Wright v. Randel

8 F. 591, 19 Blatchf. 495, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2388
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York
DecidedAugust 4, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 8 F. 591 (Wright v. Randel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Randel, 8 F. 591, 19 Blatchf. 495, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2388 (circtndny 1881).

Opinion

Blatcheord, C. J.

On the seventeenth of August, 1875, letters patent No. 166,810 we're issued to the defendant William Randel for an “improvement in button-hole attachments for sewing machines.” Ran-del, by an assignment made September 19, 1876, and recorded September 22, 1876, assigned to Oscar Smith and Benjamin H. Downer each an undivided one-third interest in said patent — ■

“Together with an undivided one-third eaeh of any improvements or new inventions that I have or may produce in button-hole attachments or buttonhole machines, and agree to assign interests as stated above, and make -application for letters patent for such improvements on machines: * * * and it is a subject of agreement by myself and the said assignees, this date, that we will neither of us sell, assign, or .set over to other paities any por[592]*592tion oí ourjnterest in said patent, reissues, or new patents in said buttonhole attachments or machines that we now have or may have, unless by the written consent of each party now owning the same.”

By an assignment made January 31,1877, and recorded February 9, 1877, and which recited that Bandel had assigned to Smith & Downer an undivided one-third interest to each in said patent, “and to any improvements or new invention in button-hole attachments or button-hole Sewing machines that the said Bandel might make or produce,” Bandel & Smith assigned to Downer “all our right, title, and interest in and to Said inventions, as secured to us by said letters patent and assignment. ” By an assignment made February 5, 1877, and recorded February 9, 1877, and which recited the contents of said two assignments, Downer assigned to one House “one undivided half of all my right, title, and interest in and to said inventions as secured to me by said letters patent and assignment, and to any improvements or new inventions in button-hole attachments or button-hole sewing machines that the said Bandel might make or produce.” By an assignment made February 19, 1877, and recorded February 22, 1877, and which recited the contents of said three assignments, Downer and House assigned to the Bandel Button-Hole Machine Company “all our right, title, and interest in and to said invention, as secured to us by the said letters patent and assignments.” By an assignment made March 7, 1878, and recorded May 31, 1878, and which recited the contents of said prior assignments, and that Lysander Wright, Jr., (the plaintiff in this suit,)—

“ Is desirous of obtaining an undivided interest in and to certain improvements and inventions in button-bole attachments made by said William Bandel previous to the nineteenth day of September, 1876, and for which a United States patent was issued, bearing date the second day of January, 1877, and numbered 192,008,”

—The said company assigned to said Wright all its right, title, interest, and claim in and to said invention, as set forth in said letters patent No. 192,0'08, and which bear daté January 2, 1877, as set forth in above-mentioned assignments.

On the second of January, 1877, Bandel filed in the patent-office ^n application for a patent for an “improvement in button-hole attachments for sewing machines.” On the twenty-eighth of March, 1877, Bandel and the defendants John W. Cipperly, John -0. Cole, and Theodore E. Haslehurst executed an agreement whereby Bandel agreed to assign to the other three (one-third each) a one-half “interest in his invention of an attachment to a sewing machine for mak[593]*593ing button-holes, and all benefits and advantages to be derived therefrom, excepting his interest in a patent issued by the United States, and already assigned to B. H. Downer and Oscar Smith,” and, in consideration thereof, the other three agreed “to be to the expense of procuring patents in such countries as may be mutually agreed upon.” By an assignment dated May 22,1877, which recited that Bandel had invented an invention in button-hole attachments for sewing machines, an application for a patent for which was filed on or about January 15, 1877, Bandel assigned to the said Gipperly, Cole, and Haslehurst each an undivided sixth part of all his right, title, and interest in and to tho said invention as sot forth in the specification filed with the application, and requested tho commissioner of patents to issue the patent jointly to him and tho said Cip-porly, Cole, and Haslehurst. The patent was issued to the four June 12, 1877. By an assignment dated June 28, 1877, Bandel, with the consent of the other three, assigned to Joseph W. Smart all his right, title, and interest in and to said inventions, as secured by said patent No. 192,008. On the twenty-eighth of June, 1877, the said Oscar Smith executed an instrument which recited the contents of the said assignment of September 19, 1876, and assigned to said Gipperly, Cole, and Haslehurst all his right, title, and interest, of whatever nature, remaining or reserved to him in said instrument. On the seventh of July, 1877, the Bandel Button-Hole Machine Company served on Cipperly, Cole, and Haslehurst a written notice which recited the said assignments of September 19, 1876, and January 31, .1877, and that the Bandel Button-Hole Machine Company, by assignments executed by said Downer and said House, had become the sole owner of said patent No. 192,008, and of all the inventions transferred by the said assignments, and that Bandel had no right which he could assign in said patent to said Cipperly, Cole, and Haslehurst, and required them to assign to said company all their interest in said patent No. 192,008, and all the interest they had acquired since September 19, 1876, by any and all assignments from said Bandel for any patents issued to Bandel, or to him and them, as his assignees, for any button-hole attachments for sewing machines, or for any improvements in such attachments. In December, 1877, Cipperly, Cole, Haslehurst, and Smart, and one Huntington, formed a corporation under the laws of New York called “Tho Empire Button-Hole Machine Company, Limited, ” which is one of the defendants in this suit. By an assignment dated January 4, [594]*5941878, which recited the safid assignment by Eandel to Smart, the said Cipperly, Cole, Haslehurst, and Smart assigned to the said Empire Button-Hole Machine Company, Limited, all their right, title, and interest in and to said inventions, as secured to them by said patent. No. 192,008 and said assignment.

The bill in this case sets forth that the inventions afterwards patented by patent No. 192,008 were invented and reduced to practice by Eandel on or about August 16, 1876, or prior thereto; and that the said assignments by Eandel to Smith and Downer, and by Eandel and Smith to Downer, were made and recorded. But it does not state when they were recorded, nor does it base any cause of action on any notice claimed to have been given by the recording. Its cause of action is based on actual knowledge by the co-defendants, with Eandel, of the contents of the said prior assignments by him, and on want of the consideration for the assignments from Eandel under which the co-defendants with him elaim.

The bill avers that the expenses of the application for patent No.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. 591, 19 Blatchf. 495, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-randel-circtndny-1881.