36 A.D. 510 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
This action is brought to recover upon a promissory note for the sum of $17,500 and interest, executed by the defendant the Nassau Electric Railroad Company and. indorsed by the defendant Tóm L.
The defense interposed by the answer sets up a lack of consideration moving from any party to either defendant. It appeared upon the trial that prior to the execution and delivery of the note there was a suit pending in the United States Circuit Court in which the Thomson-Houston Electric Company was. plaintiff and the defendant railroad company and its officers were defendants. That action was brought for the purpose of procuring an injunction, and also for an accounting for the infringement of certain claims numbered 6, 7, 8, 12 and 16 of United States letters patent No.-495,443. In that action a preliminary injunction had been granted restraining the defendant railroad company from infringing the said claims’ secured to the plaintiff' therein by its letters patent, which covered certain street railroad car equipments. Subsequent to the entry of this injunction order- an agreement of settlement was made by and between the General Electric Company and the Thomson-Houston Company, parties of the first part, and the defendant railroad company, party of the second part, of the matters in dispute in said -action. This agreement, inter alia, recited that the defendant railroad company, by the use of certain electric street car equipments, Was infringing the said above-mentioned letters patent, then owned by the said Thomson-Houston Company ■ and in consideration of the sum of $20,000, to be paid by the said defendant railroad company to the plaintiff in this action, it granted to said railroad company a license to use the said equipments it then had, and also such others as it should thereafter- procure; and it further recited : “And the licensee (railroad company) is hereby released from all claim or claims for damages for the infringement of said patent by the purchase and use of said car equipments.”
The plaintiff herein also agreed that it would at all times promptly furnish, upon certain terms, any trolley equipment that might be required by the defendant railroad company ; and it was further agreed that the plaintiff in the said action pending in the United States Circuit Court should take a permanent decree of injunction
We are of opinion that the claim of failure of consideration cannot be upheld. It is to be borne in mind that when the $20,000' note was given the letters patent were of apparent force and validity, and by the agreement the plaintiff recognized the same. It is not pretended but that at this time both parties acted in perfect good faith and with a full understanding of the situation. There was no misrepresentation or fraud upon the part of the plaintiff or the Thomson-Houston Company which induced the defendants to execute the agreement of settlement and to make and deliver the promissory note in pursuance of its terms. The case is, therefore, clearly one of the settlement of a suit and a compromise of the claim upon which it was founded. In the absence of fraud and misrepresentation such compromise furnishes a good consideration to support a payment or promise to pay thereunder; and in the absence of fraud or misrepresentation, of which no claim is made in this case, such settlement is legally binding upon all the parties thereto. It matters not that it is made to apjjear thereafter that the claims upon which the suit in which the compromise was made was founded were without validity, as otherwise there could never be a secure settlement of a contested claim, which it is the policy of the law to
It might be added that there was a consideration moving from the plaintiff to the defendants in the agreement, for therein it agreed to promptly supply any trolleys which the defendant railroad company might require.
This necessarily disposes, in favor of the plaintiff, of all the questions presented by this record.
The case of Marston v. Swett (82 N. Y. 526) in nowise affects the question upon which the plaintiff’s right to recover rests. It is true that by virtue of the agreement the defendant company became a licensee of the right, to use: the car equipments under the letters patent. But this was not all it obtained, for, as we have seen, it also relieved itself of the claim for damages which was sought to be enforced against it; and if it be assumed — a question which it is not necessary for us to decide — that the invalidity of the patent might be shown to defeat any claim arising out of the mere license to use, this would not at all destroy the plaintiff’s right to recover under well-established principles which are asserted in the authorities already cited.
It follows that the judgment should be affirmed.
All concurred, except Bartlett, J., absent.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.