Watson v. Ford

93 F. 359 | 6th Cir. | 1899

TAFT, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). Ford was about to invest a great deal of capital in a new and experimental business. The making of soda ash had been commercially successful when a certain patented process was used, but the field was not fully explored. There was believed to be room for extensive development and improvement in the process of manufacture. Watson was a reputed expert in designing and making machinery for the successful production of soda ash. It was a business in which the ownership of patents was exceedingly important. The contract, shortly stated, was that Walson, on his part, was for three years to devote his entire time and skill to the designing, erection, maintenance, and operation of a soda ash making plant, for the benefit of Ford so exclusively that Ford should have a one-half interest in all patents which Watson *362might take out for improvements in the process or machinery used in the manufacture; while Ford, on his part, was to pay Watson an increasing annual salary, in monthly installments, and a bonus of company stock in the end, should the experiment be a commercial success. The salary and stock were the consideration for the services, skill, and patented discoveries. The question is whether the conveyance of the patent was an implied condition of further obligation of Ford to pay the future salary and the stock. Prof. Langdell, in his summary of the Law of Contracts, points out that breaches of implied conditions are divisible into two classes, according as they take place before any part of the condition has been performed (“in limine,” as he terms it), or during the progress of its performance. Section 160. He says:

“Breaches of the latter class, which may be termed breaches after part performance, give rise to different considerations; for, if such a breach disables the party committing it from suing, the result may be that ne will receive nothing for what he has already done, and that the other party will receive the benefit of the part performance without paying for it. If the breach goes to the essence of the contract, the party committing it cannot complain of this result; but if it is slight and unimportant, and especially if it happens after the performance is nearly completed, he may justly say that the penalty is out of all proportion to the wrong.”

After pointing out that an express condition is to be enforced according to its letter, because tbe result of agreement, tbe learned author proceeds:

“An implied condition, on the other hand, is the creature of the court, and the court is therefore responsible for its consequences. If it is permitted to work injustice, the only excuse for the court is that it is unavoidable; and, if it is permitted to work more injustice than it prevents, not even that excuse is available, for, assuming it to be true, it shows that the condition has no right to exist. This responsibility rests upon the court, not only because an implied condition is its creature, but because, being its creature, the court has the power of molding it as the purposes of it require. * * * Influenced by the foregoing considerations, courts of law have adopted the principles of courts of equity (so fax as theix procedure would admit of their doing so) in respect to breaches of implied conditions after part performance; and therefore, if the breach goes to the essence, they permit it to be set up as a defense; but, if it does not go to the essence, they permit the plaintiff to recover, and leave the defendant to his cross action.”

Tbe principles above stated are illustrated in many cases, to some of wbicb we may properly refer. In Leopold v. Salkey, 89 Ill. 412, tbe action was for damages for breach of a contract of employment. By tbe contract, tbe plaintiff agreed to serve tbe defendant as superintendent in a mercantile business for three years, at a fixed salary. Tbe defendant pleaded that tbe plaintiff, after entering tbe employment, was absent two weeks. Tbe plaintiff showed that be bad been arrested, without fault on bis part, and detained in jail for tbe two weeks of his absence, and that, on bis release, be at once tendered bis services. Tbe defense was sustained, on tbe ground that tbe two weeks’ absence from duty was a breach that went to tbe essence of tbe contract. In Johnson v. Walker, 155 Mass. 258, 29 N. E. 522, an action to recover tbe balance due upon a contract to work for defendants for a- year as foreman in a shoe shop, it appeared that *363the plaintiff’, after working a part of the year, and receiving pay therefor at the stipulated rate, became ill, and was necessarily absent from work seven weeks, and that when, upon recovery, he offered to resume work, he was informed that he had been discharged, and a man hired in his place. Judgment was given for defendants. The court said:

“Whether a temporary illness of a few hours, or, in some instances, perhaps, of a lew (lays, would in all eases come within the implied condition, we need not consider. In the present case, the plaintiff was sick about seven weeks, and during all that time, as the exceptions state, was incapacitated from work in the defendants’ shop. We think that, as matter of law, this constituted such an interruption of and failure to perform his contract, on the part of the plaintiff, that the defendants were justified in terminating it and employing another person in his place.”

