STOKES & SMITH CO. v. TRANSPARENT-WRAP MACH. CORPORATION.
No. 262.
Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
May 1, 1946.
156 F.2d 198
R. Morton Adams and Pennie, Edmonds, Morton & Barrow, all of New York City (W. B. Morton, Jr., of New York City, of counsel), for appellee.
Before L. HAND, SWAN, and FRANK, Circuit Judges.
L. HAND, Circuit Judge.
This is an appeal from a judgment, dismissing the plaintiff‘s complaint for a declaratory judgment, and directing it to assign eleven patents to the defendant. The parties are corporations organized under the laws of different states, and in the spring of 1944 they had come to a critical difference as to the effect of a contraсt, entered into between them on June 23, 1937. The defendant, on April 29, 1944, elected to terminate this contract as of the following May 10th, and thereby raised the question which the plaintiff wishes to have determined in this action. The facts are as follows. The defendant was the owner of three patents taken out in 1935 and 1936, upon the invention of one, Walter R. Zwoyer: the first, upon an original application, filed on November 28, 1933; the other two, upon divisional applications of the original. They were all for a machine to make a connected series of small transparent envelopes and to fill them with small pellets, such as pieces of hard candy and the like. The machine proved a success, and the defendant began making and selling it under the name, “Transwrap Packing Machine.” The plaintiff had been engaged in the business of making machinery to make and fill similar packages with powders—for the most part toilet powders—and in 1935 it learned of the Zwoyer patents, and sought a license under them early in 1936. After preliminary negotiations nоt necessary to set forth, the parties executed the contract of June, 1937, out of which the present controversy arises, and the substance of which was as follows.
The defendant granted to the plaintiff an exclusive license under the Zwoyer patents in the United States, Canada and Mexico, as well as upon any patents for improvements which it might secure during the life of the contract. The plaintiff promised to keep books and render accounts, and to pay royalties, fixed by elaborate provisions not relevant here. The defendant promised to communicate to the plaintiff
So far, the contract was concededly unobjectionable. The contest is as to the eleventh, twelfth, and fourteenth Articles, which are quoted in the margin,* and the important parts of which were as follows. Article XI is obscure, but we read the second sentence as meaning that the plain-
The parties continued under the contract until January 22, 1944, when the defendant learned that the plaintiff had applied for four patents, to which in a letter written on that day it claimed the right, and of which it demanded an assignment under Article XII. The plaintiff answered on January 26th, “that there are quite a number of patents which should have been assigned to your Company. We are getting a complete list and copies of the patents for your full information.” Apparently the parties had unsatisfactory negotiations before April 17, for on that day the defendant wrote the plaintiff that its failure to offer the defendant the opportunity to take out various patents was a breach of the contract which should be submitted to arbitration. This letter it followed on April 29th by another in which it said: “Because of your failure to cure the default specified in our letter of January 22, 1944, within thirty days after written notice of
The plaintiff obviously changed its mind shortly thereafter, because the complaint at bar was filed on the 19th of May, 1944, and the summons was served on the 23rd. The defendant filed a counterclaim on June 15th, demanding an assignment of fourteen patents which it asserted to be within the contract, but three of which it withdrew upon the trial. The judge found that the contract was lawful throughout, not being within the doctrine of such decisions as Ethyl Gasoline Corporation v. United States, 309 U.S. 436, 60 S.Ct. 618, 84 L.Ed. 852; Morton Salt Company v. G. S. Suppiger Co., 314 U.S. 488, 788, 62 S.Ct. 402, 86 L.Ed. 363; and Mercoid Corporation v. Mid-Continent Investment Co., 320 U.S. 661, 64 S.Ct. 268, 88 L.Ed. 376. He dismissed the complaint, held that the plaintiff had broken the contract withоut excuse, that the defendant had rightfully terminated it on May 10, 1944, and he directed the plaintiff to assign to the defendant the eleven patents in question, and to disclose to the defendant all improvements upon the “Transwrap Packing Machine,” in which it had any interest.
