58 Ind. 187 | Ind. | 1877
This was an action by the appellant, against the appellees.
Demurrer to the complaint for want of sufficient facts sustained, and exception. Final judgment for the defendants.
The complaint, consisting of one paragraph, counted upon five several promissory notes, executed by the defendants to the plaintiff. No objection was made, however, on the ground of duplicity.
The complaint alleged, in addition to the proper averments as to the execution and non-payment of the notes, which had matured before the bringing of the action, the following facts, viz.:
“And the plaintiff. further alleges, that she is a foreign corporation, duly organized under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Ohio, and that she is the assignee and sole owner of two separate patents granted to one William O. Mack, by the United States of America, respectively on the 19th day of May, 1863, numbered 38,592, and on the 31st day of January, 1871, numbered 41,359, for new and useful improvements in sewing machines, invented by said William O Mack, and by him assigned in writing to this plaintiff, and that she had said assignments at once recorded in the patent office at Washington, D. C.; that, under and by virtue of said patents, she has been manufacturing the domestic sewing machine, using said new and useful improvements in the manufacture thereof, and, desiring to vend the same in the State of Indiana, she employed the defendants as her agents to vend and sell the said machines in’ said State; that, in pursuance of said agency, the defendants sold a large number of her said sewing machines, and received from the purchasers of such' machines prom
The 1st and 2d sections of the act of the Legislature referred to in the complaint (1 R. S. 1876, p. 373,) provide, in substance, that the agents of foreign coi’porations, before entering upon the duties of their agency, shall file in the clerk’s office of the county where they purpose doing business, the power of attorney, etc., or other authority, by virtue of which they act as agents; and also that they shall procure from the corporations and file with the clerk an authenticated order, resolution, etc., authorizing citizens or residents of this State, having a claim or demand against such corporation, arising
The 4th section of the act provides, that “ Such foreign corporations shall not enforce in any courts of this Stat'1, any contracts made by their agents or persons assuming to act as their agents, before a compliance by such agents, or persons acting as such, with the provisions of sections one and two of this act.” '
In the case of The Walter A. Wood Mowing, etc., Machine Co. v. Caldwell, 54 Ind. 270, it was held, upon full consideration and an examination of the authorities, that section 4, above quoted, does not 'make contracts void where sections 1 and 2 have not been complied with, but prohibits any enforcement of them,*or suspends any remedy upon them, until the requirements of the two sections have been complied with. But, as the statute was not complied with, the plaintiff had no present right of action upon the notes sued on, and the demurrer was correctly sustained, unless, in view of the facts stated, the statute is to be held inapplicable to the case.
In the case of The Grover & Baker Sewing Machine Co. v. Butler, 53 Ind. 454, the corporation, a foreign one, was the owner of a patent right, and manufactured patented sewing machines, and, not having complied with the statute, sold a machine, by its agent, to Butler, for which he gave the company his note, upon which the action was brought. It was held, in view of the constitution and laws of the United States on the subject of patent-rights, that the plaintiff could recover, although the statute had not been complied with. It was said by Howk, J., in delivering the opinion of the court: “ Where a foreign corporation is the owner, either as patentee or assignee, of letters patent issued by the United States,
But a foreign corporation, though the owner of a patent right and the manufacturer and vender of a patented article, may have transactions in this State not connected with the manufacture, use or sale of the patented article; and in such case the law is as applicable to them as to any other foreign corporations.
Such was the ease here. The facts in relation to the consideration of the notes sued upon, as stated in the complaint, are these:
The defendants had certain notes in their hands belonging to the plaintiff, and it was agreed that the defendants should retain those notes, and execute their own notes to the plaintiff. In short, the consideration of the notes sued on was the sale by the plaintiff to the defendants of certain notes belonging to the plaintiff, then in the hands of the defendants. This transaction had nothing to do with the manufacture, use or sale of any patented article; and the notes sued upon can not be enforced until the plaintiff shall have complied with the requirements of the statute above cited.
The demurrer was properly sustained.
The judgment below is affirmed, with costs.