55 F. 645 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio | 1893
This is an action at law to recover royalties under an exclusive license issued by the plaintiffs to the defendants Thomas & Sons for the manufacture of hay tedders under a patent granted December 18, 1877, to John Mudgett, — one of the plaintiffs. The defendants filed separate answers. In the fifth and sixth defenses, which are-substantially the same in both answers, they incorporate, by reference, the second defense, to wit, that the defendants Thomas & Sons executed the license dated January 10, 1882, which purported to grant them, the exclusive right to make and sell hay tedders under the plaintiffs’ patent, for the royalty set forth in the petition, and that by the terms of the license suah tedders were to be sold under the name, “The Mudgett Tedder.” That said contract did not oblige them to make or sell said tedders, but, on the contrary, provided that plaintiffs could terminate the contract whenever defendants failed to manufacture and sell sufficient to supply a reasonable demand therefor. Said defenses also incorporated, by reference, the averments of the fourth defense: That, prior to the season and year of 1885, said Thomas & Sons notified the plaintiffs that they could no longer manufacture under said license, on account of defects in the pretended patented improvement therein described, the close competition with other tedders, on which no royalty was payable, and the heavy royalties stipulated, and that they abandoned said contract of license, and would no longer manufacture under it. That plaintiffs acquiesced in such abandonment, entered into a new contract with the defendants John H. Thomas <fe Sons, whereby they undertook to grant them the right to manufacture under a later patent held by them, at the royalty of one dollar per tedder; settled with said Thomas & Sons on November 26, 1885, for 100 tedders sold by them under the latter contract, as in full of their account for royalties to that date; and never — then or at any other time — demanded of any of the defendants any account of or royalties on the tedders for which royalty is now sought to be recovered until about October 18, 1889, although they knew that Thomas & Sons, from 1884 to' July 29, 1886, and thereafter the defendant the Thomas Manufacturing Company, were making and selling the same.
It is further averred, by adoption from the fourth defense, that Thomas & Sons, during the season of 1884, sold certain tedders under the name “Thomas Tedder” at the same time that they sold said Mudgett tedders under the name “Mudgett Tedder,” as plaintiffs at the time well knew, which Thomas tedders were made in strict accordance with the terms of certain letters patent granted John TL Thomas, and sold under the protection of such patent, and that all tedders made or sold by any of the defendants, excepting those for which Thomas & Sons paid royalty to the plaintiffs, were said Thomas tedders, placed on the market under that name, and made and sold under the protection of the John H. Thomas patents, as the plaintiffs at all times well knew. That on September 14, 1889, the plaintiffs notified the defendants, in accordance with the terms of said license, that they terminated the said license of January 10, 1882. The fifth defense also avers that the plaintiffs’
The plaintiffs move to strike out these defenses as incompetent, irrelevant, and impertinent. The license contains no statement, by way of recital or otherwise, touching the validity of plaintiffs’ patent; and under the averments of the answer it must be taken to be true, in considering the motion, that the defendants Thomas & Sons notified the plaintiffs, prior to the season and year of 1885, that they would mo longer manufacture under the license, for reasons above stated, and that they abandoned the contract with plaintiff’s acquiescence. It must further be taken to be true that the new contract under a later patent was completed by a full settlement on the 25th of November, 1885, and from that time until the 18th of October, 1889, almost four years, although the plaintiffs knew that the defendants were manufacturing and selling tedders under their own patent, and under the name of “Thomas Tedder,” they never made any demand for royalties, or claimed that said tedders were made or sold under the contract. And, lastly, it must be taken to be true that on the 14th of September, 1889, the plaintiffs themselves notified the defendants that they terminated said contract. In this state of the pleading, the fifth defense (that the plaintiff’s patent is void for lack of invention) and the sixth defense (that it is void for want of novelty) must be recognized as valid defenses. The authorities cited by counsel for plaintiffs in support of the motion are not in point. Wilder v. Adams, 2 Woodb. & M. 329; Sargent v. Larned, 2 Curt. 340; and Marsh v. Dodge, 6 Thomp. & C. 568, — are cited for the rule that in an action of covenant, to recover the royalty for machines actually sold thereunder, the covenantor cannot set up the defense of the invalidity of the patent. The distinction is that in this case the machines were not sold under the license, but after the license had been abandoned by the defendants. For the same reason, Gaylord v. Case, 1 Cin. Law Bul. 382; Magic Ruffle Co. v. Elm City Co., 13 Blatchf. 151; Birdsall v. Perego, 5 Blatchf. 251; and Marsh v. Dodge, supra, — are inapplicable; for they hold that if the licensee avail himself of the invention, so as to earn the royalty, without offering to surrender his license, he is estopped to impeach the validity of the patent. In this case the defendants not only offered to surrender, but did actually abandon, the license. It was held as long ago as Hayne v. Maltby, 3 Term R. 438, that the doctrine of estoppel is not applicable where the license does not, by stipulation or recital, affirm the validity of the patent. In that case the plaintiffs, pretending to derive a right under a patent, assigned to the defendant the right to use the pa.tented machines on certain terms, to which he agreed. There was no statement in the license that the patent was valid. Lord Kenyon said that the plaintiffs, pretending to derive a right under a patent, assigned to the defendant part of that right on certain terms, and, notwithstanding the facts disclosed at the trial showed that they had no such privilege, still insisted that the defendant should be bound by his covenant, although the consideration for it was fraudulent and void.
The motion will be overruled.