Court Opinion

ID: 8194226
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:17:22.201306+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:42.655510
License: Public Domain

The following opinion was filed May 1, 1923:
Jones, J.
We are satisfied that the finding of the trial court that the plaintiff used such diligence as was required by the contract up to the time of the notice of July 29, 1918, was abundantly supported by the evidence. We shall' not detail at any length the testimony upon which this finding was based. The testimony shows that soon after the execution of the contract the plaintiff began an extensive sj^stem of advertising in Europe, the Orient, and South American countries. He sent letters and circulars to between four and five hundred American consuls soliciting information and assistance. He also corresponded with commercial attachés, and it appears from the voluminous record that these correspondents freely responded, giving the names of firms which might become customers. Other lists were obtained from export houses and chambers of commerce in various foreign cities. This information was followed up by letters *330and circulars sent to those who might be prospective customers. The plaintiff’s work was interfered with until May, 1917, because the Erwin Company and the Erwin Manufacturing Company could not furnish salable extinguishers.
Arrangements for manufacture abroad were not consummated owing to the peculiar conditions due to the war, such as the lack of labor and inability to get raw material for the manufacture of steel. In some instances foreign governments would not permit labor or raw material to be used outside of war work unless it was necessary. The French government would not permit the importation of fire extinguishers during the war. In some instances, owing to war conditions, orders from' foreign countries could not be filled for nearly two years.
During all this period no complaint or criticism was made by'the Erwin Company. It was kept fully apprised of the situation and knew the difficulties under which the plaintiff was operating. The undisputed testimony shows that the president of the Erwin Company suggested and consented that certain payments and a report which the plaintiff was willing to make be deferred until after his vacation, and that during his vacation and absence in July, 1918, without giving the notice to which he was entitled as a stockholder, a meeting was held and the notice relied on as a termination was directed to be given. Under these circumstances the recitals in the notice of termination were so grossly untrue that the inference is irresistible that the Erwin Company had different reasons from those assigned for seeking to terminate the contract.
One of these reasons appears in the fact found by the court that prior to this time the Erwin Company and the Erwin Manufacturing Company had been negotiating with • Eastern parties concerning alleged infringements, which negotiations led up to' the contracts made in November and December, 1918, and which culminated in the settlement of *331the suit by a stipulated decree and the consolidation of all. their interests.
In our-opinion the finding of the trial court on this branch of the case was fully warranted, and the court would have been justified in finding that the notice was given in bad faith and in utter 'disregard of the plaintiff’s, rights. The subsequent conduct of the Erwin Company in receiving reports and checks for sales while plaintiff was continuing in performance of the contract without objection up to December 17th indicated that the company had little faith in the efficacy of the notice it had served.
We now come to the question whether the trial court erred in refusing to adopt its tentative findings decreeing specific performance. On December 17, 1918, the Erwin Company returned to the plaintiff certain checks already mentioned, and in the letter returning them the plaintiff was notified that the Erwin Company had been advised by its counsel that the contract of 1916 had been terminated. It seems that after this notice the .plaintiff proceeded no further in carrjdng on the work in foreign countries. Between July 29th and this date he had carried on the work without objection. In the interval there had been conferences between the plaintiff and officers of the Erzuin Company in which he had made objection to the notice in which they had declared the contract terminated and canceled.
During this period the negotiations had been going on between the Erzvin Company and the Eastern parties which terminated in the agreements by which all their interests were combined. In January, 1919, after the organization of the Foamite Fir'efoam Company, that company sent its representatives abroad to introduce and sell in foreign countries the extinguishers which had theretofore been sold by plaintiff. On February 25, 1919, the Foamite Firefoam Company notified the plaintiff that he should not continue to infringe its patent rights or trade-marks, he had nq right. *332to manufacture or sell any fire apparatus of the foam type. On the same day it sent a letter to the plaintiff requesting him to notify a prospective client that he, the plaintiff, had no further rights in connection with the business., and that he would forward a certain order for it to fill; that if this were done it would obviate the necessity of explaining the true situation. On February 24, 1919, the Foamite Firefoam Company wrote to the firm which had been manufacturing the extinguishers as follows: “that as the articles in question are protected by patents, our designs, drawings, patterns, and dies are hot to be used for any work except that ordered by ourselves, nor are the manufactured articles to be sold to any one other than ourselves or upon our order.”
This letter indicated that the manufacturing concern had already been manufacturing for the Foamite Firefoam Company. The manufacturing company acceded to this demand.
