26 Ind. App. 583 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1900
This action was commenced in the Jackson Circuit Court and upon change of venue was tried in the Washington Circuit Court.
Section 6055 is as follows: “Any person who may take any obligation, in writing, for which any patent right, or right claimed by him or her to be a patent right, shall form the whole or any part of the consideration, shall, before it is signed by the maker or makers, insert in the body of said written obligation, above the signature of said maker or makers, in legible writing or print, the words ‘given for a patent right.’ ”
The answers to be good under this section must aver facts showing that the consideration in whole or in part for which said notes were given was a patent right or a right claimed to he a patent right. Do they contain such averments ? The only averment of consideration in either paragraph is “that said notes were executed in consideration for the sale and transfer to him by one W. J. Gooch and the Portable Pantry Company of the exclusive right and privilege of selling for use of certain portable pantries in Warren county, Indiana, until the 1st day of January, 1903.” The consideration thus alleged is only the transfer of the exclusive right to sell a manufactured article, a tangible thing for a limited time in a particular locality.
In Hankey v. Downey, 116 Ind. 118, the Supreme Court distinguish between the tangible thing manufactured under a patent and the' intangible right evidenced by the patent, saying, by Elliott, J., at p. 119: “The difference between the article manufactured and the right secured by the patent is clearly recognized.” And at p. 120: “As there is a distinction between the intangible right and the tangible thing manufactured under the right, and as the statute uses words embracing only the intangible right, it can not he extended by construction to tangible articles manufactured under letters patent. The words used in the statute have a clear
Counsel for appellee in their able brief strongly rely upon the case of New v. Walker, 108 Ind. 365. It is also claimed that like answers were held good in State Nat. Bank v. Bennett, 8 Ind. App. 680, and in Robertson v. Cooper, 1 Ind. App. 78. In the two cases last named no question appears to have been raised on the pleadings. In New v. Walker, supra, the court say: “It is a sale of the patented right to sell the exclusive right to use and manufacture for sale and use the thing patented, for such a sale carries with it' an interest in the patented right itself. Where the vendor sells a right to use and to manufacture for sale and use during the existence of the patent, he parts with all substantial rights in the patent in the territory embraced in the assignment. Curtis on Patents, §181; Walker on Patents, §296.”
From the foregoing expression of the Supreme Court, counsel for appellee argue that the sale of the exclusive right to sell for use the patented article carries with it an interest in the patent right itself. We think that this deduction is not sound; it would lead to the conclusion that dealers who sell articles manufactured under a patent should perform the acts prescribed by the statute under consideration. The
The judgment is reversed, with instructions to sustain the demurrers to the first and second paragraphs of appellee’s answer.