10 N.J. Misc. 695 | New York Court of Chancery | 1932
The Kellems Products, Incorporated, manufactures grips used by telegraph, telephone and lighting companies to lug cables through conduits. Coley, one of the defendants, was the shop foreman of the Kellems company under a term of years, who covenanted that he would not, for five years after his term of service, engage in the business of cable grips within one hundred miles of New York City. He was discharged for unfaithfulness after one year’s service and has since incorporated Martin & Sons Products Company, Incorporated, manufacturer of cable grips, Newark. He and Martin each own one-half the capital stock. Coley attempts to justify the breach of the covenant on the ground that he was unlawfully discharged; the burden is upon him to show it, but the Kellems company undertook that task. This is the story, with some of the background: Miss Kellems, the owner of the Kellems company, sold grips for about a year before
It is held that Coley’s discharge was justified. The legality of his covenant not to engage in a similar line of business is not challenged, and it will be enforced in the language of the covenant.
Another object of the bill is to restrain Coley and his company from using the collapsible mandrel, a shop secret of the complainant. Grips were woven before on a solid mandrel, the weave being spaced by pins or screws set in the mandrel, which had to be separately removed to release the grip, to strip it from the mandrel. During the first week of the Kellems company’s operation, Miss Kellems’ brother invented a mandrel which does away with the taking out of the pins or screws, by fastening the pins or screws to strips surrounding a pipe or the like. When the weaving of the grip is finished, the pipe is withdrawn from the strips, they collapse, releasing the pins or screws through the mesh; a simple labor and time saving contrivance. Coley helped him, made suggestions, and later made a duplicate out of Kellems company material, in the shop. He claimed the invention, and a dispute arose between him and Miss Kellems. His insistence was the beginning of the end, but pending settlement of the question between him and her brother she paid him—one calls it a bonus, the other a royalty—for the use, both stipulating that the payment was without prejudice. When Coley went back to his former employer, Martin, he got one-half the capital stock of the company for the invention, and they are now using it in fabricating grips. Coley applied for a patent, so did Kellems, who filed an interference in the patent office
Coley brought into court models of his progressive ideas .as they supposedly took shape in material form. His original working models are strangely like the finished product; they show no intermediate thought from the primary conception to the completed article, which might ordinarily be expected. His second or experimental model, supposedly constructed in the course of developing the commercial form, was made up of six strips, of a total of eight, admittedly taken from a mandrel then in use in the Martin company’s .shop, persuasive evidence that the experimental model was made afterward and was not a step in the evolution of the mandrel in dispute, and that it is a fraud. One more thing: -Coley says he had the strips made by one Walsh in December, 1927—the sliding strips are the essence of the new device.
Present form of decree on notice.