Holmes v. Bloomingdale

76 N.Y.S. 182 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902

CHASE, J.

On the i6th day of September, 1898, plaintiff entered •into a written agreement with the defendants by which he agreed to apply to the United States patent office for a patent on his improved barrel cover, and that, when said patent should be obtained, he would assign and transfer it to the defendants. The defendants agreed to pay the costs and expenses of procuring the patent, and also to transfer to the plaintiff, when said patent should be obtained and duly assigned to them, certain real estate in the county of Warren. It was further agreed that, in case the patent office should fail to grant to the plaintiff letters patent upon his invention, then the agreement to’ convey should be of no force or effect. Defendants employed patent attorneys in New York City, and requested plaintiff to have said attorneys procure the .patent for him, and they agreed to pay all expenses. Plaintiff, through such attorneys, made application for letters patent for his claimed invention, stating, in five separately numbered paragraphs, what he claimed as new, and for which he desired to secure letters patent. Thereafter the claim was rejected, with a statement that ■claims 1 to 3, inclusive, were rejected as defining nothing patentable over patent No. 548,199, dated October 22, 1895,.granted to one Hubbard, and patent No. 600,574, dated March 15, 1898, granted to one Coy, and that claims 4 and 5 were rejected for reasons stated, which include the prior issue of the Hubbard and Coy patents, and two other patents mentioned. The attorneys in New York were then discharged "by the plaintiff, and he employed a patent attorney in Washington, through whom he canceled the five claims for which he had stated that he desired to secure letters patent, and inserted three other claims, separately numbered. The claim so filed was rejected on the ground that the applicant had done nothing more than to aggregate the features shown in other patents specifically mentioned by the department. Subsequently the claim so last filed was reconsidered and allowed, and a patent issued to the plaintiff, numbered 634,729, dated the 10th day of October, 1899. On the 25th day of October, 1899, jplaintiff tendered to' the defendants an assignment of said patent of *184October io, 1899, and demanded a deed of the property described in the contract. The defendants refused to give a deed of the property, and this action was brought to compel specific performance of the contract by the defendants.

Plaintiff, on the trial in this action, in describing his invention, says:

“My Invention is in the manner in which it is fastened to the barrel, by swinging that lever around. It is locked and held in position so that they can roll the barrel around in any shape they have a mind to. Another feature is the removing of this cover,—this show case. It can be taken off, and the cover still remain a cover for any barrel, or whatever they want to use it for.”

The defendants claim that the representations made to them by the plaintiff prior to the execution of the contract were untrue, and amounted to a fraud upon them, and that the contract is, in consequence thereof, void, and that it will be inequitable to' require them to perform the conditions of the contract. One of the defendants testified:

“I went up there with my brother. Both of us looked at the cover. We thought well of it, and asked Mr. Holmes if he had ever looked up the records on barrel covers. He said, ‘Yes,’ he had, and there was nothing like it; it was entirely new.”

The defendants then asked the plaintiff to gO' to their attorneys and procure a patent, and that they would pay the expense thereof. The cover for the barrel, and all the apparatus connected therewith, were sent by the plaintiff to such attorneys; and subsequently the defendants met the plaintiff at their office, and one of the defendants testified :

“They [the attorneys] had looked it over while they had it there, and they were ready to make the application. They asked if they should make a search for it, and Mr. Holmes said, ‘No.’ it wasn’t necessary; that he had looked the patents over in the patent office, pertaining to barrel covers, and that nothing had ever been patented like it. * * * Prior to entering into this contract, Mr. Hobbes called my attention to the show-case portion of this invention, with the other part. He told the advantages of it,—that it would protect the articles displayed from the dust and dirt, and exposure from the weather. * * * Prior to entering into this contract, I did not have any knowledge of the Hubbard or Ooy patent”

The other defendant testified:

“Mr. Holmes explained the merits. I thought it was a good thing. I asked him if he had ever seen anything like it, or if there was anything like it on the market. He said, ‘No,’ there wasn’t * * * I only had one interview with Mr. Holmes, and I asked him if he had ever seen anything like that, and he said he never had. Mr. Holmes said he had searched the records. He said that when I asked him. He said: ‘No; I have searched the record, and there is nothing like it It is entirely new. * * *’ It was -entirely his own invention.”

The court has found that these statements were made by the plaintiff to the defendants, and that they amounted to a fraud upon them. It is unnecessary to decide whether the plaintiff’s patent is an infringement upon the Hubbard, Coy, and other patents. It is very clear that the barrel cover and apparatus, as exhibited to the defendants prior to the execution of the contract, were not entirely new, as represented by the plaintiff. The barrel cover and attachments as shown in the Hubbard and Coy patents, although differing somewhat in detail from the barrel cover and attachments as shown in the plaintiff’s patent, *185nevertheless make an article which necessarily comes into immediate competition with it, and seriously affects its value. The plaintiff’s-statement of his invention, as hereinbefore quoted, comes far short of. his statements to the defendants at and prior to the time of the execution of the contract. We approve the conclusion of the trial court.

The plaintiff claims that the court erred in receiving in evidence-copies of the Hubbard and Coy patents, respectively. The record shows that no objection was made to the receipt of the specifications and drawings on the ground that they were incomplete or insufficiently certified. The objections relate wholly to their materiality, and to their competency so far as they call for a transaction between the plaintiff and his attorneys. There is no merit in the objections as made.. The plaintiff, in his testimony, and in the conduct of the case, repeatedly recognized the Hubbard and Coy patents, and only objected to their materiality as a defense in this action. The plaintiff also had in court a model of the Hubbard patent, which he used, when on the witness stand, in pointing out the details of the same, and the difference between such patent and the one issued to him.

The objections to testimony of conversations and communications-between the plaintiff and the patent attorneys in New York City were not well taken, for the reason that the attorneys represented the defendants as well as the plaintiff, and also for the reason that all such testimony appears in the case, not alone from the statements called out from the plaintiff, but from written statements and specifications signed" by the plaintiff, which are also in evidence; and the rulings were, in any event, harmless.

Judgment affirmed, with costs. All concur.

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