This action was commenced March 4, 1919. In the counterclaim of the Foamite Firefoam Company that company prayed that the plaintiff be perpetually enjoined from selling, or offering or soliciting' the sale of, any of the fire-extinguishing apparatus in which he had been dealing and from representing that he was offering for sale any of the same.
When the letters mentioned above were written, the Foam-ite Firefoam Company had absorbed the business and assets of the Erwin Manufacturing Company and the Erwin Company and was planning its campaign for extensive sales in foreign territory in which plaintiff had been operating. Before December 17, 1918, when plaintiff was notified that no more royalties would be received by the Erwin Company, he had sold extinguishers in foreign countries, to the amount of about $18,500, and the sales sheets show that the greater part of such sales had been made during the latter part of the period during which he had been at work. The earlier part of the period had been used in giving publicity to the sales, and after such publicity had been given, and the war *333and the obstacles occasioned thereby had ceased, his work had progressed very favorably.
It is claimed by the defendants that notwithstanding the sale to the Foamite Firefoam Company, its interference with the plans of the plaintiff, and its entering into active competition in the territory which had been assigned to him, it was the duty of the plaintiff to continue his operations during the pendency of the suit, although he had been notified that no more royalties would be received and that the Erwin Company and its successor regarded the contract as terminated and canceled, and this was the view accepted by the trial court in the final findings of fact and conclusions of law. It is claimed by the defendants that this was necessary in order to preserve rights under the patent laws of foreign countries, and necessary to preserve his own rights, if any he had, to specific performance of the contract.
On the other hand, it is claimed by the plaintiff that the conduct of the Erwin Company and its successor in interfering with and preventing sales by its action in treating the contract as terminated and canceled rendered it unnecessary and practically impossible for the plaintiff to carry on his operations in the manner provided by the contract.
It is. contended by counsel for the defendants that the notice of July 29, 1918, and the refusal to receive royalties and recognize the rights of the plaintiff did not constitute a renunciation of the contract; that there was nothing for the Erwin Company and its successor to perform except to receive royalties and observe certain other independent stipulations, the breach of which could be compensated in damages; and that all the covenants on the part of the licensor were independent covenants not going to the whole consideration of the contract.
In the contract of 1916 the Erwin Company agreed that the extinguisher and its processes did not infringe upon any other letters patent of the United States; that it would at its own expense assume the defense of all suits for infringe*334ment, and prosecute at its own cost any infringement of the patents issued by foreign countries and defend any suits which might be brought. The company further agreed that all improvements upon the extinguisher or the processes used in its connection during the continuation of the license should be included within the terms of the contract, and that it would at all times supply plaintiff with copies of all testimonial letters or instruments it might receive for his use in advertising and selling, and that it would promptly deliver to the plaintiff, without compensation except the royalty, all inquiries or orders from jobbers, commission houses, and from all sources which related to extinguishers to be shipped out of the United States, and that it would pay all taxes against the patents in countries covered by the license, and that it would furnish the plaintiff with all credentials and other evidence of the rights conferred upon him in order to enable him to -be authorized as such licensee in other countries.
It will be seen that in entering into this contract both parties had in mind the ambitious plan to build up a large business in many foreign countries. This may be gathered from the contract itself, and especially from the conduct of the plaintiff and the Erwin Company during the period intervening between the date of the contract" and the notice of cancellation. The parties had actively co-operated with each other and in the most friendly manner had rendered mutual assistance. It is also clear that a long campaign was contemplated, lasting at least five years, with the privilege of renewal by the plaintiff.
