38 F. 597 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1889
The defendant Dalzell and the Fahys Watch-Case Company having filed a bill against the complainant for infringement of two patents granted to Dalzell for inventions in apparatus for manufacturing cores for watch-crowns, the complainant interposed a plea averring in substance that prior to the making application for the patents it was agreed between Dalzell and the complainant that the inventions should be the property of the complainant, and be patented for its benefit. Thereafter the complainant filed this bill against Dalzell and the Fahys Watch-Case Company, the exclusive licensee under the patents, to compela conveyance of the patents to it, together with three other patents subsequently granted to Dalzell for other improvements in apparatus for making parts of watch-cases. The case presents the issue of fact whether such an agreement was made between Dalzell and the complainant, and, if it was
The question whether such an agreement was made between Dalzell and the complainant depends wholly upon oral testimony, and primarily upon that of Mr. Dueber, the president and principal stockholder of the complainant, on the one side, and Mr. Dalzell upon the other. Dueber testifies that in the spring of 1885 Dalzell suggested the advisability of patenting the inventions for the benefit of .the complainant, stating that if the company would pay the expense of getting the patents he would not want anything for himself. Dalzell testifies that he suggested to Dueber that his inventions were worthy of patents, and he was’going to patent them, hut that he could not spare the money for doing so at that time; whereupon Dueber, in substance, told him to go on, that he could have what money he wanted, and should be protected as though he had used his own money to obtain the patents. The theories of the respective parties are such that one or the other of these statements must be accepted as substantially true, and there is no middle ground upon which the testimony of these two witnesses can 'be reconciled with a different contract. Either there was a distinct understanding that the patents were to be obtained exclusively for the benefit of the Dueber Company, or there was one that they were to be obtained exclusively for the benefit of Mr. Dalzell.
In the endeavor to arrive at the truth the record has been thoroughly studied, and it would seem to be quite- useless to discuss the testimony of the various witnesses, in detail. Not only the main issue, but all the collateral issues, and the leading facts which bear upon them, are involved in a sharp conflict of testimony. The conclusion is reached that the version of Mr. Dueber is the true one. The more rational version of the facts is that the inventions were made by Dalzell while he -was in the employ of the Dueber Company, after he had been working for several months upon them as a tool-maker, pursuant to the instructions of the company, and at its expense, in the effort to perfect what its mechanical superintendent had begun, but had laid aside for a more convenient time. It must be assumed that until Dalzell had perfected the dies and forces for making watch cores they had not previously been used for that purpose. Nevertheless, the use of such devices for analogous purposes was so well known as to be a matter of judicial notice; and it is not unreasonable to suppose that an intelligent mechanic like Dalzell, skilled in the particular calling, who was directed to experiment - with that specific end in view, supplied with the necessary appliances, and given several "months in which to do it, would succeed, as he did, in adapting dies and forces to the new occasion in which they were to be employed. Dalzell accomplished what he was expected to accomplish, and what he was paid to do. By this it is not meant to suggest that what he did was not invention, but it is of some significance in explaining why, when Dalzell suggested patenting the inventions, he did not •make any claim for compensation; why the company, although willing to incur .the expense of obtaining patents, did not expect to pay him
The circumstance has not been overlooked that the terms of the agreement, as alleged in the bill, depart somewhat from those alleged in the plea of the complainant to the bill of Dalzell and the Fahys Watch-Case Company; nor have the evasive answers been overlooked of Dueber himself to some of the questions which were propounded to him. These matters, as well as the testimony of the many witnesses for the defendants tending to corroborate Dalzell’s version of the facts, have been duly Considered. The case is one in which different minds may well'reach a contrary opinion of the merits. Nevertheless, the impression originally
When the Fahys Watch-Case Company 'employed Dalzell, and acquired a license under the patents, its officers knew that the inventions were in use at the factory of the complainant, and that Dalzell had made the apparatus there for making the crown cores while an employé of the complainant. Its officers entertained the negotiations with Dalzell at a time when they supposed he was still an employé of the Dueber Company. They made no inquiries of the Dueber Company, nor even of Dalzell himself, to ascertain whether the complainant had or claimed to have any right to use the inventions. Under these circumstances, upon the authority of Prime v. Manufacturing Co., 16 Blatchf. 453, (decided in this circuit-,) the Fahys Watch-Case Company is chargeable with constructive notice of the complainant’s rights, and must be held responsible to the extent of the knowledge which its officers might have obtained by making inquiry. A decree is ordered for the complainant.