The power of a patentee to make a license conditional upon the licensee‘s buying other goods only of him, first came up, so far as we can find, in Heaton-Peninsular Button-Fastener Co. v. Eureka Specialty Co., 6 Cir., 1896, 77 F. 288, 35 L.R.A. 728, where the court decided that, since the patentee had power unconditionally to forbid infringement, he might attach such conditions as he chose to a license. In 1902 the Supreme Court in Bement & Sons v. National Harrow Co., 186 U.S. 70, 22 S.Ct. 747, 46 L.Ed. 1058, carried this so far as to except from the Sherman Act,
The question here is whether the facts at bar fall within this doctrine. It is true that the defendant did not expressly exact as a condition upon its license under the Zwoyer patents that the plaintiff should buy anything of it; not even parts of the Zwoyer machine. Indeed, it was going out of business and could not have supplied the plaintiff, if it had exacted any such promise.
The last Zwoyer patent will expire in 1953, and the eleven improvement patents will expire between 1956 and 1959, so that there will be a period of from three to six years during which, although the plaintiff will be free to make, use, or vend the original “Transwrap Packing Machine,” the defendant will be able to compel the plaintiff to buy from it alone any improved “Transwrap Packing Machine.” Thus the plaintiff will be required to buy from the defendant articles which, although patented, are not covered by the Zwoyer patents. It is quite true upon the sale of its business, had the defendant not included those patents, it could have made it a condition that the plaintiff should assign to it any improvement inventions it might make, and in that way it would have secured the plaintiff as its customer for all such improvements. The owner of all property, by withholding it upon any other terms, may, if he can, force others to buy from him; land is the best example and every parcel of land is a monopoly. But it is precisely in this that a patent is not like other property; the patentee may not use it to force others to buy of him things outside its four corners. If the defendant gets the plaintiff‘s patents, it will have put itself in that position, in part at any rate, by virtue of the compulsion of its own patents. We do not see what difference it makes, under the decisions we have cited, whether the plaintiff is compelled to buy all improvements from the defendant by means of a transfer of the plaintiff‘s patents, or by means of a contract; indeed, the compulsion in the first instance is more absolute than in the second.
It is urged that this provision was merely an incident to the defendant‘s sale of its business, including the Zwoyer patents; that it could not be expected to part with that business and those patents without protection, in the event of recapture upon the buyer‘s default; and that it should not be compelled to take back a mutilated
We have been speaking of the period after the contract came to an end, and we do not forget that the plaintiff had an option to extend it, not only beyond thе original term of ten years, but for successive periods of five years until the last of the improvement patents expired. The defendant might argue—though it has not done so—that this gave the plaintiff the opportunity to avoid the competitive handicap we have mentioned, from which it would suffer after 1953: all it need do was to keep on in the business. To this there are two answers. First, continuance in the business was not wholly within the plaintiff‘s power. The sales in the preceding period had to be “reasonably satisfactory” to the defendant. Moreover, if the plaintiff got into such financial straits that it must file a petition under Chapter X, it lost the contract even during the original first ten years; so too in case payment of the royalties was enjoined, whatever that meant. Second, and more important, the plaintiff was not competitively free to abandon the contract at the end of any of the periods. In 1947, when the original period would come to an end, and again in 1952 and 1957 when the next two succeeding periods would do the same, among those considerations which would certainly be influential in its decision to renew, would be the position it would be in, of which we have spoken a moment ago: i. e., that after 1953 it might feel itself forced to renew just because the improvement patents were in the defendant‘s hands. Moreover, that predicament might not end in 1959, the year when the last of the eleven patents in suit will expire; for these may not be the last improvements, and the plaintiff may be forced, either to cease all efforts to patent improvеments, or to keep renewing the contract in order to escape the consequences of its own ingenuity. For these reasons we hold that the promise to assign the improvement patents was illegal, and cannot be enforced.
However, since the plaintiff has repudiated this promise, the defendant is excused from any further performance of any of its own promises in the contract; for the fact that the plaintiff was privileged to repudiate, does not affect that result. The contract was originally bilateral, and it does not apportion the plaintiff‘s promises as separate considerations for the defendant‘s promises; nor can we say a priori how far the promise to assign the improvement patents determined the defendant‘s acceptance. In such circumstances it is the rule that a promisor is excused from performance when a counter promise which is the consideration for his own promise is repudiated for illegality.
Judgment reversed: cause remanded.
SWAN, Circuit Judge (dissenting).
