Plaintiff, inventor of a “metal toe protector” for which application for letters patent had been made, brought this action for declaratory relief to determine the rights of plaintiff and defendants under an agreement by which the latter had been manufacturing the article for plaintiff. Injunctive relief also was asked to prevent defendants from further making or selling the device. Judgment went for plaintiff and defendants appeal on questions of law alone. Although appellants cite eleven different respects in which they claim the trial court erred in its decision, the questions involved may be discussed under a very few headings.
It is not necessary, as contended by appellants, that this action, affecting as it does an article for which patent application was pending, should be brought in the federal courts. Exclusive jurisdiction of suits arising under patent laws is committed to the federal courts, but the action before us does not in any sense involve any question arising under the patent laws or any infringement of a patent. It is simply a controversy to prevent appellants from wrongfully using to their own advantage and to respondent’s detriment information and ideas which they had received from the latter while manufacturing the metal toe protectors for him. Such an action, to prevent appellants from using information acquired through their confidential business arrangement with respondent, was properly brought in the superior court, which
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is clothed with jurisdiction in such a case.
(Harlow
v.
Feder,
Not only did the state court have jurisdiction to hear and determine this controversy for the protection of respondent’s trade secrets, but the complaint stated facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, setting forth the parties, their relationship, the nature of the rights involved, a statement of the wrong threatened and other appropriate allegations to bring the controversy fully before the court. There is therefore no merit in appellants’ points as to the insufficiency of the complaint and improper statement of causes of action.
As stated in
Morrison
v.
Woodbury,
Judgment affirmed.
Wood, J., and Grail, P. J., concurred.
