope of the patents that may be obtained for the aforesaid inventions; provided, however, that such inventions, improvements or apparatus shall be made, sold, leased licensed or rented only in equipments or apparatus embodying in whole or in part the inventions in the aforesaid applications and patents on which royalty is payable under this agreement and nothing in this agreement shall be construed to prevent the parties of the first part from granting rights or licenses to others for improvements or further inventions not embraced within or covered by the aforesaid applications or patents which have been assigned to the party of the second part.”

The subject of cancellation of the contract was regulated in article 20 as follows:

“Twentieth. It is understood and agreed that in the event that this agreement be cancelled or terminated under any of the provisions thereof, then the party of the second part shall reassign to the parties of the first part the patent or patents and application or applications for letters patent covering the equipment or apparatus affected by said cancellation or termination; and in the event that this agreement be not renewed at the expiration of the term of five years herein provided, then the party of the second part shall reassign to the parties of the first part all the applications and letters patent for the aforesaid inventions or improvements made thereon by the parties of the first part, either jointly or severally; and the party of the second part agrees to make, execute and deliver to said parties of the first part any and all deeds, writings or instruments of assignment necessary or required to vest in and secure to said parties of the first part the full and complete title, rights and interests in and to said inventions and improvements' in accordance with the provisions of this clause.”

January 31, 1907, Jepson and his associates assigned their common interests to a corporation they had! organized under the name of the J. B. M. Electric Company.

The Bliss Company constructed a car lighting device under one or more of these applications in accordance with what is known as the “booster” system. Upon exhibition at an electrical convention held at Atlantic' City in Juñe, 1907, it proved a conspicuous failure. Thereupon all parties to the contract agreed that future efforts should be spent upon application 312,223. Just here arises the vital issue of fact. The witnesses of the Bliss Company say that it thereupon furnished to Jepson an invention theretofore made by Bliss of an automatic reed regulator under an agreement that all work in improving it was .to be done by Jepson and his associates for the sole benefit of the company, and not under the contract of January 8, 1907. On the other hand, Jepson and his witnesses say that all work done upon it was to be done under the contract and covered by the contract as an improvement upon application 312,223. Either account might be true, and there is much in the record to sustain each, but in disposing of the dispute we shall rely upon a'few facts that seem to us controlling. [869]*869Jepson’s work did result in improvements which were covered by an application in his name for letters patent No. 404,271. March 28, 1908, the parties to the contract of January 8, 1907, in accordance with article 20 thereof, canceled that agreement. The Bliss Company reassigned to Jepson and his associates the applications mentioned in it, and delivered copies of the same, together with the drawings, for which Jepson and his associates receipted April 3, 1908.

Nothing whatever was said about application No. 404,271. If this application had been still in the name of Jepson, the inventor, this omission would be no ground for comment. But in point of fact he had on the day of its date, September 30, 1907, assigned it to the J. B. M. Electric Company, and as president of that company (though the word “Electric” was left out of its name in the actual execution) assigned it to the Bliss Company. Evidently it should have been reassigned if it was covered by the agreement of January 8, 1907, as the defendant contends.

July 30, 1908, the J. B. M. Company assigned applications Nos. 312,223, 276,276, 314,531, letters patent No. 878,305, which had issued upon application No. 288,055, all of which had! been assigned to the Bliss Company under the contract of January 8, 1907, together with application No. 419,993 and “any others the numbers of which may have been omitted in this agreement” to the Gould Coupler Company, the defendant and cross-complainant, without making any mention of application 404,271.

December 4, 1908, the J. B. M. Company executed an assignment of No. 404,271 specifically to the Gould Company, which recited that it was owned by it July 30, 1908, and was therefore covered by the assignment of that date.

Upon the foregoing statement it would seem to be perfectly clear that the complainant is entitled to a decree and that the cross-bill should be dismissed.

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Bluebook (online)
194 F. 866, 114 C.C.A. 612, 1912 U.S. App. LEXIS 1235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-light-heating-co-v-j-b-m-electric-co-ca2-1912.