182 Mass. 137 | Mass. | 1902
This is an action for an alleged malicious libel on the plaintiff’s title under patents for an electric switch, by reason of which certain persons who were in treaty with him for a purchase of an interest in it withdrew and refused to deal with him further. The facts necessary to be stated are few. The plaintiff having a patent, earlier than those referred to, for a switch operating mechanism, had granted to the defendant an
We assume for purposes of decision that the defendant understood itself to be writing about the switch mentioned in the declaration, a different switch from that covered by its express license, although whether it did so or was bound to do so perhaps may be doubted. Also we assume that the defendant might be answerable for the communication of the letter to the possible purchasers, by the railway superintendent to whom it was addressed, within the principle of Elmer v. Fessenden, 151 Mass. 359, 362, 363.
We have stated the plaintiff’s special damage as it appears on . the evidence. Swan v. Tappan, 5 Cush. 104. Lowe v. Harewood, W. Jones, 196. It will be seen to consist in the withdrawal of an offer, or breaking off of negotiations that might never have ended in a sale even if the letter had not been written. No doubt the plaintiff would not be prevented from recovering merely by the fact that the third persons were not bound to the plaintiff and that therefore the act induced by the defendant was lawful. Moran v. Dunphy, 177 Mass. 485, 487. But it might be questioned perhaps, whether the plaintiff must not
We do not propose to determine the validity of the defendant’s claim. It is enough to say that it was a reasonable one and one which the defendant had a right to try if it saw fit, and therefore was privileged to assert. Wren v. Weild, L. R. 4 Q. B. 730. Steward v. Young, L. R. 5 C. P. 122. Halsey v. Brotherhood, 19 Ch. D. 386. Gassett v. Gilbert, 6 Gray, 94, 97. It is true that the license refers to “ the Switch Operating Mechanism for Railways described ” etc., and that the covenant refers to “ further improvements in Switch Operating Mechanism for Railway Cars,” using capitals, which might give some color to the contention that the latter words were used as a proper name to describe the former invention and that therefore the improvements were improvements only in that. But the words are not a proper name and are not preceded by the definite article as they had been before, and in the same paragraph, later, the word “ Mechanisms ” is used, in the plural, thus giving additional strength to the argument that the improvements meant were improvements in switch operating mechanisms generally. The plaintiff seems to have assumed this to be the meaning until he broke with the defendant. If the covenant had the meaning last supposed, we perceive no objection to it in point of law, on grounds of public policy, as being too broad or smacking too strongly of slavery. It was no broader than was necessary to guard against the chance of the first invention being made useless and unmerchantable by a later one. Aspinwall Manuf. Co. v. Gill, 32 Fed. Rep. 697, 700. This consideration is a further ground in favor of the plaintiff’s claim.
It is said that in any event the defendant did not own the right which it asserted. For purposes of decision, we assume that the defendant had not done enough to be entitled to the present execution of a further instrument applying to the present patent, or to bring into play the principle now governing antici
Finally it is said that the license had been revoked for breach of its terms by the defendant, but it was open to argument, if not clear, that the defendant had neglected no duty and that the license, which was for the full term of the patent, was irrevocable. Kelly v. Porter, 8 Sawyer, 482, 486, 487; S. C. 17 Fed. Rep. 519, 522.
We repeat then that the defendant had reasonable ground to assert the right which it set up in its letter, and a privilege to assert it. And this being so, the only question remaining is whether there was any extrinsic evidence of malice or that the defendant exceeded its privilege. A case like this might open an interesting inquiry. If there were evidence that the defendant did not believe its claim to be valid, still it might be argued that, if it was assured by counsel or if the court should think in fact, as we do, that it had a reasonable chance of success on any state of facts that it believed to be true or a jury to be warranted in finding, it reasonably had a right to assert its claim. It might be argued that the defendant had a right to disregard its own judgment of what the law ought to be. Allens v. Codman, 139 Mass. 136,138. Connery v. Manning, 163 Mass. 44, 47. Whether an actually malevolent motive, as distinguished from self interest, would make a difference, would be a further question. The extent of a privilege depends on the nature of the particular case. At one extreme are the absolute rights regardless of motive, recognized
But these are speculations. In the case at bar, not only did the defendant have reasonable ground for its assertion but there is no evidence that it did not believe it or that it made it for any other than business reasons. Assuming, as we do for purposes of decision, that Pearson, the defendant’s superintendent, had authority to represent it in all that he did, what he did and said showed that he did not believe that the plaintiff had a useful invention and that at the same time he constantly asserted the company’s rights to any invention which the plaintiff might make. It showed nothing more. See Spill v. Maule, L. R. 4 Ex. 232. This would not warrant a jury in finding that his motive was a wish to harm the plaintiff rather than an intent to benefit the defendant. There is no ground even to suspect such a thing. If proof of a malevolent motive would rebut the privilege, which we do not decide, nothing less than that would do, so far as malice is concerned. It is true, as is said in the very careful brief for the plaintiff, that in most connections malice means only knowledge of facts sufficient to show that the contemplated act is very likely to have injurious consequences. Apart from statute it generally means no more when the question is what is sufficient prima facie to charge a defendant. Burt v. Advertiser Newspaper Co. 154 Mass. 238, 245. But sometimes the defence is not that the damage was not to be foreseen, but rests on what in substance is a privilege, whether of a kind usually pleaded as such or not, that is to say, on a right to inflict the damage even knowingly. In such cases, if malice in any sense makes a difference, as distinguished from excess over what was reasonable or needful to do or say under the circumstances, which often is included under the same word, Gott v. Pulsifer, 122 Mass. 235, 239, it means that the defendant is not within the privilege because he was not acting in bona fide answer to the needs of the occasion, but outside of it from a wish to do harm. See Wren v. Weild, L. R. 4 Q. B. 730, 735, 736; Clark v; Molyneux, 3 Q. B. D. 237, 246, 247.
Exceptions overruled.