Case ID: misc_14/html/0060-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Bischoff, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

George Maitland et al., Plaintiffs, v. Henry P. Drew et al., Defendants
    (New York Common Pleas
    Special Term,
    September, 1895.)
    An answer in' an action for royalties, which alleges that after the making' -of the license the patent was .adjudged invalid, without stating the date of the adjudication, is insufficient to constitute a defense.
    An allegation that the patent is" invalid is "no defense to an action for royalties," where there is no averment of notice of repudiation nor allegation that the patent has been judicially adjudged invalid or officially revoked.
    Payments of royalties made before an adjudication of invalidity;of the. patent cannot, be recovered. " • "
    
      Issues of law upon demurrer to separate defenses and counterclaim contained in answer of defendant May.
    
      A. Walker Otis, for plaintiff and demurrer.
    
      Charles Meyers, for defendants, opposed.
   Bischoff, J.

To an action for royalties alleged to have become due under the license of certain patent rights to the defendants, the latter, by answer, after certain admissions and denials, interposed two separate defenses and a counterclaim, and to these the plaintiffs demur.

The contract between, the parties was entered into on or about November 1, 1891, and the royalties in suit are based upon sales of the patented articles by the licensees for a period from October 1, 1893, to January 1, 1895, amounting to $450 for such period. -

The first separate defense proceeds upon the allegations that the contract of license was induced through the representation that the patents, under which the royalties in suit accrued, were valid, whereas such patents were void, “ and thereafter, by a judgment by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, it was declared that the said letters patent * * * were invalid,” etc.

The second separate defense simply sets forth the fact that the patents were void at the time When the contract was made.

The counterclaim is for the recovery back of royalties acto ally paid by defendants to plaintiffs prior to the date when the patents were declared void. "

It is well settled that a licensee of a patent, under a royalty contract, cannot proceed with the manufacture and sale of the articles patented and afterwards resist a claim for the royaltiés upon the ground that the patent was invalid, unless he had given notice of his intention to repudiate the contract, or the patent had been judicially declared void prior to the accrual of such royalties, in which latter ease the notice is unnecessary (Marston v. Swett,. 82 N. Y. 534), and proof of the actual annulment of the patent is very material upon the •question of the amount of royalties due the licensor. Id.

Neither in their defenses or counterclaim do these defendants allege the giving of notice of repudiation at any time, and only in the first defense is the adjudication declaring the patent void alluded to.

But here we have merely the averment that the adjudication was made after the date of the contract, and nothing appears wherefrom it may be inferred that this event took place prior to the accrual of all the royalties, or of any. Proof ■of the date of this judicial act might have considerable. bearing upon the issue of the amount due the plaintiffs under the ■contract if the issue were properly raised, but, failing an allegation of such date, proof would be required that it might be .shown whether or not the matter constituted a defense. Time, when material to the statement, must be pleaded. People ex rel. Crane v. Ryder, 12 N. Y. 436.

As to substance, the allegations of a pleading are to be taken .strictly against the pleader, although liberality as to form ■obtains under the Code, and it is not to be assumed that the date in question was prior to the 1st . of January, 1895, in support of the defense. I have no judicial knowledge of the judgments of the federal courts. ■ t .

The demurrer to this defense is to be sustained.

The second defense refers to no other allegation of the answer for its support. Hence it must stand or fall as pleaded (Boyd v. McDonald, 35 N. Y. St. Repr. 484; Hammond v. Earle, 58 How. 426), and it is insufficient in that, there is no averment of notice of repudiation nor an allegation that the patent was made invalid by judicial decree or ■official revocation. Marston v. Swett, supra, 66 N. Y. 206; Saltus v. Belford Co., 133 id. 499; Skinner v. Wood M. & R. Mach. Co., 140 id. 217.

So, too, of the counterclaim. The payments sought to be. recovered back are alleged to have been made-previous to the ..adjudication declaring the patents void, and, therefore, the «defendants can make no claim to them. They received what they paid for, the right to privileges under what the parties: at the time took to be valid patents. Cases supra.

Demurrer sustained, with costs. Leave to the defendant to amend upon payment of costs within twenty days.

Ordered accordingly.