McTammany v. Munroe Organ Reed Co.
McTammany v. Munroe Organ Reed Co.
Opinion of the Court
This is a bill in equity brought to enforce the specific performance of an agreement made by the Munroe Organ Reed Company to give the plaintiff a license under certain patents applicable to automatic musical instruments. The other defendants are holders of the patents by assignments taken with notice of the plaintiff’s claim.
The case was reserved for our determination by the Superior Court, upon the pleadings and the master’s report, and the objections and exceptions thereto. The exceptions to the master’s report, however, were not argued, and were waived.
The agreement bears date May 13, 1887. The plaintiff had then long been occupied in inventing automatic musical instruments, that is, such as employ perforated music paper for controlling the production of sound, and was, and continued to be,
On May 13, 1887, the company and the plaintiff made a new arrangement, comprised in an agreement signed by both and in a letter of the same date addressed to him by the company. This agreement contains, among other stipulations, the contract which he now seeks to enforce. He agrees in substance to give his time and personal services exclusively to the company as a travelling salesman in the sale and introduction of th& goods manufactured by it, and in all ways for the establishment and advancement of its trade and business interests; the company agrees to relieve him of so much of his agreement of September 28, 1885, as is inconsistent with the devotion of his time to trav
The mutual intent and purpose of the parties in making this provision for the grant of a license, as found as a fact by the master, was to secure and protect him while absent as travelling salesman against an abandonment by the company of its agreement of September 28, 1885, with Alexander McTammany. In fact, no such abandonment occurred. The services of the plaintiff under the agreement and letter of May 13, 1887, terminated on May 19, 1888, by mutual consent, and the company has paid him in full compensation therefor all of the royalties due him under the letter. During the year in which he was employed as salesman he made no request of the company for a license under the agreement, but on October 8, 1888, requested it to execute a written instrument, which he presented, granting him a license for the benefit of Alexander McTammany under any patents which had come into its possession, in accordance with the agreement since September 28, 1885, but which license the instrument provided should not be operative unless the company should at any time fail or neglect to carry out the stipulations of its agreement of that date with Alexander McTammany. The company did not comply with this request, and it was renewed on December 5, 1888, and this bill filed on December 28, 1888. The company’s agreement with Alexander McTammany contin
It is plain that the only license to the plaintiff contemplated by the agreement which he seeks to enforce would be one of which he can now make no use. By the terms of the proviso quoted, the license was not to be operative except in the event of the abandonment by the company of the agreement of September 28, 1885, between it and Alexander McTammany, as therein stipulated and provided. That event can never occur, ■since that agreement has been terminated by mutual consent, upon terms presumably satisfactory to all parties, and without an abandonment by the company. In addition, the plaintiff, by virtue of his partnership with Alexander McTammany, was himself virtually interested in that agreement, and may be presumed to have shared in whatever consideration may have induced Alexander to consent to its termination. Whatever might have been the plaintiff’s right to ask for a specific performance of the agreement if he had demanded and been denied a license while his employment as travelling salesman continued, it would now be idle to compel the defendants to grant him a license, which by its terms must remain wholly inoperative and useless.
But the plaintiff contends that the intention of the parties was that the licenses to him were to place him upon the same footing with reference to the company’s patents as with reference to his own, obtained while he was in the service of the company, and which upon the termination of the contract were
There is accordingly no reason for affording him equitable relief. Bill dismissed, with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.