To sustain an action under § 7 of the Sherman Act, a
necessary element is cooperation by some of the defendants in a
scheme involving monopoly or restraint of interstate trade and
causing the damage complained of.
Page 227 U. S. 9
The owner of a patent has exclusive rights of making, using, and
selling which he may keep or transfer in whole or in part.
Patents and patent rights cannot be made a cover for violation
of law, but they are not so used when only the rights conferred by
law are exercised.
Patent rights can be protected by a party to an illegal
combination.
While the combined effect of the separate acts alleged to have
made the combination illegal must be regarded as a whole, the
strength of each act must be considered separately.
Assertion of patent rights may be so conducted as to constitute
malicious prosecution, but failure of plaintiff to maintain the
action does not necessarily convict of malice.
Mere coincidence in time in the bringing by separate parties of
suits for infringements on patents against the same defendant
held, in this case, not to indicate a combination on the
part of those parties to injure the defendant within the meaning of
§ 7 of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act.
A contract by which a manufacturer of a patented article
appoints another who does not manufacture or sell like articles his
exclusive agent for the output of the factory
held in this
case not to violate the Sherman Act.
Where an action under § 7 of the Sherman Act was tried in
the Circuit Court and argued in the circuit court of appeals on the
basis of cooperation between the defendants, this Court will not
consider a contention raised for the first time that one of the
defendants was itself a combination offensive to the statute.
In this case, it does not appear that the contracts between the
defendants were made for the purpose of injuring the plaintiff,
and, both courts below having so held, this Court also so
holds.
179 F. 115 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the construction of § 7 of the
Sherman Anti-Trust Act and what constitutes an illegal combination
thereunder, are stated in the opinion.
Page 227 U. S. 24
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Action for the recovery of damages in the sum of $406,881.60,
being the total of certain specific items mentioned in the
complaint, and for all other damages sustained by plaintiffs (so
designated throughout this opinion) by virtue of the facts stated,
including all sums that they are entitled to under the provisions
of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act of 1890, 26 Stat. 209, c. 647,
together with an attorney's fee. The grounds of recovery are set
forth in the complaint, which, inclusive of exhibits, occupies 150
pages of the record, and seems to make impossible any attempt at
brevity or condensation. The case, however, is not in wide compass,
and attention may be concentrated upon certain considerations. The
contention of plaintiffs in its most general form is that the
defendants entered into a conspiracy or combination in restraint of
interstate trade, and in execution of it plaintiffs' interstate
business was destroyed by defendants wrongfully prosecuting two
suits against them for the infringement of patents under which the
articles of their trade were manufactured, and by circulating
slanders and libels to the effect that such articles were
infringements of defendants' patents. A cause of action is hence
asserted under § 7 of the Anti-Trust Act. The section is as
follows:
"Any person who shall be injured in his business or property by
any other person or corporation by reason of anything forbidden or
declared to be unlawful by this act may sue therefor in any circuit
court of the United States in the district in which the defendant
resides or is found, without respect to the amount in controversy,
and shall recover threefold the damages by him sustained, and the
costs of suit, including a reasonable attorney's fee."
To justify recovery, therefore, injury must result from
something forbidden or made unlawful by the act, and
Page 227 U. S. 25
what is forbidden or made unlawful is expressed in §§
1 and 2. Section 1 is as follows:
"Every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise,
or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the several
states, or with foreign nations, is hereby declared to be illegal.
. . ."
The acts forbidden are made a misdemeanor. And by § 2 it is
also made a misdemeanor for any person to
"monopolize, or attempt to monopolize, or combine or conspire
with any other person or persons to monopolize, any part of the
trade or commerce among the several states, or with foreign
nations."
The question occurs, do the facts of the case show a breach of
the law by defendants and injury resulting from it to plaintiffs?
The following facts are alleged: on the twenty-fourth of February,
1898, or just prior thereto, certain corporations and one
partnership were engaged in making or selling creamery supplies,
including combined churns and butter workers, and transporting them
in state and interstate commerce. All of the corporations and the
partnership were in direct competition in their lines of business,
and as the result of it all of the articles manufactured and sold
by them were sold at no more than a fair price and legitimate
profit. The corporations controlled over 90% of the business of
manufacturing and selling creamery and dairy supplies in the States
of Michigan and Indiana and in all the states west and in some of
the states east thereof, manufacturing the articles in one or more
of the states, and shipping by the same common carriers from the
states where manufactured to other states, and distributing and
selling such articles there.
