50 N.Y.S. 1016 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
These actions are brought to recover royalties which the plaintiff claims have become due to him and the defendant Harmon from the Fahys Watch-Case Company by reason of the manufacture of certain watch cases patented by Skidmore & Harmon, and manufactured by the Fahys Watch-Case Company under contracts from them. There were two contracts,—one made on the 5th of April, 1884, and the other on the 21st of October, 1886. By the terms of the first contract, Skidmore & Harmon, the parties of the first part, agreed to give, and did give, to the Fahys Watch-Case Company, party of the second part, the exclusive and sole right to make and manufacture silver watch cases under letters patent of the United States granted to the parties of the first part on the 19th of February, 1884, and numbered 293,869, and the party of the second part agreed to make the said cases as fast as the market might require. The contract provided for the payment of a certain royalty by the party of the second part to Skidmore & Harmon, with a change in the amount of the royalty in certain circumstances. It also fixed the price at which the watch cases would be put upon the market to wholesale dealers. It then contained a provision, substantially, that if, by reason of competition or other causes, it became necessary to reduce the price, the party of the first part would reduce it until their profits, or the sum to be paid to them, did not exceed 20 cents on each case. It contained further provisions looking towards the necessity of reducing the price of the goods. The contract further provided that the parties of the first part agreed to give to the parties of the second part all pending applications and future patents on dust-proof watch cases, under the same conditions, and with the same privileges, as were given in the contract. The party of the second part further agreed to make all the cases in a good and workmanlike manner, and according to samples furnished and approved by Skidmore. The contract sued upon in the second of these actions was substantially the same,.
It appeared that disputes had arisen between Skidmore and the defendant in regard to royalties which were claimed to be due under these contracts in 1891, and Skidmore brought an action on each contract to recover the royalties due in that year, and other actions to recover royalties due in 1892. These actions were tried, and judgments rendered in favor of the plaintiff in all of them. The judgment rolls in these actions were put in evidence. As the actions were brought upon the same contracts as the actions now before us, those judgments, so far as they construe the contracts, are final determina-' tions of the rights of the parties, not only as to matters which were put in issue therein, but as to every other matter which might have been litigated in them. Embury v. Conner, 3 N. Y. 511; Cromwell v. Sac Co., 94 U. S. 351. It appeared in those cases that, after the making of the contracts upon which those actions were brought, the plaintiff prepared models or samples of the cases to be made under the contract, as it was provided that he should do, and various changes were made in those samples, until finally a structure was produced which was approved by the plaintiff as the proper form of construction of a watch case under the agreement, and was accepted by the defendant. It appears in the present actions that the sample thus made and accepted by all parties is the model of those manufactured in 1893 and in 1894, and upon which royalties are claimed. It further
But, if the referee had been correct in his finding that the Fahys Watch-Case Company did not have the exclusive right and the undisturbed enjoyment of the privileges intended to be granted, yet, upon the facts appearing in this case, it was nevertheless liable, to some extent, at least, for royalties upon the watch cases which it made in 1893 and 189-1 under each of these contracts. The facts have been so fully stated which establish this proposition that it is only necessary to recapitulate them shortly. They are these: The structure accepted as the one to be made under the contracts was the sample structure presented by Skidmore after the contracts had been executed. Skidmore acquired the Fitch patent for the express purpose of protecting the defendant in the manufacture of that sample. The defendant manufactured that sample during 1893 and 1891, under the express protection of the Fitch patent. During those two years Skid-more & Harmon relinquished to the defendant the exclusive right to manufacture these articles which they had granted to it by their contracts, and they did not attempt to assert the right to manufacture, but permitted the defendant to obtain the benefit of its contract, so far as they were concerned. Indeed, they could not do otherwise. The contract bound them to give to the defendant the exclusive right to manufacture these cases, and, so long as that contract continued in force, they were not at liberty to assume the manufacture themselves, or to authorize anybody else to do it, no matter whether it was protected by a valid patent or not. So the defendant, having from Skid-more & Harmon an exclusive right to make these watch cases according to these samples, and also having acquired from them a license to use the Fitch patent, and thereby protect itself from any infringement of that patent, exercised those rights, and manufactured and sold those cases. The only right it had to stamp these cases as made under the Fitch patent was that which it acquired through Harmon •& Skidmore. The case therefore clearly comes within the rule that the licensee of a right to use a patented invention, while it remains such, cannot renounce the license, and relieve himself of the liability
The learned referee held that the case of Skinner v. Machine Co. did not apply, because the defendant did not stamp the watch cases manufactured in 1893 and 1894 under the Skidmore patent, and did not make any claim of the privileges conferred or attempted to be conferred upon it by Skidmore’s contract. But in that conclusion he entirely overlooks the fact that it did stamp the articles under the Pitch patent, which it acquired from Skidmore, and which it would have no right whatever to use except so far as Skidmore had bestowed it, and thus it did in fact make use of the privileges which it acquired as the necessary result of the contract with Skidmore. It must not be forgotten that the claim here is based upon an entire failure of consideration, and the defendant cannot succeed unless it established that claim. It is not sufficient that it should show that it was interrupted in its exercise of the right, or that by competition it was forced to reduce the price of its articles. If it appears that it made any use of the privileges which it acquired from Skidmore, and received any benefit from those privileges, in the manufacture of these articles during 1893 and 1894, there clearly was not an entire failure of consideration, and the defendant is bound to pay royalties. If, for any reason growing out of the contract, the amount of royalties which it should pay is to be diminished, or it suffered any damages because of a breach on Skidmore’s part of a portion of his contract, yet as it confessedly took the benefit of the contract, to a certain extent, by the use of the Pitch patent, and of the protection which that patent gave it, it had not repudiated the contract, and it is bound to pay royalties. Warwick v. Stockton (N. J. Ch.) 37 Atl. 458. And any remedy which it seeks by reason of a breach of the contract on the part of Skidmore must be obtained, either by an action to that effect, or by a counterclaim in these actions.