Caddo Rock Drill Bit Co. v. Reed
Caddo Rock Drill Bit Co. v. Reed
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiffs seek to annul a certain contract giving defendant the exclusive right to manufacture and sell a certain patented bit and parts used" for drilling oil and gas wells, upon the following alleged grounds, to wit:
First. That said contract was obtained through fraud.
' Second. That it was void because not authorized by the corporation.
Third. For failure of the defendant to perform its stipulations.
Fourth. That the contract amounted to a transfer of all the corporate assets, and prevented it from fulfilling the purposes for which it was organized, which could only be done by proper meeting of the stockholders.
Defendant denied the alleged fraud, claimed the validity of the contract, and averred that he had more than fulfilled his obligations thereunder.
Exceptions of no cause and no right of action were pleaded as to plaintiffs Howard R. Hughes and G. W. Hardy, individually and as trustees, which exceptions do not appear to have been passed on. A nonsuit was entered on the part of “Mr. Hudson” (we presume meaning Humason, as no one by the name of Hudson appears in the petition), and upon the merits there was judgment for defendant.
Plaintiffs have appealed.
Opinion.
We will consider the question of fraud, consisting of certain alleged representations by defendant with regard to a drill bit which he was already manufacturing, together with that of the authority for the contract, for the reason that the facts touching the two propositions are so’interwoven that they can hardly be separated.
Before the trial defendant took a rule on plaintiffs to produce the records and minute book of the Oaddo Rock Drill Bit Company (hereinafter called, for convenience, the Cad-do Company), and the answer was that the plaintiffs did not have said records, and they could not be found. Hence it became a question of proving by parol what happened at the director’s meeting in which the contract with defendant was authorized, as well as the extent of the discussions and representations of the latter. It is well established that the Caddo Company, notwithstanding it had been organized for some years, had never been able to accomplish anything substantial with the patents which it controlled, and was, at the time, involved in a contest before the United States Patent Office .concerning these same patents. Dr. G. W. Robinson, of Shreveport, had furnished most of the funds spent in promoting the proposition, and, on the occasion of the meeting of the board of directors in question, though not a director, was present and insisting that some arrangement should be made with defendant. In fact, the directors, as witnesses, say that they would have agreed to anything most that Robinson had requested. Reed’s presence in Shreveport (his home and place of business being in Houston, Tex., where he was already engaged in the manufacture of a drill bit of his own) was secured at the solicitation of the Caddo Company, some of its officers and stockholders; and we are reasonably convinced that the latter, more so than the former, were in a mood to make concessions.
The lower judge, who saw and heard all the witnesses, has resolved these issues of fact in favor of the defendant, and we find no sufficient reason to disagree with him, either as to the nature of the contract authorized, or as to the representations of defendant concerning the character of his bit.
For the reasons assigned, the judgment appealed from is affirmed, at the cost of the appellant.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CADDO ROCK DRILL BIT CO. v. REED
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by Editorial Staff.) 1. Patents &wkey;>215 — Evidence held not to sustain charge of fraud in procuring exclusive license under patent. In a suit to cancel a contract granting to-defendant an exclusive license to manufacture and sell under complainant’s patents, evidence showing that the complainant, and not defendant, was the moving party in procuring the execution of the contract held not to show fraud by defendant which vitiated the contract. 2. Patents &wkey;»215 — Evidence held not to show licensee’s failure to perform contract. In a suit to annul a contract granting an exclusive license to manufacture and sell under patents, evidence that the licensee had paid the expenses of litigation against the patentees, which they should have paid, and expended sums of money in preparing for manufacture after that litigation was terminated, held not to sustain complainant’s contention that defendant had failed to perform his part of the contract. 3. Corporations 439 — Grant of exclusive license to use patents held not to convey assets so as to prevent corporation doing business. The grant by a corporation of an exclusive license to manufacture and sell under patents owned by the corporation, and which were its principal assets, for a royalty payable to the corporation, is not invalid without a stockholders’ vote as a conveyance of the assets of the corporation which prevents it from doing the business for which it was organized. 4. Corporations 388(4) — Directors and stockholders who signed contract cannot attack it as ultra vires. The directors and stockholders of a corporation who signed the contract granting an exclusive license to manufacture and sell under the corporation’s patents cannot attack the contract on the ground that it conveyed the assets of the corporation, and thereby prevented it from performing the duties for which it was, organized.