It is the claim of the defendant that the covenants made by the parties to the contract were entirely independent of each other, and in the briefs there is much discussion of the question whether the respective covenants were independent or whether they were mutual and reciprocal. It is intimated by counsel for defendants that after the execution, of the contract the licensor had practically nothing to do except *335receive the royalties and commissions, and that the covenants were so entirely independent that even if there was a breach by defendant the plaintiff was bound to continue performance. There is much discussion of this question in the briefs of the respective counsel and many cases are cited on the subject. Many of the cases relate to sales of property or real estate. None of them relates to facts at all similar to those here involved. An adequate discussion of these cases would involve long recitals of the facts in the cases cited, and seems hardly necessary. The following statements in a standard work on contracts express the general rule on the subject:
“While the courts now assume that covenants are dependent rather than independent, and concurrent on the one hand rather than precedent and subsequent on the other, this rule, like the other rules of modern law on this subject, is merely a guide to aid the court in ascertaining the intention of the parties; and it is not a rigid rule of substantive law. Whether covenants are dependent or independent, and whether they are concurrent on the one hand or precedent and subsequent on the other, depends entirely upon the intention of the parties shown by the entire contract as construed in the light of the circumstances of the case, the nature of the contract, the relation of the parties thereto, and other evidence which is admissible to aid the court in determining the intention of the parties. While a number of tests have been laid down, and while they are of great help in ascertaining the intention of the parties, they are not, at modern law, arbitrary rules, but merely guides to aid the court in discovering the intention of the parties; and accordingly they are not conclusive in every case.- The fact that a covenant is referred to as a condition precedent, or as a precedent covenant, is not of itself conclusive as to its character. It is the order in which the. parties intend the covenants to be performed, and not the name that the parties give to them, which determines whether they are precedent covenants or not. The intention of the parties must be ascertained from the contract as a whole, and specific provisions must be ignored if-they are inconsistent with the general intent. While the fact that a *336covenant goes to a part only of the consideration, or that the covenants are to be performed at different times without any apparent relation between the performance of the one and the performance of the other, may tend to show that such covenants are independent, neither of these rules can be regarded as arbitrary and unbending; and if the contract as a whole shows that the covenants are dependent, effect will be given to such intention, although one of the covenants goes to a part of the consideration only, and although the contract provides that different covenants are to be performed at different times without any apparent relation between the performance of the two. On the other hand, the injustice of the result that may follow in some cases from treating a covenant as dependent, may induce the court to construe it as independent, although in outward form it may seem to be dependent.
“While there is occasionally a lack of harmony in construing some provisions, as is often the case when questions of construction are presented, the courts agree that arbitrary tests must be discarded. Special emphasis is placed upon good sense or common sense as the best guide in ascertaining the relation of the covenants. The order in which the covenants appear in the contract is generally regarded as immaterial; while there is apparently some authority to the contrary. The fact that the contract provides that one party shall ‘first’ do' a certain act does- not of itself show conclusively that such covenant is intended as a precedent covenant. A covenant may be precedent as to one or more covenants to be performed by the adversary party, and concurrent or subsequent as to others. Under a building contract requiring payment by instalments at certain specified dates and requiring the building to be completed at an intervening date, the completion of the building was a condition precedent to the payment of the instalments due after the date fixed for completion.” 5 Page, Contracts (2d ed.) § 2948.
We are convinced that the covenants were not so far independent of each other that under all the circumstances the defendants could breach the contract in the manner they did and' still insist that the plaintiff should continue performance during the pendency of the suit.
*337There is one important feature of this case which distinguishes it from those referred to by counsel for defendants. The express covenants in the contract have already been stated. There was also an implied agreement by both parties that neither would do any act preventing or tending to prevent its performance. The rule was well stated by Mr. Justice Dodge in the opinion in Manning v. Galland-Henning P. M. D. Mfg. Co. 141 Wis. 199, 203, 124 N. W. 291:
“But the grant from defendant to plaintiff’s assignor was also a contract. It granted an exclusive right to make, use, and vend. In all contracts granting property rights, or rights of conduct, there is an implied agreement on the part of the assignor that he will do no affirmative act to derogate from his grant. That is implied in the very grant itself. In the nature of things it is inconceivable that the minds of the parties have met on basis of a grant of something and, at the same time, on negation of that grant, in whole or in part. This principle is very old in the law and has been applied to a great variety of circumstances; in many cases being carried to the point of declaring to be implied covenants going much further. The grantor or lessor of land, in absence of statute, covenants for the quiet enjoyment of the property demised, and, even where statutes have negatived such implication, he is still held to have covenanted not to derogate from such grant by his own acts. A contract for exclusive agency implies that the principal will commit no act invasive of the exclusiveness of such agency. The grantor of an exclusive license under a patent is in the same position and subject to the same rule, as has often been decided.”
In that opinion many Wisconsin and other cases are cited as authority for this familiar rule and it is unnecessary to cite them again. This rule is not confined to actual and successful prevention of performance by one of the parties.
“It is as effective an excuse of performance of a condition that the promisor has hindered performance as that he has actually prevented it. The early decisions are to the contrary, but it seems evident that the same principle of justice which precludes a promisor from taking advantage of a *338condition the performance of which he himself has prevented, precludes him also from setting up a condition the performance of which he has made more difficult. ‘Where a party stipulates that another shall do' a certain thing, he thereby impliedly promises that he will himself do nothing -which will hinder or obstruct that other in doing that thing and indeed if the situation is such that the co-operation of one party is an essential prerequisite to performance by another, there is not only a condition implied in fact qualifying the promise of the latter, but also an implied promise by the former to give the necessary co-operation.” 2 Williston, Contracts, pp. 1307, 1308.
