120 Va. 390 | Va. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the court.
This bill in equity was filed by the appellant, David Stein, asking for an accounting and praying for an injunction to restrain the appellees, Arthur J. Morris, the Fidelity Corporation of America, and the Industrial Finance Corporation, from appropriating or using the plan of banking known in this record as the “Morris Plan of Industrial Banking,” of which the complainant claims to be the owner.
It appears from the record that in March, 1910, A. J. Morris, one of the appellees, together with several associates, organized in the city of Norfolk the Fidelity Savings and Trust Company, Inc., which began in May, 1910, to conduct the business of a loan and savings company for the accommodation of people of small means who could not get accommodation from the ordinary commercial banks. This corporation prospered to such an extent that by the end of the first year the financial soundness of the principle on which it operated was demonstrated, and other similar institutions were established in different parts of the country. In the summer of 1912 it was found that an extensive development of this system of banking would require a larger capital, and the Fidelity Corporation of America was thereupon organized with an authorized capital of $300,000. To this company Morris and his associates con
In addition to the capital invested in the Industrial Finance Corporation, approximately $7,000,000 has been invested in the capital of the numerous operating banks that have been established by that corporation. It is this business that the appellant, five years after the movement began, seeks to restrain and call to account, upon the ground that he is the originator of the instalment plan of industrial savings and loan banking, and that the use of his idea by the appellees is wrongful and prejudicial to his rights.
It appears that in April, 1901, appellant and a number of associates organized in Newport News, Virginia, a corporation known as the “Merchants and Mechanics Savings Association,” for the purpose of prosecuting the business of savings and loans in the city of Newport News. The claim alleged is that this institution and a certain table and letter filed with the Pill constitutes an unique plan of lending to poor people money, returnable in weekly instalments and reinvesting these weekly instalments, which is owned exclusively by the appellant, and that the same idea has been adopted by the appellees in their plan of establishing industrial banks.
The evidence of those who united with the appellant, Stein, in organizing the Merchants and Mechanics Savings Association of Newport News, which he claims to be the sole and complete embodiment of his system, is overwhelmingly to the effect that the scheme was not original but was an old one which had been in operation in Europe for many years, and that- Stein acquired his knowledge of the system in Europe from whence he emigrated to America in 1892. The witness, Rosenbaum, who was an active officer of the Newport News corporation, says he never heard of any scheme of proprietorship from the organization of the company in 1901 until about 1914. This testimony of Stein’s own witness, who was in a position to know, would alone seem to be sufficient to show that the present claim of in
If, however, appellant had originated the scheme or idea of banking of which he claims to be the owner, he could not have a property right in such a method or idea for conducting business without any physical means or devices for carrying it out. In other words, he could not put such an idea into operation without it at once escaping his own grasp and becoming the property of mankind. Bristol v. E. L. A. Society, 52 Hun. 161, 5 N. Y. Supp. 131; Burrell v. Chown (C. C.), 69 Fed. 993; Bristol v. E. L. A. Society, 132 N. Y. 264, 30 N. E. 506, 28 Am. St. Rep. 568; Hamilton Mfg. Co. v. Tubbs (D. C.), 216 Fed. 401.
In Bristol v. E. L. A. Society, 52 Hun. 161, 5 N. Y. Supp. 131, supra, it is said: “It is difficult to conceive how a claim to a mere idea or scheme, unconnected with particular physical devices for carrying out that idea, can be made the subject matter of property. So long as the originator of the naked idea, whether, germinating under the laws of metaphysics, it be regarded as Platonic or Cartesian in its make-up, keeps it to himself, it is his exclusive property, but it ceases to be his own when he permits it to pass from him.” As further said in the case cited, such ideas in their relation to property, belong to the claimant as long as he keeps them. But if he permits them to go he cannot follow them.
In Hamilton Mfg. Co. v. Tubbs, supra, it is said: “Where an idea or trade secret or system cannot be sold or negotiated or used without a disclosure, it would seem proper that some contract should guard ' or regulate the disclosure; otherwise, it must follow the law of ideas and become the acquisition of whoever receives it.”
In the case of Haskins v. Ryan, 71 N. J. Eq. 575, 64 Atl. 436, a leading authority on the subject, the court, in a luminous discussion of this subject, says: “The means of carrying out the plan, of giving effect to the idea, lay, therefore,
The contention of complainant that he imparted his plan or scheme of banking to Morris, as his attorney, in confidence and with a restriction against his using the same, and that Morris violated such professional confidence when he established the “Morris plan” is not tenable. It appears that several years after Stein had united with others in organizing the Merchants and Mechanics Savings Association of Newport News, through which organization he made known to the public his so-called scheme and method of doing business, he approached Morris with the request that he would unite with him in organizing a similar savings association in the city of Norfolk. Morris did unite with Stein in an effort to organize such a company, but the effort resulted in failure, and thereupon Morris’ connection with the matter and with Stein ended. The preponderance of the evidence shows that no scheme was committed to
No communication to a lawyer for the express purpose of having it brought to the attention of the public, or communicated to another, is privileged. Weeks on Attorneys at Law (2nd ed.), sec. 151; Bartlett v. Bunn, 56 Hun. 507, 10 N. Y. Supp. 210; Commonwealth v. Bacon, 135 Mass. 521. It is true that an attorney should be held to the highest good faith in dealing with a client, but it is obvious, in the present case, that the charges of disloyalty on the part of Morris, if he ever was attorney for Stein, are wholly without merit.
The appellees have urged upon us other grounds of defense to .the claim asserted by the appellants, but in the view we have already taken of the case it is not necessary to refer to them.
In conclusion, we are of opinion that the claims of the appellants are without foundation in law or in fact, upon any view of the case. The decree complained of, denying the relief prayed for, is, therefore, plainly- right and must be affirmed.
Affirmed.