11 F. Cas. 348 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York | 1879
This suit is brought on letters patent [No. 51,310], granted to Palmer Hamilton, December 5th, 1865, for “improvements in saw mills.” The bill alleges infringement by the defendants by making, constructing, using and vending to others to be used, machines containing the patented invention. Palmer Hamilton, by an instrument in writing executed August 1st, 1866, conveyed to Milton A. Hamilton and to his legal representatives all the right, title and interest which he, the said Palmer Hamilton, had in the patented invention “as it was, or might be, applied to muley or single upright mill saws.” This instrument was recorded in the patent office August 27th, 1866.
' By an instrument in writing executed August 27th, 1S66, and recorded in the patent office October 15th, 1866, and which recited the said conveyance from Palmer Hamilton to Milton A. Hamilton as being one of all the right, title and interest of ralmer Hamilton in and to the invention as it is or may be applied to muley or single upright mill saws, Milton A. Hamilton conveyed to Clinton A. Lombard and John Thompson, as copartners, under the name and style of Lombard & Thompson, “and to their legal representatives, the full and exclusive right to use and to sell to be used the said saw hangings” (the invention patented being stated in said conveyance to be known as “Hamilton’s oscillating and reciprocating saw hangings”), “as they are or may be applied to muley or single upright mill saws, as secured by the said letters patent, for, to and in the state of New York, I excepting and reserving the right to manufacture the said invention for myself and legal representatives.” On the same 27th of August, 1866, and at the same time, a written agreement was executed between Milton A. Hamilton of the first part and Lombard and Thompson, as copartners under the name of Lombard & Thompson, of the second part which contained the following language; “The party of the first part, in consideration of the conditions hereinafter named, to be kept and performed by the party of the second part, hereby agrees to furnish as many sets of
Lombard & Thompson, by an instrument in writing, executed April 29th, 18GS, and recorded in the patent office August 7th, 18GS, conveyed to Robert P. Russell, Montgomery Reese and the firm of Strong & Woodbury, in equal shares of one-third each, “all the right, title and interest which we have in the said invention, as secured to us by said letters patent, for, to and in the state of New York.” Reese, by an instrument in writing executed July 18th, 1SGS. and recorded in the patent office August 7th, 18GS, conveyed to Russell and the firm of Strong & Woodbury, in equal shares of one-half each, “all the right, title and interest which I have in the said invention, as secured to me by said letters patent, for, to and in the state of New York.” Strong and Woodbury, by an instrument in writing executed December 10th. 1809, conveyed to the defendants in this suit “all our right’, title and interest therein, as secured by the letters patent and assignment before-mentioned, which consists of the right, title and interest of the said Robert P. Russell, Henry A. Strong and Edmund F. Woodbury to the right for the whole state of New York, except one-half interest held by Robert P. Russell, and the counties-of Cayuga and Franklin, previously assigned to John Busby and Sidney A. Paddock, respectively.”
The bill alleges, that Milton A. Hamilton,, by an instrument dated March 20th, 1807,. and duly recorded in the patent office, conveyed to Palmer Hamilton all his right, title and interest in and to the said patent and invention; and that the recorded conveyance from Milton A. Hamilton to Lombard and Thompson was not intended by the parties thereto to convey to Lombard and Thompson any right to manufacture said invention, and that the practical construction placed upon said instrument by the acts of said parties at the time of the execution thereof and subsequently was that the sole right to manufacture said invention remained in said Hamilton. Xt also sets forth the two unrecorded instruments of August 27th, I860, and avers that ever since the three instruments were executed the said Milton A. Hamilton and his assignee have' been at all times and now are ready and willing to furnish such saw hangings to said Iiombard and Thompson and to their assigns, and did so furnish such saw hangings to said Lombard and Thompson, and that the defendants have not applied to the said Milton A. Hamilton or to his assigns to be furnished with such saw hangings, but have assumed to manufacture the same themselves; that Palmer Hamilton, by an instrument dated April 18th. 1S73, and recorded in the patent office, assigned to the plaintiff all the right, title and interest of him, the said Palmer Hamilton, in and to said invention, and also all rights of action for infringements of said patent which had accrued to him, the said Palmer Hamilton; and that' She is the sole owner of said invention.
The defendants have filed a plea to the whole bill. It sets up the conveyance of August 1st, 18GG, from Palmer Hamilton to Milton A. Hamilton, the recorded conveyance of August 27th, 1SGG, from Milton A. Hamilton to Lombard and Thompson, the conveyance of April 29th, 1SGS, from Lombard and Thompson to Russell, Reese and Strong & Woodbury, the conveyance of July 15th, 186S, from Reese to Russell and Strong & Wood-bury, and the conveyance of December 19th,
The plaintiff put in a replication to the plea, and proofs have been taken and the case has been heard thereon. The bill above-mentioned is an amended bill. The suit was before the court on the original bill and a plea thereto, at the June term, 1878. Hamilton v. Kingsbury [Case No. 5,984].
The pleadings then brought before the court all the instruments now before it, except the two unrecorded instruments of August 27th, 1866. The question then presented for consideration was solely as to the construction of the recorded conveyance of August 27th, 1866, from Milton A. Hamilton to Lombard & Thompson. The court held, that, under and by that conveyance, Lombard & Thompson acquired the right to make, as well as the right to use and to sell to be used, “the said saw hangings, as they are or may be applied to muley or single upright mill saws, as secured by the said letters patent, for, to and in the state of New York," such right to use and to sell to be used being exclusive, but the grantor reserving to himself a right to make in common with the grantees. The plea was allowed.
On the present pleadings and the proofs thereunder it is contended for the plaintiff that, under the three instruments of August 27th, 1866, taken together, Lombard & Thompson acquired no right to make the invention, except in a certain contingency, which has never happened; that the three instruments are contemporaneous and are all portions of the same transaction, and must all be read together to determine the intent of the parties to the transaction; that those three instruments are consistent with no intention other than the one set up in the bill; that, if the recorded conveyance of August 27th, 1866, gives to Lombard & Thompson the right to manufacture, the other two instruments have no meaning; and that the instruments are (1) a license, which, in terms, gives the licensees no power to manufacture; (2) an agreement, by which the licensor agrees to furnish the hangings to the licensees at fixed prices, and the licensees agree that they will not manufacture so long as the licensor keeps his agreement; (3) a permission from the licensor to the licensees to manufacture, in case the licensor fails to perform his agreement.
It seems plain that the three instruments, taken together, must have the interpretation claimed for them by the plaintiff. But, the defendants contend that they are bona fide purchasers, without notice of any instrument but the recorded conveyance of August 27th, 1866, and that they are protected from any unrecorded agreement between Milton A. Hamilton and Lombard & Thompson, in the absence of any actual notice thereof.
The plea is overruled, with costs to the plaintiff to be taxed, with leave to the defendants to answer, on payment of such costs, within 30 days after service of a copy of the order to be entered on this decision.
[A petition for rehearing was denied. 4 Fed. 42S. For other cases involving this patent, see note to Hamilton v. Ives, Case No. 5,982.]