On the twenty-fourth of February, 1898, the Creamery Package
Manufacturing Company, one of the corporations, and its
stockholders, then engaged in the manufacture and sale of dairy and
creamery supplies, but not of
Page 227 U. S. 26
combined churns and butter workers, it being as to the latter
only the agent for their sale, entered into a contract with the
other corporations and the partnership, by which it was agreed to
increase the capital stock of the Creamery Package Manufacturing
Company to enable it to purchase the property and business of the
other corporations, parties to the contract, including in the
property all patents and applications for patents.
The contract is very elaborate and verbose, but we need not give
its particular covenants, as no point is made upon them, it being
only alleged and contended that its purpose and effect were that
the Creamery Package Manufacturing Company should acquire the
property and business of the other corporations and that, while the
latter should cease to exist, they should be represented as
continuing as separate and independent concerns and competitors in
the market with the Creamery Package Manufacturing Company, and
with one another, while in truth and fact there would be no
competition between them.
It is alleged that, in execution of the purpose of the contract,
traveling men from the different houses, under instructions from
the Creamery Package Manufacturing Company, met and secretly
arranged the bid each should interpose, determining by by lot and
other ways who should interpose the lowest bid and who the
highest.
The Owatonna Company was not a party to that contract, but it is
contended that it participated in or is brought into the scheme and
purpose of the contract by certain agreements entered into by it
with the Creamery Package Manufacturing Company. They are all
attached to the complaint as exhibits, and may be described as
transferring certain patents or the right to use certain patents to
the Creamery Package Manufacturing
Page 227 U. S. 27
Company. A brief summary of them is given in the margin.
*
Page 227 U. S. 28
It is alleged that, on July 8, 1904, the Creamery Package
Manufacturing Company and the Owatonna Company brought suit
separately in the Circuit Court of the United States for the First
Division of the State of Minnesota at Winona against the
plaintiffs, charging infringement of patents for churns and butter
workers. The bills in the suits are attached to the complaint in
this action, and are in the usual form. Process was issued and the
plaintiffs here answered. Upon proofs taken, a decree was entered
in favor of plaintiffs and against the Owatonna Company in the suit
brought by it. It is not alleged in the complaint, but it is in the
answer of the Creamery
Page 227 U. S. 29
Package Manufacturing Company and not denied, that it obtained a
decree adjudging plaintiffs here infringers of the patents which
were the subject of the suit.
It is alleged that the defendants here conspired with one
another to commence and prosecute the suits, and that they were
commenced and prosecuted maliciously and without probable cause,
whereby plaintiffs were caused certain items of damages.
The other allegations of the complaint need not be repeated in
detail. They are to the effect that the contract of February 24,
1898, was made in violation of law, to restrain state and
interstate trade and commerce, and that all that was done under it
was in pursuance and execution of that purpose, including the suits
brought against plaintiffs by the Owatonna Company and the Creamery
Package Manufacturing Company for the infringement of patents.
That, prior to the bringing of those suits, plaintiffs had a good
and established trade and market for their churns, and were
manufacturing and shipping them in the states of Wisconsin, Iowa,
and South Dakota, and knowing this, and fearing that such trade
would be continued in those states, and be extended to other
states, defendants commenced the suits for infringement, and prior
thereto and since have written letters and talked to purchasers and
prospective purchasers of plaintiffs' churns, threatening lawsuits
and actions for damages for infringement of the patents described
in the bills, and also threatened suits for injunction, and by this
means destroyed plaintiffs' state and interstate trade.
That plaintiff D. E. Virtue and one Martin Deeg were the first
joint inventors of a churn and butter worker, and that a patent was
issued therefor, No. 634,074, under which they manufactured those
articles and sold them in state and interstate commerce except as
they had been prevented by the suits brought against them as
hereinbefore stated. And, by elaborate allegations, the patents
upon
Page 227 U. S. 30
which those suits were brought are attacked for want of
invention and novelty.