When a man sells his business on terms which make it possible that he may have to buy it back, it seems to me entirely reasonable for him to require the purchaser in that event to turn over any improvement patents which have been taken out in the meantime. If the seller had no patent when he sold his business, a stipulation that patents thereafter taken out by the buyer in connection with the business should be assigned to the seller if the business was rеturned to him pursuant to the terms of the agreement, would in my opinion be valid—and my brother‘s argument does not suggest the contrary. The situation would seem to be analogous to requiring an employee to assign inventions made in the course of his employment. Guth v. Minnesota Mining & Mfg. Co., 7 Cir., 72 F.2d 385, certiorari denied 294 U.S. 711, 55 S.Ct. 505, 79 L.Ed. 1245. Even if the seller of the business owned a patent under which the buyer received a license, a stipulation that any improvement patents should belong to the licensor would formerly have been sustained. See Allbright-Nell Co. v. Stanley Hiller Co., 7 Cir., 72 F.2d 392. Recent Supreme Court cases upon which my brothers rely have established the principle that “the owner of a patent may not employ it to secure a limited monopoly of an unpatented material used in applying the invention.” Mercoid Corporation v. Mid-Continent Co., 320 U.S. 661, 664, 64 S.Ct. 268, 271, 88 L.Ed. 376. The application of that principle to the case at bar requires an extension of the doctrine to very different facts and I can see no valid reasons for so extending it. In my opinion the judgment should be affirmed.
Notes
“12. If the Licensee shall discover or invent an improvement which is applicable to the Transwrap Packaging Machine and suitable for use in connection therewith and applicable to the making and closing of the package, but not to the filling nor to the contents of the package, it shall submit the same to the Licensor, which may, at its option, apply for Letters Patent covering the same. In the event of the failure of the Licensor to apply for Letters Patent covering such additional improvements, inventions or pаtentable ideas, the Licensee may apply for the same. In the event that such additional Letters Patent are applied for and are granted to the Licensor, they shall be deemed covered by the terms of this License Agreement and may be used by the Licensee hereunder without any further consideration, license fee or royalty as above provided. In the event that any such additional improvements are patented by the Licensee for use in connection with Transwrap Packaging Machines, (after the refusal or failure of the Licensor to apply for Patents thereon), the Licensor may, nevertheless, have the use but not the exclusive use of the same outside of the several territories covered by this License Agreement. The expenses of obtaining any such Patents shall be paid by the party applying therefor.
“The Licensor agrees to apply for and pay the expenses of obtaining any renewals of said Patents owned or acquired by it. The Licensee shall have the full right to use and enjoy any of the said inventions in its other machines which do not compete with Transwrap Packaging Machines and to license others so to do. but in such case the Licensee shall reimburse the Licensor for its cost in obtaining the Patents on said inventions on a basis to be agreed upon by the parties and if they fail to agree, the same shall be referred to arbitration as hereinafter provided.”
“14. In the event that any one or more of the following events (herein termed events of default) shall occur and such defаult shall not be cured within thirty days after written notice thereof by the Licensor to the Licensee, this agreement may be terminated by the Licensor in the manner hereinafter provided.
“The following and each of the following shall constitute events of default:
“(a) Failure of the Licensee to keep true and accurate books of account;
“(b) Failure of the Licensee to permit the Licensor or its duly authorized representatives to examine and inspect the same;
“(c) Failure of the Licensee tо render to the Licensor full and accurate statements in writing of all Transwrap Packaging Machines manufactured and sold by it;
“(d) Failure of the Licensee to pay the full amount of the license fees or royalties hereinabove provided for as and when the same shall be due and payable;
“(e) If the Licensee shall be adjudicated a bankrupt, or shall file a Petition under Section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act [11 U.S.C.A. § 207], or any Act amendatory thereof, or if the Licensee shall take advantage of any bankruptcy or insolvency act;
“(f) If by reason of any action taken by or against the Licensee the payment of license fees or royalties shall be enjoined or suspended;
“(g) If the Licensee shall be dissolved or liquidated (other than in connection with a corporate reorganization and the continuance of the business of the Licensee); and
“(h) If the Licensee shall default in any of the terms, clauses, covenants and conditions of this License Agreement.
“Should such an event of default have occurred and nоt been cured within thirty days after written notice thereof by the Licensor to the Licensee, this license shall be deemed terminated upon a date fixed in a further written notice of termination to be sent by the Licensor to the Licensee by registered mail, which date shall not be less than ten days after the expiration of the thirty days hereinabove referred to.
“Failure of the Licensor to insist upon any of the terms, clauses, covenants and conditions of this License Agreement in any instance shall not, however, be deemed to be a waiver of default in subsequent instances.”
