196 A.D. 546 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
The plaintiff is engaged in the construction of safety devices upon elevators. In this action the court has found that the defendant Purcell entered into an oral contract to assign to the plaintiff “ all his rights to any invention calculated to improve or perfect the device he was employed to work on, and to set over any application for patents for such device to the plaintiff.” The defendant Purcell entered the employment of the plaintiff first to give expert advice as to the improvement of the existing devices relative to the construction by the plaintiff of these safety appliances and he was engaged for nearly a year in this employment. He after-wards entered the regular employment of the plaintiff as a superintendent and devoted his time and his skill to the perfection and installment of these safety appliances, with the agreement heretofore mentioned, to assign all his rights to such inventions to the plaintiff. After having been in the service of the plaintiff for a year he organized the defendant corporation and gave to the corporation full information as to the devices which he had invented as improvements upon the devices theretofore used by the plaintiff in its work. Judgment was entered in the action May 13, 1918, which restrained the defendants and each of them “ from manufacturing, selling, installing or otherwise using the device or devices for the safetifying of elevators now and heretofore manufactured, sold, installed or used by them, or either of them, heretofore invented or devised' by defendant Purcell while in the plaintiff’s employment,” and further requiring Purcell “ to disclose and transfer to the plaintiff any and all devices, improvements or inventions which he might at any time develop, invent or devise, relating to the ‘ mechanical safetifying of elevators,” in accordance with his agreement, and that the assignment to the defendant corporation be declared void and that both defendants execute and deliver
It will be noticed that this agreement is not an agreement to refrain from divulging any secret process of the plaintiff, but is an agreement to assign to the plaintiff all inventions or devices which he may have made theretofore or which he may thereafter make while in the plaintiff’s employ. This clearly gives to the plaintiff the right to an assignment of any invention or device which is patentable and even to an assignment of any application which had not been acted upon by the Patent Office. But an assignment of a device which is not patentable would give to the plaintiff no rights, and in respect to these elevators, while the devices are subject to inspection and can be seen by any person who should be interested to inspect them, the disclosure to another party of the nature of that device, or the subsequent use thereof by the party himself after he left the employment of the plaintiff would not be a disclosure of any confidential information which he has obtained, nor would it be a use of any device to which any party is given any exclusive right by any letters patent. Of course, as to those devices which were patentable, a different question would arise, and as to those the.defendants do not seek to modify the judgment. As we read the decree entered herein we think that a fair interpretation thereof would not preclude the defendants from using any device which was not patentable, by reason of lack of novelty, and which was not a secret device, because attached
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Page and Greenbaum, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.