Universal Oil Products Co. v. Shell Development Co.

196 Misc. 497, 95 N.Y.S.2d 355, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3173
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 196 Misc. 497 (Universal Oil Products Co. v. Shell Development Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Universal Oil Products Co. v. Shell Development Co., 196 Misc. 497, 95 N.Y.S.2d 355, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3173 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1949).

Opinion

Isidor Wasservogel,

Official Referee. The issue to be determined in this action is whether World War II has ended insofar as the agreement between the parties here involved is concerned.

Plaintiff, a Delaware corporation, seeks a declaratory judgment as to the meaning of the phrase “ six months after the-termination of the present war ” contained in an agreement to which it and all of the defendants in this action are signatories. The action was discontinued by stipulation as to two of the contracting parties, namely Texaco Development Corporation and International Catalytic Oil Processes Corporation, upon their consepf to abide by the judgment rendered herein. Anglo-[499]*499Iranian Oil Company, Limited, although not within the jurisdiction of this court, has agreed to submit to its judgment in consideration of plaintiff ’s covenant not to sue the corporation in England on the subject matter of this suit.

; The agreement here involved, known as “ Recommendation 41 Agreement,” is dated August 7, 1942, although it is conceded that it was not executed until on or about April 19,1944. Plaintiff contends that the time denoted by the phrase “ six months after the termination of the present war ” has not yet arrived and will not be reached until the making of a formal treaty of peace with Germany and Japan, or until a proclamation is made by the President of the United States that the war has ended. The defendants, Standard Oil Development Company (hereinafter referred to as “ Jersey ”) and Shell Development Company (hereinafter referred to as Shell ”) contend that the war ended, for purposes of the agreement, on or before July 25, 1947.

Pursuant to a Presidential letter, dated May 28, 1941, to the Secretary of the Interior, Recommendation No. 41 was issued by the Office of Petroleum Coordinator for War, later known as Petroleum Administration for War. It recommended, among other things, that various companies in the oil industry, including the parties involved in this action, negotiate an arrangement whereby they would mutually assist each other and carry on research and development work in oil refining processes. The agreement involved herein is the result of the attempt of the parties litigant to comply with this Recommendation No. 41.

The agreement executed by the parties provides for the exchange of technical information among them and establishes a licensing and cross-licensing arrangement with respect to certain methods and processes for catalytic refining of petroleum. For this purpose each of the parties to the agreement is licensed by all the other. parties. Plaintiff and defendant, The M. W. Kellogg Company,,which his assumed a neutral position in the dispute before the court, are granted nonexclusive rights to issue licenses under the patent rights of the signatories to the agreement. ■ They are required to grant licenses thereunder to all applicants therefor, substantially as set forth in a form of license annexed to the agreement and made a part thereof.

• Approximately twenty licenses have been granted to petroleum refiners and are now outstanding under the agreement. The date of “ termination of the present war,” as defined in the agreement and, licenses granted thereunder, is a crucial date [500]*500because a, lapse of six mouths from the time when the war terminates cuts off certain phases of performance under the contract, Ampng the obligations of the parties which would come to an end at the expiration of six months after the termination of the war are the necessity for co-operative research and the exchange of laboratory and technical data. The obligation of the parties to furnish improvements and developments to licensees pursuant, to licenses outstanding under the, agreement would also then be ended. The date when the war terminates fixes th$ latest conception date of inventions by the parties and their licensees, upon which patents are to be licensed and cross-licensed as provided, for in the, agreement.. Determination of this date constitutes one of three, conditions upon which is based the licensees’ right to terminate outstanding licenses-, and also ends the period of reduced royalty rates, on products of the licensed processes sold, to, the United States Government and its agencies. Although the termination of the war would serve as a cut-off date to, end the flow of new information or patents; based thereon under the licensing- provisions of the-, agreement,, if merely determines the extent of patents; which plaintiff and defendant Kellogg may license* and does not marl the- end. of their licensing rights, which would continue thereafter for- the life of the patents.

By the terms of the. agreement, the laws of the State of New York control its construction. The legality/ of the arrangement established by the parties, is, not an issue before the court and will not, be considered.

I hold that, under the laws of this. State, the. intentions of the parties, at the time, of the, execution of. the agreement- are of the essence and must; he - ascertained. It, therefore* becomes necessary to examine: the - circumstances surrounding- the agreement entered into by the parties ip order to determine the meaning- of the phrase. l-‘ termination, ofi the present- war ” (Matter of Jones v. Schneer, 270 App. Div. 1027; Galbord v. Buono, 188 Misc. 324) i

The. record before me. clearly indicates, that; throughout- the negotiations .preceding the adoption» of the Recommendation. 41-Agreement, all of the parties-, and the- various Government' agencies interested in,- this; problem, considered the* proposed arrangement as. a means of furthering- the war effort during the national emergency. It- was undoubtedly am exigency requisite, to the prosecution of- the war. The parties to - the agreement. are, all members- of a highly competitive - industry. [501]*501The Pearl Harbor disaster, however, and the ensuing world conflict made the mobilization of private industry for the production of essential materials a vital factor in the prosecution of the war. In view of the nature of the emergency, competition among the oil companies was temporarily suspended. In the early part of 1942, the companies here involved already had started discussions with officials of the Petroleum Coordinator for National Defense in an attempt to draft a recommendation to be issued by the Office of the Petroleum Coordinator (Hearings of Senate Committee on Patents, 77th Cong., 2d Sess., part 8, p. 4174). But the policy of the Department of Justice to prosecute associated companies as violators of the antitrust laws hampered the formulation of an agreement whereby the signatories thereto could safely combine their patent rights and processes in the catalytic oil refining industry. Jersey had previously been enjoined by a decree of a District Court of the United States from participating in any catalytic refining association. In order to allay the fears of those engaged in industry, the Attorney General, by letter dated April 29,1941, announced that thereafter the policy of the Department of Justice would be to immunize from prosecution under the antitrust laws any acts performed by business men in compliance with specific requests made by agencies of the Government for the purpose of a maximum productive effort in the national defense,” as required in the present emergency ”. This letter of the Attorney General merely outlined an informal administrative procedure for securing antitrust clearance from the Department of Justice, but, in the light of the injunction issued against Jersey (U. S. Dist. Ct.

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Bluebook (online)
196 Misc. 497, 95 N.Y.S.2d 355, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/universal-oil-products-co-v-shell-development-co-nysupct-1949.