27 F. 622 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1886
This bill in equity is brought for infringement of letters patent No. 168,644, granted the complainant for improvement in spindle bolsters. The suit is between citizens of New Hampshire, and the first question to he determined is whether there is a subsisting license between the plaintiff and the defendant corporation covering the patented bolsters in controversy.
The plaintiff was in the ‘employ of the defendant corporation as overseer or superintendent from 1861 to 1877. During this ,time he made several improvements in the machinery used in the mills. His patented adjustable rings were put into the mills in 1866 and 1870, and his patented traveler cleaner in 1868 and 1870. The patented bolster upon which suit is now brought was put in between 1875 and 1877. . The date of the patent is October 11, 1875. The defendants
Mr. Killey admits that he told Jeneks that the company claimed the right to the free use of his inventions because he was in their employ. He further says that Jeneks was very anxious that the company should adopt his adjustable ring, as it would be an advantage to him in introducing his improvements. For this reason, he agreed that the company should pay_ nothing for the improvement, and that this agreement extended to all improvements, and therefore covered the bolster patent now in controversy. As to the $250 a year paid to the plaintiff for about a year and a half, Mr. Killey and Mr. Amory, the treasurer of the company, both testify that it was paid as additional salary upon the complaint of Mr. Jeneks that the company was not treating him fairly. This position is confirmed by the form of receipt taken from the plaintiff, wherein it appears that the money was paid as additional salary. Again, in a letter from the treasurer to Killey in October, 1877, he notifies him that the business of the company will not warrant the payment to Jeneks after that month of his extra salary.
The great weight of evidence is in favor of the position taken by the defendants that the $250 was not paid as a royalty for the use of the inventions, but was given to the plaintiff as additional salary because of his services to the company. That Jeneks was willing and desirous that the company should have the free use of his in
We do not think the evidence supports the position taken by the plaintiff that if there was any license to use the patented bolsters it was on condition of the payment of $250 a year so long as the defendant corporation used them, or during the life of the patent. We are relieved, therefore, from deciding the question whether, if such was the fact, the defendant corporation might not now be sued as an infringer on the ground that it had repudiated the license by its failure to pay the royalty for a number of years. It also becomes unnecessary to decide whether such a parol contract as the plaintiff has sought to make out would not be void under the New Hampshire statute of frauds. It is clear that the statute has no application to the license which we find upon the evidence exists between the parties.
This suit being between citizens of the same state, and there appearing to be a subsisting license between the parties, the court has no jurisdiction, and the bill must be dismissed. Hartell v. Tilghman, 99 U. S. 547.
Bill dismissed.