Citation Numbers: 133 A. 582, 104 Conn. 472
Judges: Maltbie, Wheeler, Curtis, Maltbib, Haines, Hinman
Filed Date: 5/29/1926
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The plaintiff brings this action to restrain the defendant from using or disclosing a certain formula and process which he claims to have originated and disclosed to the defendant under its promise to keep it secret and to use it only when authorized by him.
For several years prior to 1923 the plaintiff had been engaged in manufacturing various kinds of rubber goods and specialties. In and prior to that year, he, with his son, had been experimenting in the effort to produce a cushion fabric, known as channel cloth, to be placed between the metal piece which holds the glass in automobile windows and the glass itself. The material then in use for that purpose was composed of a cloth base coated with a mixture of cork, linseed oil and other ingredients, and it was not satisfactory because it was hard and inflexible. The plaintiff was seeking a composition which, when placed upon a cloth base, would be soft and pliable and flow to the contour of the glass. He finally discovered a formula, the basic feature of which was a mixture of cork and rubber, to which were added other ingredients such as shellac and *Page 474 rubber substitutes. This formula was adapted to experimental work, but would require modification before it could be used for quantity production. Not being equipped to manufacture the product, the plaintiff approached the defendant with a view to making with it an arrangement to produce the cloth in quantity for him, stating that he would only disclose his formula upon the defendant's promise to keep it secret and to use it only when authorized by him. An arrangement was finally made in which the defendant undertook to try to produce an article similar to the sample submitted to it by the plaintiff, and if successful, to manufacture the cloth for him, promising to keep the formula secret and only to use it as authorized by him.
The plaintiff thereupon disclosed his formula, and the defendant experimented with it further, and finally succeeded, by making some changes, in producing a composition suitable for quantity production; and for these experiments the plaintiff paid the defendant. The formula so reached consisted of cork, rubber in different forms, rubber substitute and micronex, with a considerable quantity of litharge, to act as an accelerator, and small quantities of two or three other materials. Thereafter the defendant proceeded to manufacture large quantities of the cloth for the plaintiff, and continued to do so until the plaintiff discovered that the defendant was circulating samples of the cloth among automobile manufacturers with a view to establishing a market of its own for its manufacture and sale. The agreement between the parties was thereupon abrogated and the plaintiff withdrew from the defendant the authority he had given to it to use the formula. Thereafter the defendant proceeded to manufacture channel cloth, using a formula consisting of cork, rubber, rubber substitute, carbon black or micronex, with litharge added, in much the same proportions *Page 475 as it had used these materials before. After the action was brought, the defendant further simplified its formula by leaving out the litharge and rubber substitute, slightly varying the proportions of the materials remaining. The channel cloth produced by this formula was similar in appearance to, and had the same characteristics as, that which the defendant had been manufacturing for the plaintiff.
The trial court has further found that in 1859 there was issued by the United States Patent Office the so-called Goodyear patent, which covered the process of combining cork and rubber and allied gums and spreading them upon cloth; that this process had been known and used ever since to produce artificial leather and the like; but that the use of a composition of rubber and cork, or of that with other ingredients, to produce a cushion fabric or channel cloth, originated with the plaintiff, and had never been used for that purpose until the plaintiff disclosed his formula to the defendant; nor had the defendant ever used the Goodyear process for any purpose or produced material similar to that which it manufactured for the plaintiff.