Instead of continuing to co-operate with the plaintiff as it had agreed, the Erwin Company, without the knowledge of the plaintiff, entered into an arrangement with the Eastern, parties which from its very nature would tend to supplant him unless his rights were given consideration. Without cause it notified him that his contract was canceled and has ever since based its claim on that notice as well as on the other notice of June 24, 1920. Instead of defending actions to protect plaintiff from infringement, the Erwin Company ‘and the Erwin Manufacturing Company assumed to sell to the Foamite Firefoam Company all their rights, domestic and foreign, to the trade-name “Firefoam,” thus facilitating and encouraging the bringing of actions against the plaintiff. The letters of the Foamite Firefoam Company after it assumed control contained the implied threat that he would be prosecuted if he continued the sale.
Although the contract did not limit the plaintiff in obtaining his extinguishers to any particular manufacturing company, the notice to the firm with which the business had been carried on, and complied with by that company, to furnish no more extinguishers to the plaintiff, was another fact tending to show that so far as possible prosecution of his work would be thwarted at every stage. The prayer for injunction preventing plaintiff from continuing the sales was another illustration of the deliberate purpose to prevent him from carrying out the contract. The plaintiff found *339that instead of having the co-operation and assistance of the Erwin Company and its. successor he was. to have their determined resistance.
The Foamite Firefoam Company had taken an assignment of the trade-marks of the Erzvin Company with full notice, not implied but express, of the rights, and claims of the plaintiff, and yet it proceeded to enter his territory and carry on a large business with which plaintiff could have •little hope of competing. By several years of labor and considerable expenditure of money he had given in foreign countries publicity to his undertaking and at the time of the so-called cancellation was in a situation to reap the profits of his industry. The Foamite Firefoam Company entered the same field, and at the time of the trial had made sales of portable extinguishers amounting, according to its exhibits, to over $247,000.
It is argued in behalf of the Foamite Firefoam Company that it entered the foreign field to preserve rights to the trade-names, but their persistent efforts to prevent the plaintiff from carrying on his work and the apparent financial success of their operations indicate to us that they were influenced by far different motives. It is also argued that notwithstanding the obstacles in his way the plaintiff should have brought suits to enjoin defendants if he believed they were interfering with his rights, instead of ceasing his endeavors on the work. He asked for such an injunction in the present suit. There is no claim that he had not prosecuted the action with as much diligence as possible. . The suit was in progress before judgment for over three years. The record consists of over 2,500 typewritten pages and the exhibits are correspondingly voluminous. If he had instituted other actions he could not have relied on the findings of the court in this action, since they were unsigned and expressly made only tentative findings.
On the assumption that plaintiff abandoned the contract and his operations without cause, the argument of defendants’ counsel that such abandonment would preclude a re*340covery is entirely logical, but we cannot agree with the premise thus assumed. Abandonment is purely a question of intent. As said by Mr. Justice Brown :
“To establish the defense of abandonment it is necessary to show not only acts indicating a practical abandonment, but an actual intent to abandon. Acts which unexplained would be sufficient to establish an abandonment may be anáwered by showing that there never was an intention to give up and relinquish the right claimed.” Saxlehner v. Eisner & Mendelson Co. 179 U. S. 19, 31, 21 Sup. Ct. 7, 45 Lawy. Ed. 60.
In view of the facts which have been stated, we conclude that he could not continue successfully, during the pendency of the suit, to carry on his work and maintain business relations with those who refused to accept royalties or cooperate with him in any manner and who were actively resisting his efforts. When he found that it was practically impossible to carry out the contract he made tender of performance and kept the tender good until the judgment was rendered. In the complaint in this action he declared that he was ready, willing, able, and anxious to carry out and perform the terms of the contract. At the final hearing the offer was renewed and consent was given that the court might make any decree there granted conditional upon performance.
