296 F. 652 | 5th Cir. | 1924
This suit was brought by the appellee against the appellant in a Florida state court in March, 1922. The parties are herein referred to' as plaintiff and defendant, respectively. The declaration contained seven counts, each claiming the sum of $11,-
For several years prior to January, 1908, plaintiff was employed by defendant as an electrical and mechanical engineer, defendant being engaged in the manufacture of certain automobiles, commonly known as Ford automobiles. On January 5, 1908, plaintiff agreed with defendant to invent a magneto for defendant that would work on the flywheel of an automobile, for and in consideration of defendant agree-, ing that upon the inventing by the plaintiff of such a magneto defendant would pay plaintiff a reasonable amount as a royalty on each of the magnetos so invented and used by the defendant in the construction and manufacture of such automobiles. Plaintiff thereafter invented such a magneto, and on March 2, 1908, made application to the United States Patent Office for a patent for said invention. In pursuance of that application a patent, No. 1,066,729, was issued on July 8, 1913, to defendant as assignee of plaintiff. Pursuant to the same agreement plaintiff invented a new and useful improvement in flywheel magnetos, for a patent for which appliction was made on April 27, 1908. On that application a patent, No. 1,098,361, was issued on May 26, 1914, to defendant as assignee of plaintiff. Defendant accepted the two inventions mentioned, and did use and cause to be used and is now using and causing to be used the magneto and improvement in flywheel magnetos, so invented in the manufacture of automobiles known as model T Ford automobiles, of tractors known as Fordson tractors, and of trucks known as Ford trucks. Defendant has refused to keep and perform said agreement on his part, though repeatedly requested to do so, except that defendant did pay to plaintiff the sum of $10,000, which was agreed to be paid upon the manufacturing and using by defendant of the first 20,000 magnetos and improvements thereto which had been invented by plaintiff. A reasonable royalty for the use of said inventions is $2.50 upon each magneto and improvement thereto. After the removal of the suit to the court below, and before the issues had been settled, the defendant moved the court for leave to withdraw the pleas theretofore filed, and to file in the cause an equitable plea, which is set out at length in the opinion rendered by the District Judge. Huff v. Ford, 289 Fed. 858. Defendant’s mbtion for leave to file that plea was overruled and denied, the court adjudging that that plea does not contain any equitable defense. The defendant 'complains of that action of the court.
It was permissible to allow a proper amendment of the pleadings at the time leave to file the plea mentioned was sought. R. S. § 954 (Comp. St. § 1591); Judicial Code, § 274a (Comp. St. § 1251a). A result of the denial of leave to file the plea on the ground that it does not contain any equitable defense was that thereafter it was not subject to be amended by making its allegations more definite or certain, if it was desired so to amend it, as the rejection of the plea put it out of the case.
That plea contained averments to the following effect:
The plaintiff’s alleged causes of action set forth in the common counts are none other than he has attempted to set forth in the seventh count. For a long period prior to January, 1908, and at all times
Neither at the time of said final, payment nor prior thereto did plaintiff make any claim or demand whatever, either upon defendant or the Ford Motor Company, for any compensation, remuneration, or reward by way of royalty or otherwise other than the balance of the sum of $10,000 provided for by defendant as aforesaid. At the time of said final payment defendant, as well as the Ford Motor Company, understood that all obligations of defendant to plaintiff in respect to compensation and remuneration were completely satisfied and discharged, and plaintiff did not then or theretofore claim to the contraer. During the period from 1908 to the date of said final payment plaintiff resided in Detroit and was employed by the Ford Motor Company in performing various services assigned to him in or about the development and production of model T Ford cars, in which were installed said flywheel magnetos. Plaintiff well knew when the Ford Motor Company began using said magnetos in model T Ford cars and/or engines in the fall of 1908, that during said period the Ford Motor Company was manufacturing and using said magnetos by permission of the defendant in
During the entire period from 1908 to the present time defendant has permittedrihe Ford Motor Company to manufacture and use said magnetos without demanding, requesting, requiring, or expecting any compensation for such use of said magnetos by way of royalty or otherwise. During that period the Ford Motor Company has manufactured and used a large number of said magnetos, and has regular^ paid dividends in which defendant has shared pro rata with other stockholders. If plaintiff’s claim or any part thereof were now allowed, and judgment therefor awarded against defendant, the amount of such judgment would be a total loss to the defendant, with no means or right to recoup or recover any part thereof against or from the Ford Motor Company or from others who were then stockholders of said company, whose stock defendant during the year 1919 purchased without knowledge of plaintiff’s claim, a part of that stojck so purchased being afterwards transferred by defendant to other persons, who likewise had no knowledge of plaintiff’s claim. Had plaintiff seasonably apprised defendant by suit dr otherwise of the claim made by this suit defendant could^and would have defended the same, and shown it to be groundless, and would have seasonably made such contract with the Ford Motor Company for the use of said magnetos as would have provided for indemnity against plaintiff’s alleged clamp or would have caused the substitution and use by the Ford Motor Company of some other ignition device, or wo'uld otherwise have protected himself from loss which would now result from the recovery by plaintiff in the suit of a judgment for any sum whatever. A large number of persons who were employed by defendant and/or by the Ford Motor Company during the period when the transaction out of which plaintiff’s alleged claim arises, and who were familiar with material parts of that transaction, have now passed out of such employ and are not available as witnesses in defendant’s behalf. The recollections of others who knew of said transaction, through lapse of time, have grown dim and indistinct. Material documents and data have been lost or mislaid. In many divers ways defendant is hampered and embarrassed in now making his defense against plaintiff’s alleged claim, although such defense could have readily and effectively been made at any seasonable time subsequent to January, 1908.
The averments of the plea disclose the circumstances under which plaintiff rendered the service alleged in his declaration. They show
It would not be consistent with equity and good conscience for plaintiff to enforce the claim asserted by this suit after he, with knowledge of the facts and under conditions inviting the assertion of that claim if it was relied on, acquiesced in defendant treating that claim as nonexistent; after he demanded and accepted payment of the balance of the reward mentioned as a final settlement of all claims based on the services rendered, and theretofore and thereafter for many years refrained from making the claim now asserted, while defendant,' in reliance on the belief and understanding, indujced by plaintiff’s conduct, that such claim never, existed or had been abandoned, was changing his position in such a way that he will be injured if plaintiff now "is permitted to enforce his claim. .Under equitable principles applicable to the state of facts alleged in the plea plaintiff has, by estoppel and laches, lost the right to enforce the claim asserted by him. Simmons v. Burlington, etc., R. Co., 159 U. S. 278, 291, 16 Sup. Ct. 1, 40 L. Ed. 150; Washington v. Opie, 145 U. S. 214, 12 Sup. Ct. 822; Ward v. Sherman, 192 U. S. 168, 176, 24 Sup. Ct. 227, 48 L. Ed. 391; Moran v. Horsky, 178 U. S. 205, 20 Sup. Ct. 856, 44 L. Ed. 1038; 10 R. C. L. 694. The effect of one being estopped to enforce a claim is that his plight is substantially the same as it would have been if the claim had never existed.
We conclude that the averments of the plea in question showed the existence of an equitable defense to the suit brought by plaintiff, and that the court erred in the above-mentioned ruling. This conclusion dispenses with the necessity of considering features of the plea which have not been specifically referred to.
Because of the above-mentioned error the judgment or decree appealed from is reversed, (