Warwick v. Demayo

213 S.W.2d 392, 358 Mo. 130, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 556
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 13, 1948
DocketNo. 40708.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 213 S.W.2d 392 (Warwick v. Demayo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warwick v. Demayo, 213 S.W.2d 392, 358 Mo. 130, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 556 (Mo. 1948).

Opinion

*133 [393]

DOUGLAS, P. J.

Plaintiff claims he is entitled to recover more than $50,000 from defendants because by fraud they wrongfully acquired and have used his invention which he had disclosed in confidence to one of the defendants, DeMayo. He seeks to stop them from continuing to manufacture and sell the device which he invented, and to make them account to him for their profits. The trial court sustained defendants’ motions to dismiss, and plaintiff has appealed.

*134 One of the grounds for dismissing the petition was that it showed on its face that the statute of limitations barred plaintiff’s action. This was because plaintiff failed to file his action within five years after he discovered defendants’ fraud.

Plaintiff argues that the statute of limitations cannot bar this action because his disclosure of his invention to defendant DeMayo was under an. express trust. The other defendants thereafter acquired his invention with notice of the express trust and through collusion with the trustee DeMayo, so they became trustees ex male-ficio. Therefore; since plaintiff is the beneficiary of an expresá trust the statute does not run against him, and in favor of the trustee of the express trust and the trustees ex maleficio.

However we find plaintiff manifested no intention to create a trust in disclosing his invention to DeMayo so there could be no express trust. The relationship between plaintiff and DeMayo arising from the agreement between them was analogous to that of joint adventurers engaged upon a common undertaking for joint profit. Under these circumstances the statute of limitations has barred this action.

Plaintiff states in his petition he invented in the early part of 1936 a coin operated vending machine for the self-service sale of bottled soft drinks. After inserting a coin in a slot, a person could obtain a bottle containing a soft drink from a cooling cabinet. Defendant DeMayo was connected with a cabinet company which made and sold cooling cabinets. Plaintiff set out to interest DeMayo, and through DeMayo the cabinet company with which he was connected, in the manufacture and sale or other disposition of a vending machine embodying his invention.

Plaintiff, disclosed his invention to DeMayo in confidence under an oral contract for the purpose of having DeMayo use it in manufacturing vending machines. They also orally agreed since DeMayo had already advanced money to finance the manufacture and marketing of the invention, and would continue to do so, that he should be first reimbursed from the proceeds of the sales for the monies so advanced. After he had been reimbursed the net proceeds were to be shared equally between him and plaintiff. By the oral agreement DeMayo promised not to dispose of the invention or any interest in it without plaintiff’s consent.

Plaintiff then charges, that defendants fraudulently conspired to deprive plaintiff [394] of his invention by having DeMayo obtain a patent in his own name on plaintiff’s invention although they knew DeMayo held the invention in trust, and by obtaining an assignment of the patent DeMayo procured. All of this scheming was concealed from plaintiff. Plaintiff says he made persistent inquiries of DeMayo about the use of his invention but he did not learn these facts until September 1946. But plaintiff’s petition is self-contradictory. He alleges he discovered a vending machine embodying his invention *135 in public nse in the spring of 1940. He learned such machines were distributed'by defendant Yendo Company so he wrote the company advising them he was the inventor, and threatening immediate suit. He received a reply to his letter from the Yendo Company dated April 11, 1940, exactly as follows: “Dear Mr. Warwick:

“We are in receipt of your letter of April 2 in which you are making claim for some part of the purchase money which we paid to Mr. DeMayo. You further state you were the inventor for Mr. DeMayo.
“Of course, you realize we never had any negotiations with you and all our negotiations were with Mr. DeMayo for the reason that the records in the patent office in Washington showed that Mr. De-Mayo was the 'inventor of the machine which we subsequently purchased.
“We are convinced there must be some misunderstanding between you and Mr. DeMayo as all of our negotiations with him have been strictly in accord with representations made by him and if you have any claim we are confident if you properly present it to Mr. DeMayo that your interest will be well protected.
THE YENDO COMPANY
By D. F. Pierson, President.”

Plaintiff thereupon got in touch with DeMayo who in furtherance of the conspiracy informed him that he had a contract with the Vendo Company that fully protected plaintiff’s rights to the invention. DeMayo also replied there had been no profits but that in due time an accounting would be made. Plaintiff claims the Vendo Company’s letter and DeMayo’s statements lulled him into taking no action at that time even though, as we see it, DeMayo had broken his agreement in secretly obtaining a patent in his own name and then selling it.

This suit based on fraud was filed May 16, 1947, or some seven years after plaintiff received the letter from the Yendo Company informing him that DeMayo has obtained a patent on plaintiff’s invention afid that the Vendo Company had bought it. The letter clearly revealed to plaintiff DeMayo’s breach of faith.

Ordinarily the five year statute of limitations wo'uld have commenced to run upon the receipt of such information as contained in the letter which informed plaintiff of the breach of faith. Section 1014 R. S. 1939 provides a five year limitation on such an action as this with the customary saving clause that in an action for relief on the ground of fraud, the cause of action is deemed not to have accrued until the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud.

To avoid the application of this statute plaintiff argues that he created an express trust with DeMayo as trustee when he dis *136 closed his invention to DeMayo. Therefore he is protected by the rule that the statute of limitations does not, run against- an express continuing trust, in favor of the trustee and against the beneficiary, so long as there has been no denial or repudiation of the trust.

To show that plaintiff created an express trust in disclosing his invention to DeMayo, plaintiff makes this allegation.

“lie 'disclosed in strict confidence his aforesaid invention to Frank DeMayo, Jr., upon a mutual and express oral understanding that he, said Frank DeMayo, Jr., would use in strict confidence his aforesaid invention, as well as the information which he had gained as a result of the aforesaid disclosure for the purpose of manufacturing and selling, protecting plaintiff’s rights therein, or otherwise disposing of the same.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
213 S.W.2d 392, 358 Mo. 130, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warwick-v-demayo-mo-1948.