From what has preceded it follows that we cannot sustain certain findings of fact niade by the trial court. Among those findings are the following: that it was necessary for the Foamite Firefoam Company, by reason of plaintiff’s failure to' perform the contract after December 17, 1918, to enter the foreign field to protect and preserve the subject of the contract from lossnnd ruin; that the Erwin Company did not intend to renounce or repudiate the contract by the first notice given and that it believed it had the right to declare a forfeiture of the contract; that plaintiff had in no wise carried out or performed the contract since December *34117, 1918; that no act of the defendants had prevented such performance; that plaintiff could, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, have carried out and performed said contract, to at least the same, and probably to considerably greater, extent than he did prior to that date; that on June 25, 1920, the Erwin Company, pursuant to the provisions of the contract and for good and just cause, duly gave written notice of forfeiture to the plaintiff effective July 25, 1920.
The trial judge evidently gave the case very careful consideration, and if the findings had been based for the most part on disputed questions of fáct we might feel that they should not be disturbed. But the facts are almost wholly proven by documentary evidence and are practically without conflict. We are, however, unable to agree with the trial court as to the rules of law to be applied.
It is claimed by counsel for defendants that the contract of April 4, 1916, expired by its own limitation at the end of five years because the plaintiff failed to diligently perform and failed to exercise his option for renewal. The question of abandonment and diligence on the part of the plaintiff has already been discussed. The contract granted the exclusive right for five years and contained the following clause:
“The licensor hereby grants to the licensee an exclusive license to manufacture, use, and sell the said portable fire extinguisher within and throughout all countries, other than the United States óf America, for the term of five years from the date hereof, such licensee to have the right to grant sub-licenses for said purposes in said foreign countries; if the licensee shall fulfil all the terms and conditions of this agreement within said period of five years, an extension of this agreement shall be granted to said licensee for the life of the patent or patents described above upon the same terms and conditions of this agreement.”
It is argued by defendants’ counsel that this should be construed as a present grant for five years and an agree*342ment, upon certain conditions, to make a further grant; that plaintiff was under no obligation to renew the contract, and that after the expiration of the agreement it would have been incumbent on him to do some affirmative act indicating his intent to renew. Counsel cite Adams & Westlake Mfg. Co. v. Westlake, 53 Fed. 588. In that case defendant agreed to renew, if requested. Plaintiff requested a renewal, but he requested a six-year renewal instead of the five he was entitled to, and the attorney who wrote the request signed it as attorney for the plaintiff and also for a company with which defendant had no contract. It was held that the request was not for a renewal in accordance with the terms of the contract and that the contract had expired.
It will be .observed that in the instant case it is not provided, that on performance of the conditions the licensor will then malee a hew agreement or grant, but it is provided that “an extension of this agreement shall be granted.” No notice or request was stipulated in the contract. If the plaintiff had not been hindered and prevented from performing the contract there can be no doubt that by continuing to perform after the five years the contract would ipso facto have been extended. From a colloquy between counsel at the final hearing it appears, that on June 24, 1920, when the second notice purporting to abrogate the contract was served, it was agreed that it was unnecessary for plaintiff to continue to tender royalties, as they would not be accepted. It seems to have been agreed that the legal situation should be just the same as if the parties had argued the case the next day after this second notice of termination and the court had made its findings; that clients should not suffer or their rights be affected by reason of delay in presenting the matter to the court. It is evident to us from the entire history of the litigation that it was the purpose of the plaintiff to rely on his right to extension of the contract during the life of the patents and that this purpose was well known to -defendants.
*343It is also plain that the conduct of the defendants, from the time the litigation commenced and before, demonstrated that defendants would not have consented to any extension, on their theory that the contract was terminated. Any notice of intention to extend the contract would have been a mere useless ceremony, and no such notice was required. Fergen v. Lyons, 162 Wis. 131, 137, 155 N. W. 935.
In the judgment following the findings of fact and conclusions of law it was adjudged that the contract of April 4, 1916, was terminated as of July 25, 1920; that the rights of the plaintiff therein, except the right to an accounting, ceased to exist as of July 25, 1920, and that the plaintiff has no right to the use of the word “Firefoam” as a trademark or in any connection with his trade-name as relating to fire extinguishers; and that he be perpetually enjoined from exercising any of the rights granted by the contract and from using the word “Firefoam” as a trade-mark or in connection with his trade-name as relating to fire-extinguishing devices.
This judgment was based on the ground that plaintiff had abandoned the undertaking since December 17, 1918. We have found that there was no such abandonment by the plaintiff of his rights and that he was excused after that period from carrying on operation under the contract by the conduct of the defendants. We therefore conclude that the judgment to the effect that the contract was so terminated and that the plaintiff be enjoined from continuing sales cannot stand.
Although the court made no specific finding on the question whether plaintiff by his operations in foreign countries infringed on the trade-name rights of the Foomite Firefoam Company, the issue was raised and argued by the respective counsel and decided adversely to the plaintiff.
