30 F.2d 296 | D. Mass. | 1929
The defendant under leave reserved at the trial has moved that the verdict for the plaintiff be set aside and the alternative verdict entered for the defendant upon 'the ground that the correspondence relied upon by the plaintiff did not, as a matter of law, constitute a contract. I have given this question careful consideration with the assistance of much more thorough arguments and citation of authorities than was practicable during the progress of the trial.
The test by which the question is to be decided is well stated in Mississippi & D. Steamship Co. v. Swift, 86 Me. 248, 29 A. 1063, 41 Am. St. Rep. 545, the leading case on this subject.
“It is quite clear that, after all, the question is mainly one of intention. If the party sought to be charged intended to close a contract prior to the formal signing of a written draft, or if he signified such an intention to the other party, he will be bound by the contract actually made, though the signing of the written draft be omitted. If on the other hand, such party neither had nor signified such an intention to close the contract until it was fully expressed in a written instrument and attested by signatures, then lie will not be bound until the signatures are affixed.” Emery, J., at page 258 of 86 Me. (29 A. 1066). Quoted with approval in General Motors Corp. v. Abell, 292 P. 922, at page 929 (C. C. A. 1), and again in Barber-Colman Co. v. Magnano Corp., 299 F. 401, at page 404 (C. C. A. 1).
The material correspondence between the present parties begins with the letter from the plaintiff .to the defendant, dated December 10, 1926. It refers to “tfie details of the arrangement arrived at this afternoon,” and explicitly says that the agreement is “understood to be subject to the approval of the board of directors of Smith & Wesson and also tlie board of directors of Gilbert’s Patents, Ltd.”; and further is “subject to the examination and approval of the present patent papers by you or your attorney.” After a conference between the parties, the defendant wrote to the plaintiff, under date of December 13, a formal offer covering- the most
“1. Contract to be approved by their (plaintiff’s) solicitors.
“2. Contract to be entered into on allowance of patent or my return to America and your approval of application -papers covering- patent, whichever is the earlier period.
“3. Contract to eover life of patent.”
“As all of these points have either been inferíed or agteed to, I consider it a completo acceptance and will have a contract drawn up by the solicitors in London on my return there, which I will bring- back or send back for your examination and approval together with ‘Power of Attorney’ to examine the patent.”
Under the same date the defendant answered this letter, “It is further understood that the imoposed contract is to be:
“1. Approved by the solicitors of Gilbert’s Patents, Ltd.,, and of Smith & Wesson, Inc.
“2. Contract to be entered into upon allowance of patents or Mr. Gilbert’s return to America and Smith & Wesson’s approval of application papéis covering patent, whichever is the earlier period.
“3. Contract to eover life of patent.”
The advance royalty of $50,000 for the first year was to be paid by Smith & Wesson “after the signing of tho agreement” (Smith & Wesson letter of December 13). The minimum royalties thereafter were to be $100,-000 per year for the life of the patent. The draft contract finally submitted by the plaintiff to the defendant, execution of which was refused by the defendant, covers nearly eight pages of typewriting, and contains eighteen clauses, many of them of considerable length.
Tho correspondence shows that both parties understood that there might be considerable delay before the patents were finally issued. In substance, the plaintiff expressed to the defendant in one of the letters its understanding that the manufacturo and introduction of tho plaintiff’s wheel was to begin at once and not to wait the issue of the patents. The defendant’s silence on the point, under the circumstances surrounding it, might fairly bo construed as indicating an acceptance of that point of view.
The question is whether upon these facts, supplemented by the details which appear in the correspondence and tho circumstances surrounding it, the defendant indicated an intention to hind itself in advance of the execution of a formal contract; it seems to me extremely close and doubtful. The observation of Mr. Justice Emery, “Still, with the aid of all rules and suggestions, the solution of the question is often difficult, doubtful, and sometimes unsatisfactory” (Mississippi & D. Steamship Co. v. Swift, 86 Me. 259 [29 A. 1067]), is very applicable to this ease. From the nature of the issue, decisions in other eases are not decisive here. They do, however, indicate a disposition not to hold a party bound by negotiations which avowedly contemplate a formal installment, unless the intention to he hound in advance of the formal contract is fairly evident. .This principle has been applied in several eases dealing with patents. Barber-Colman Co. v. Magnano Corp., supra; Ben-Wat Corp. v. D. Lupton’s Sons Co., 13 F. (2d) at page 390 (C. C. A. 3); Hilditch v. American Bumper Corp. (D. C.) 15 F.(2d) at page 451. “‘A license agreement * * * is a rather complicated contract.’ * * * It belongs to that class of contracts which are usually found to be in writing; its nature is such as to need a formal writing for its full expression; it has many details, and usually, as in this ease, covers the life of the patent, and the amount hero involved is large.” Bingham, J., Barber-Col-man Co. v. Magnano Corp., supra, at page 404 of 299 F.
In the present ease the agreement toward which the parties wore working involved patents in many different countries, with perhaps different expiring dates; it was to run 17 years from the issue of the United States patents; it called for minimum royalties exceeding $1,500,000. That the correspondence settled the principal terms cannot ho denied. But it left unsettled many points which, if not principal ones, were nevertheless of much practical importance. The correspondence as it stands, supplemented by all reasonable implications from it, would by no means make a complete working agreement on the subject-matter about which the parties were negotiating. While the defendant did not oh-
As to the motion to set aside the finding on damages: The plaintiff contends that on the clear facts the damages awarded were plainly insufficient. Damages are a matter on which, from the nature of the question, wide latitude must be allowed to the jury. While unquestionably the evidence would have warranted a much larger verdict for the plaintiff, I am not prepared to say that on no reasonable view of the evidence can the amount found be sustained.
It follows that the defendant’s motion to set the verdict aside and enter the alternative verdict for the defendant upon the grounds stated in this memorandum must be- allowed; and that the plaintiff’s motion to set aside the finding on damages must be denied.
Ordered accordingly.