89 W. Va. 7 | W. Va. | 1921
The action of the circuit court in overruling demurrers to two special pleas of set-off, and in overruling objections of the plaintiff to the notice of recoupment filed by the defendants, and in refusing to strike the same out, has been certified to this court for review.
The case was before this court on somewhat similar questions raised by this record, and is reported as Pottery Company v. Parker, 86 W. Va. 580.
Plaintiff sued defendants on certain notes aggregating $5,-170.00 and defendants tendered two special pleas of set-off
Now defendants have tendered two more special pleas of set-off designated as special pleas No. 3 and No. 4, respectively, and also another notice of recoupment marked No. 2, both of which special pleas and the notice of recoupment No. 2 were permitted to be filed, and demurrers of the plaintiff thereto and motion to strike out overruled and refused. It is this disposition of the pleas and notice by the circuit court which is now here for review. In plea No. 1, heretofore held to be proper and directed to be filed, the defendants relied on a contract between them and plaintiff, made the 8th of October, 1915, whereby, in consideration of the defendants agreeing to permit plaintiffs to manufacture the “Wedge Knob” with the use, in the manufacture thereof, of the “Nailit Knob,” a device then “owned and controlled” by defendants, the plaintiff agreed to manufacture and sell exclusively to defendants the “Wedge Knob” at the price of $5.65 per thousand plus a stipulated price for ten penny nails and leather washers used in the manufacture; and that the plaintiff was to add to the price aforesaid 24 cents per thousand to be credited on the books of the plaintiff in reduction of indebtedness of the defendants to plaintiff; and that said agreement was to continue for 5 years, and as long thereafter as either party did not violate the provisions of the contract, and then to be cancelled at the option of the party who did not violate it. The breach averred and set-off relied upon is that plaintiff violated this contract by manufacturing and selling directly to other persons large quantities of said manufactured article, which, at the rate of 24 cents per thousand, the sum per thousand to which defendants were en
Plaintiff strenuously contends that the plea is bad and demurrer thereto should have been sustained, because, as counsel avers, this extended description of the ownership and control of the “Nailit Knob” device in fact shows that defendants did not have ownership and control thereof; and that therefore they had no right to make the use of “Nailit Knob” device the basis or consideration of the contract of October 8, 1915, and that said contract was therefore without consideration and void; in other words, that pending an application for letters patent, the applicant has no such ownership or control of the device sought to be patented as would give him the right to license or permit another to use it. It is claimed that plaintiff already had full power and right to use this device in the manufacture of'its “Wedge Knob,” pending defendants’ application for patent thereon, and that when it signed this contract, although under seal, there was no basis for its so doing, no consideration therefor. An inventor has an inchoate right of property in an invention pending his application for patent, with which he may deal as an article of property. Gayler v. Wilder, 10 Howard 477; Richardson v. Essex Machine Co., 207 Mass. 219. A license to use a device for which application for letters patent is pending may be given, and if acted upon and the device used by the licensee in the manufacture of articles in which the invention is used, it will avail to protect the licensee in the
It is alleged that the contract does not .in terms grant a license or permit the plaintiff to manufacture the assembled knob by using the “Nailit Knob”, and therefore is at variance with the plea. The contract must be considered in the light of the allegations of the plea. If there be a difference in the construction of the contract on this point, and it be necessary to construe the contract upon its introduction on the trial, presuming its true intent and meaning cannot be ascertained from the instrument itself, possibly evidence aliunde would be permitted to show the intention of the parties. That question does not properly arise here.
It is asserted that the contract is void because in restraint of trade. Without reviewing the authorities on the question of the right of a patentee to put on the market articles
The substance of the objection to plea No. 3 in relation to the allegations therein concerning the application and issuance of the Fargo patent, and the purchase by J. M. Parker and Son, incorporated, of the exclusive right and license to make, use and sell devices embodying the invention throughout the states and territories of the United States, is that the plaintiff is not protected thereby in the manufacture of the particular article set out in the contract. The plea in substance alleges that defendants have caused the purchase of the Fargo invention with the express intention and purpose of protecting the right given by them to plaintiff in the contract for the manufacture of the two piece assembled knob, and to fully protect that contract and all the rights of the plaintiff thereunder, and that by virtue of an understanding and agreement with J. M. Parker and Son, incorporated, a corporation owned and controlled by defendants, they have fully assured and conserved to plaintiff the integrity of the contract. Whether or not this can be supported by the evidence is a question for jury determination. It does not render the plea bad on demurrer.
Plea No. 4 is similar to plea No. 3, and is objected to for the same reasons urged against plea No. 3. The only material difference is that it alleges an additional sum of $5,000.00 accruing to defendants by virtue of the breach between time of the institution of the suit and the 8th day of October, 1920, the time of the expiration of the contract. We can see no objection to this plea because it covers a period of the breach possibly not covered by pleas Nos. 1 or 3.
Notice of recoupment No. 2 is the same as notice of recoup
Another objection is that the notice of recoupment alleges no time in which the contract would run, no date for its termination, and therefore plaintiff could terminate the agreement at any time, and that it did on March 14, 1916, after
No objection is urged by counsel for plaintiff against tbe new matter set out in notice of recoupment No. 2 relating to tbe termination of defendants’ established trade in the porcelain products manufactured by plaintiff, by reason of the breach of tbe alleged agreement by plaintiff; and it will not be considered and passed upon.
We affirm the action of tbe circuit court in permitting special pleas of set-off Nos. 3 and 4, and notice of recoupment No. 2 to be filed, and in overruling the demurrers to said pleas, and in refusing to strike out the notice of recoupment No. 2.
Affirmed.