The Foamite Firefoam Company acquired all the property and rights of the Erwin Company. This included, according to their contracts, the foreign rights for the sale *344of “Firefoam,” but these rights were covered by Gessler’s contract and were subject thereto. Thus the Poamite Fire-foam Company acquired from the Ertvin Company no rights which had been contracted to Gessler, and by virtue of that contract the Erwin Company could sell nothing' but the domestic rights in “Firefoam.”
Gessler entered the foreign field in 1917 in good faith, and had expended money and labor and established a promising trade. The Foamite Firefoam Company and its predecessors made no' concerted effort to get foreign trade until January, 1919. Hence the rights of Gessler were paramount to those of the. Foamite Firefoam Company. His rights were not affected, even though, in the United States, “Firefoam” was an infringement of “Foamite.” A trade-mark right is not a right in gross. The right to its exclusive use depends upon its actual use in any locality, and priority of use outweighs priority of invention.
“The adoption of a trade-mark does not, at least in the absence of some valid legislation enacted for the purpose, project the right of protection in advance of the extension of the trade, or operate as a claim of territorial rights over areas into which it thereafter may be deemed desirable to extend the trade.” United Drug Co. v. Theodore Rectanus Co. 248 U. S. 90, 98, 39 Sup. Ct. 48; Hanover S. M. Co. v. Allen & Wheeler Co. 208 Fed. 513; Thomas G. Carroll & Son Co. v. McIlvaine & Baldwin, Inc. 171 Fed. 125; Columbia M. Co. v. Alcorn, 150 U. S. 460, 463, 14 Sup. Ct. 151; Nims, Unfair Competition (2d ed.) p. 412.
Since Gessler’s rights were paramount in foreign countries, the sales by the Foamite Firefoam Company were infringements.
The court found that some confusion had arisen because of the use by plaintiff of the trade-name “Firefoam” and the use by defendant Foamite Firefoam Company of the trade-name “Foamite.” Plaintiff was not concerned with any confusion which arose within the United States, since his license was not effective there. Defendants showed no *345instance where there had been confusion of names in foreign countries subsequent to the consolidation, and, if they had, it would have only tended to prove that plaintiff’s and not defendants’ rights were threatened.
Considerable testimony was given bearing on the question whether a 'certain “three-chamber engine type” of extinguisher was included in the contract of April 4, 1916. The court found on this subject: “That the so-called ‘three-chamber engine type’ of extinguisher shown in the evidence is not covered by plaintiff’s license contract in suit, for the following reasons: (a) it is not a ‘portable’ extinguisher within the meaning of that term as it was used and understood by the parties to the license agreement at the time it was entered into; (bj the patents upon said ‘three-chamber engine type’ of extinguisher were never owned by defendant the Erwin Company, nor did the latter ever have any shop rights therein; (c) the said ‘three-chamber engine type’ of extinguisher is not an ‘improvement’ upon the types of extinguishers covered by the license agreement,” and that plaintiff was not entitled to any damages by reason of such manufacture and sale. On this question there was much conflict in the testimony, and we see no.reason for disturbing the finding of the court. The same is true with respect to findings 25, 26, 27, and 28, which relate to certain specified sales.
Our conclusions are that the contract between the Erivin Company and plaintiff was not terminated by the notices relied on by the defendants; that it did not expire by its own limitation; that the contract is still in full force and effect; that the defendants the Erwin Company and Foamite Firefoam Company should be adjudged to specifically perform the same; that they should be enjoined from interfering of preventing performance by the plaintiff. We approve the following portion of the fourth conclusion of law:
“That the plaintiff is entitled to an accounting from the defendants the Erwin Company, Erwin Manufacturing Company, and Foamite Firefoam Company, and to judg*346ment for damages due him on sales on all types of portable fire-extinguishing apparatus and machines other than the so-termed ‘three-chamber engine type’ in countries other than the United States, as herein defined, from April 4, 1916, to December 17, 1918, less the royalties stipulated in said contract to be computed for said period upon such sales and to be not less than the minimum royalties provided by said contract.”
To this conclusion the court added that it would be inequitable to award to plaintiff profits upon sales made by defendant Foamite Firefoam Company after December 17, 1918. We hold that plaintiff is entitled to an accounting with the Foamite Firefoam Company for sales made by it in foreign countries after December 17, 1918.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Rosenberry, J., dissents.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on January 15, 1924.