The defendant's main contention, in brief, is that the plaintiff is entitled to relief only as he can show that he had a property right of some nature entitled to protection in equity, and that by reason of the long-time knowledge and use of the process covered by the Goodyear patent, which included the basic feature of the plaintiff's formula, he could have no property right in that formula. The principle upon which courts proceed in the protection of trade secrets is stated inDu Pont De Nemours Powder Co. v. Masland,
Indeed, the fact that the discoverer of a process or formula may not be able to secure property rights in it by means of the patent law, may be the very reason why he seeks the protection of secrecy. He must have a secret, that is, something not known to the public or in his trade; and the character of the article produced might make so obvious the process or formula by which it is made that the very putting of it upon the market destroys the secret of its production. But this does not mean that the possibility of its discovery, by chemical analysis or experimentation, will itself put an end to the rights of the originator, and so long as the method of its production remains a secret, the law is not much concerned with its nature or the elements which go to make up the composition. Here the plaintiff, consciously or unconsciously, did make use of elements which, in a certain combination, were covered by the old Goodyear patent, and the use of which, in that combination, had become well known for certain purposes. But the proportions of those elements going to make up the composition which the plaintiff originated, and that which, while acting for him, the defendant finally adapted to commercial use, the additional *Page 477
elements deemed necessary to produce an article of commercial value, and the adaptation of the combination to the manufacture of channel cloth, were matters not known to others, and were his distinctive contribution to commercial progress. Speaking of the patentability of an invention, the United States Supreme Court has said: "It is often difficult to determine whether a given improvement is a mere mechanical advance, or the result of the exercise of the creative faculty amounting to a meritorious invention. The fact that the invention seems simple after it is made does not determine the question; if this were the rule many of the most beneficial patents would be stricken down. It may be safely said that if those skilled in the mechanical arts are working in a given field and have failed after repeated efforts to discover a certain new and useful improvement, that he who first makes the discovery has done more than make the obvious improvement which would suggest itself to a mechanic skilled in the art, and is entitled to protection as an inventor." Expanded Metal Co. v. Bradford,
It was open to anyone to use the same process, provided they came by the necessary knowledge fairly. But the trial court finds that the method developed by the plaintiff continued to be his secret after the placing of the channel cloth upon the market. The knowledge of the process which the defendant had was obtained by reason of the confidence reposed in it by the plaintiff, and upon its express promise not to divulge the information so secured, and to use the formula only as authorized by the plaintiff. Cork, rubber, and micronex, the basic features of the formula used by the defendant after the contract was abrogated, were those disclosed to it by the plaintiff, and, with a minor variation, the defendant used them to produce *Page 478
an article virtually the same as that which it had manufactured for the plaintiff, and so to compete with him in the very field wherein it had contracted to serve him. In such a situation, the right of the plaintiff to protection in equity is amply established. Peabody
v. Norfolk,
The defendant also assigns as error the overruling of its claim on the trial, that the plaintiff was entitled to no greater relief than that warranted by the allegations of his complaint. Such an assignment is too general to comply with our rules. Janulewycz v.Quagliano,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Macbeth-Evans Glass Co. v. Schnelbach , 239 Pa. 76 ( 1913 )
Expanded Metal Co. v. Bradford , 29 S. Ct. 652 ( 1909 )
Janulewycz v. Quagliano , 88 Conn. 60 ( 1914 )
E. I. Du Pont De Nemours Powder Co. v. Masland , 37 S. Ct. 575 ( 1917 )
Pepe Hazard v. Jones, No. Cv 96-0151601-S (Oct. 15, 2002) , 33 Conn. L. Rptr. 254 ( 2002 )
Allen-Qualley Co. v. Shellmar Products Co. , 31 F.2d 293 ( 1929 )
Schreyer v. Casco Products Corp. , 97 F. Supp. 159 ( 1951 )
Holiday Food Co. v. Munroe , 37 Conn. Super. Ct. 546 ( 1981 )
Clinipad Corporation v. Aplicare Inc., No. 235252 (Jan. 10, ... , 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 176 ( 1991 )
Lockridge v. Tweco Products, Inc. , 209 Kan. 389 ( 1972 )
Smith v. Dravo Corp. , 203 F.2d 369 ( 1953 )
The A. H. Emery Company v. Marcan Products Corporation, ... , 389 F.2d 11 ( 1968 )
Imperial Chemical Industries Limited v. National Distillers ... , 342 F.2d 737 ( 1965 )
Evans v. General Motors Corp. , 277 Conn. 496 ( 2006 )
Holiday Food Co. v. Munroe , 37 Conn. Super. Ct. 546 ( 1981 )
Gallowhur Chemical Corp. v. Schwerdle , 37 N.J. Super. 385 ( 1955 )
Plastic & Metal Fabricators, Inc. v. Roy , 163 Conn. 257 ( 1972 )
Hyde Corporation v. Huffines , 158 Tex. 566 ( 1958 )
Berry v. Glidden Co. , 92 F. Supp. 909 ( 1950 )
Titcomb v. Norton Company , 208 F. Supp. 9 ( 1959 )
Sperry Rand Corporation v. Rothlein , 241 F. Supp. 549 ( 1964 )