In Powell v. Sewell, 59 Minn. 406, 61 N. W. 335, a patient made a contract with a physician for a year’s treatment, giving his note for the stipulated compensation. In a suit on the note, the defense was that defendant had applied to the physician for treatment, and could not see him because the physician was ill. Sothing was said to defendant as to how long he might have to wait for plaintiff’s services. It was held that this was a good defense to the note. In Poussard v. Spiers, 1 Q. B. Div. 410, the action was on a contract for the employment of the plaintiff’s wife as a leading opera singer, for a season of three months. She attended most of the rehearsals, but was by illness prevented from attending the first three or four public performances. It was held, as matter of law, that the plaintiff’s inability to perform at the opening and early performances went to the root of the matter, and justified the defendants in rescinding the contract. In Fillieul v. Armstrong, 7 Adol. & E. 557, on the other hand, it was held that the failure of a French teacher engaged for a year to report for duty for three days after a vacation did not justify his discharge. In Bettini v. Gye, 1 Q. B. Div. 183, the adion was for breach of a contract to employ plaintiff as a singer for a season of three months in theaters, halls, and drawing rooms. The plaintiff stipulated not to sing in England, for three months before the engagement, and agreed to be in London six days before March 30th for rehearsals. lie was detained by illness so that he was four days late, and could only give two days for rehearsals. It was held that this breach did not go to the root of the matter, and did not constitute a defense; that, if the contract had been for a season of opera, rehearsals would have been most important, and failure to attend them might have been á fatal breach, but here the singing was to he of a great variety. More than this, the singer had been obliged to abstain from earning money by his voice in England for three months before the rehearsals without compensation, which afforded a strong argument for saying that subsequent stipulations were not intended to be conditions precedent, unless the nature of the thing strongly showed they must be so. The reasoning of Mr. Justice Blackburn in the last case suggests one of the considerations which should be very persuasive with a court in determining whether a covenant involves an implied condition, and that is the extent of the penalty to which *364such a construction must subject the defaulting party. As Prof, Langdell says in his Summary of the Law of Contracts (section 168):

“Tie following rules are to be taken,'however, only as illustrations of the more general rule that a part performance, in order to raise an equity in the plaintiff’s favor, must substantially change his position, to his own detriment and to the defendant’s benefit; or, if not to the defendant’s benefit, at least to his own detriment. It seems, therefore, that the slightest breach of condition will authorize the throwing up of a contract, whenever it can be done without putting the plaintiff in any worse position substantially than he would be in if the contract had not been made.”

. in the light of the foregoing authorities, we come to consider the case at bar. It is a case of part performance and a default. Is the default a breach of an implied condition? Does the failure to convey the patents go to the root and essence of the contract? Ford was seeking to establish a great business, the life of which was intended to- extend far beyond the three years of Watson’s employment. Watson was experimenting. His successful discoveries Ford necessarily counted on as material aids to success, and it was of the highest importance that he should secure such a title to those discoveries that he might use them and prevent others from using them. Previous success in the same business had been due to patented processes and machinery, and it was vital that Ford should protect his interest in discoveries and improvements he was paying so much to secure. Should Watson retain the right, after a successful development of the business, to prevent the use of such improvements as he might invent, it would materially interfere with the success of the enterprise. The agreement that Ford should share in the ownership of the patents was a material part of the consideration for which he was to pay Watson’s salary and stock bonus. The contract affords no method by which any particular part of the consideration can be apportioned to the conveyance of the patents. That was merely part of the service, and an important incident to the devotion of all of Watson’s time and skill to the new business. Watson received monthly pay for his services down to the day of his discharge. A construction of the contract which makes his refusal to convey the patents a breach of an implied condition does not visit him with the penalty of loss of pay for any work actually done. He had a chance of receiving a stock bonus; but this was remote and contingent, for Ford had the option, at the end of six months after actual operation began, to terminate the contract if he thought it not to be a commercial success1. Considering the importance of the patent rights in the business, and the lightness of the penalty imposed for .breach of the condition if implied, we hold that the breach went to the essence or root of the contract, and that the defendant, Ford, was entitled with the covenants on his part to be performed. Cadwell v. Blake, 6 Gray, 402, 411. The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

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