49 N.J. Eq. 92 | New York Court of Chancery | 1891
The question presented for decision in this case is, whether or not the complainant is entitled to an injunction restraining the defendant from making sale or any other disposition of two letters patent granted to him by the government of the United States. The complainant claims that the patents in question are its property in equity, and that, although they were issued to the defendant, still, in point of equity, he simply holds their legal title in trust for it, and that, therefore, he should be enjoined from making any use of them, for his own benefit, until this suit shall have been finally decided. It is not denied or disputed that the patents were issued for inventions which the defendant had made or discovered, but the complainant says that the ¡patents are its property, because when the inventions were made
The circumstances which led the complainant to- make the-contract are described in the bill as follows: prior to the time-when the contract was made the complainant had been engaged in trying to construct a gas motor for the propulsion of street cars; it had so far completed its motor that it had been used, for
No written agreement was drawn, but it was distinctly understood that he [the defendant] was to give us the benefit of his whole time, skill, knowledge and ability in improving and perfecting our motor, and it was our distinct understanding that, as the consideration for giving him a larger salary than he demanded, we should secure, with respect to our motor, all the fruits of his skill and inventive ability as applied to it under our supervision; that the sole work in which he was to be engaged was the perfection of our motor, in the development of improvements therein and the elimination of the faults discovered in former practice; * * * it was understood that the defendant should give his undivided attention and time to that single duty.”
Mr. Connelly further says that he and his brother, John S. Connelly, after such contract of employment had been made, pointed out to the defendant faults or defects in the complainant’s motor which experiments had disclosed, and also confided to him all they knew about the motor, and their designs respecting the same, for the purpose of placing him in a position where he could use his skill and inventive ability, in perfecting the motor, to the best advantage.
That part of Mr. Connelly’s affidavit in which he says that the contract limited the defendant’s employment to the special service of making improvements in the motor and eliminating faults — that it was understood he should give his undivided at
This summary of the affidavits in the case shows that every-fact which the complainant has put forward as the foundation of the right which it asks to have protected is denied, and that, too,, in a manner so thorough and positive as almost to force the*mind to believe that the terms of the - contract, as set forth in the affidavit of Thomas E. Connelly, is his understanding or construction of them, rather than those which the words used by the persons making the contract would show had been agreed upon. The form of the affidavit, in this respect, is subject to the 'most-serious objection. Unless the contract, according to the meaning
The complainant’s application must be denied, with costs.