Wiggin v. Consolidated Adjustable Shoe Co.

161 Mass. 597 | Mass. | 1894

Morton, J.

This is an action for the breach by the defendant of a written contract between it and the plaintiff. At the date of the contract the defendant was the owner of a patented invention relating to boots and shoes, and was the sole manufacturer of boots and shoes containing the invention, and was seeking to introduce them into new territory. For that purpose it made the contract with the plaintiff. We infer that it made similar contracts with other parties for a like purpose. Under the contract with the plaintiff, it appointed him “ its sole agent for the sale of shoes manufactured by it . . . in the cides 'of Minneapolis and St. Paul, and the counties of Hennepin,' Ramsey, Washington, and Anoka,” Minnesota, and agreed that he should have “ the sole and exclusive sale of said shoes in said territory.” It also agreed that it would protect him “ from all infringements and infringement suits on account of said shoes.” The contract was dated January, 1889, and was to run five) years. In October, 1889, another person began to offer for sale in Minneapolis the same kind of shoes which the plaintiff was selling, and which the defendant manufactured. He offered them at a price less than that at which tlie plaintiff was selling. The plaintiff notified the defendant, and called upon it to stop the interference. The defendant made efforts to find out where the shoes that were thus offered for sale were obtained, and it finally appeared that they had been bought in Chicago and taken to Minneapolis, but had not been sold by any agent of the defendant to the party offering them for sale in Minneapolis. The defendant did what it could, by remonstrance and by circulars cautioning the public against purchasing any shoes not sold by the plaintiff, to protect him, but instituted no suit or proceedings against the party. The plaintiff contends that the defendant is liable under the clauses in the contract already referred to. We do not think it is. The defendant appointed the plaintiff its sole agent for the territory described, and agreed in effect, as we construe the contract, that he, so far as it was concerned, should have the exclusive sale of said boots and shoes in said territory. It did not warrant nor guarantee him against any sale there by anybody else of its shoes. It agreed in substance that nobody else should have the right from it to sell its shoes there, and that it would not sell shoes there *599itself; and it is not claimed that the defendant authorized or made the sale of which the plaintiff complains. Generally such a contract would give the party selected a monopoly within the territory described, though unaccompanied with any restrictions on the place of re-sale; especially when applied to articles like boots and shoes. But the contract especially provides that the plaintiff is to have “ the right to make all sales or fill any orders that shall come to him in his regular place of business in said territory, but not in any other place, and . . . shall not solicit orders or canvass for trade outside of said territory.”' It cannot fairly be supposed that this right was confined to the plaintiff alone. The contract upon its face, therefore, impliedly gave him notice that the defendant did not undertake to warrant or guarantee him against the presence of goods bought from an agent or party elsewhere. No doubt the defendant could have guaranteed the plaintiff against any sale by any one else within this territory, and could have restricted its licenses so that no boots or shoes could be sold in such a manner as to interfere with the sale of other licensees. Hobbie v. Jennison, 149 U. S. 355. But it has not done so.

The agreement that the defendant “ shall protect ” the plaintiff “ from all infringements and infringement suits on account of said shoes,” means obviously that, if anybody sues the plaintiff, or makes a claim against him on the ground that the patent contained in said shoes infringes upon another patent, or if anybody else undertakes to sell shoes within the plaintiff’s territory that infringe upon the defendant’s patent, then the defendant will protect the plaintiff against such suit or claim, and will vindicate its patent.

We think the rulings of the presiding justice were correct, and that the exceptions must be overruled, and it is so ordered.

Exceptions overruled.

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