That the Creamery Package Manufacturing Company has purchased
the property and business of other competitive concerns, and that
it has had during the last several years contracts with many and
numerous dealers in the articles sold by which it required them to
purchase such goods exclusively of it at certain fixed and
maintained prices, and to sell only in certain designated
territory, the object of which is to secure a monopoly to the
Creamery Package Manufacturing Company, and to restrain interstate
commerce. That all of the acts detailed were done in pursuance of a
common scheme and conspiracy on the part of all of the defendants
during the years 1897 and 1898, and ever since maintained and
carried out, limiting the production of creamery supplies, fixing
and determining their prices, restraining trade in them, and
monopolizing over 90% of their production and sale, of which, prior
to one year before the bringing of this action, plaintiff had no
knowledge or notice except the two suits in equity and the contract
by which Virtue and Deeg transferred to the Creamery Package
Manufacturing Company the exclusive right to manufacture the churn
and butter worker under patent No. 634,074 for the period of three
years. That they did not know that that contract was procured as
part of the schemes of defendants. That they were at no time
parties to acts of defendants, and did not know of the wrongful
contracts and combinations until after the time limited to take the
testimony in the two equity suits.
The defendants answered the complaint, admitting some of its
allegations and denying others. They alleged performance of the
contract between the Creamery Package Manufacturing Company and the
plaintiff Virtue and said Deeg, and opposed to the charges of the
complaint certain affirmative matters, including two actions
brought in the state court.
Page 227 U. S. 31
A jury was impaneled to try the issues, which, under the
instructions of the court, found a verdict for defendants upon
which a judgment was duly entered. It was affirmed by the circuit
court of appeals. 179 F. 115.
The circuit court and the circuit court of appeals both decided
that the damages which plaintiffs alleged they sustained were not a
consequence of a violation by defendants of the provisions of the
Sherman antitrust law. Both courts assumed, for the purpose of
their decision, that the contract of February 24, 1898, between the
Creamery Package Manufacturing Company and the other manufacturers
and sellers of churns and butter workers was a combination in
restraint of trade; but both courts held that the Owatonna Company
was not a party to it, nor became associated subsequently in its
scheme.
Of the infringement suits, the court of appeals said they
exhibited
"a case where two suits were brought, one by a party to a lawful
agreement, the other by a party to an unlawful agreement, for the
infringement of patents owned by them respectively, and where both
parties were doing no more then exercising their legal rights."
And the court declared in effect that it could see no sinister
significance in the suits' being simultaneous, and said, further,
that, after a thorough examination of the record, it agreed with
the circuit court that there was no evidence offered at the trial
"which would warrant the jury in finding that any agreement of that
kind existed."
The plaintiffs attack this conclusion in twenty-one
propositions, some of which are of very broad generality, and all,
counsel contend, are supported by the decisions of this and other
courts. It is quite impossible to consider them in detail without a
review and repetition of the cases. The view we take of the case
makes this unnecessary. The case is, as we have said, in narrow
compass. The complaint charges a violation of the Sherman law, and,
as a means of accomplishing its purpose, the destruction of
Page 227 U. S. 32
plaintiffs' interstate trade by a malicious litigation of their
rights. A necessary element of the charge is the cooperation of at
least the corporate defendants in the purpose, and this determines
our inquiry. In answering it, we shall assume, as the lower courts
assumed, that, by the contract of February, 1898, the Creamery
Package Manufacturing Company and the corporations competing with
it entered into a combination offensive to the law. Did the
Owatonna Company participate in it, or subsequently join it or
cooperate to execute its purposes? The question must be answered in
the negative, as we shall proceed to show.
The Owatonna Company was a manufacturer of churns and butter
workers under various patents owned by it, which articles it sold
throughout the United States, and by the contract of April 19,
1897, it constituted the Creamery Package Manufacturing Company its
sales agent of them, the latter company not making churns and
butter workers. The contract was a perfectly legal one, and
preceded by some time the agreement of the twenty-fourth of
February, 1898, entered into between the latter company and other
corporations. There were contracts between the Creamery Package
Manufacturing Company and the Owatonna Company subsequent to the
latter date, but all of them were supplemental to the first one and
had no illegal taint, nor did they affect it with illegal taint. It
is true they granted rights to the Creamery Package Manufacturing
Company, and exclusive rights, but this was no violation of law.
The owner of a patent has exclusive rights -- rights of making,
using, and selling. He may keep them or transfer them to another,
keep some of them and transfer others. This is elementary; and,
keeping it in mind, there is no trouble in estimating the character
of such rights or their transfer. Of course, patent and patent
rights cannot be made a cover for a violation of law, as we said in
Standard Sanitary Manufacturing Company v. United States,
226 U. S. 20.
But
Page 227 U. S. 33
patents are not so used when the rights conferred upon them by
law are only exercised. The agreement of the nineteenth of April,
1897, constituted, as we said, the Creamery Package Manufacturing
Company a sales agent of the churns and butter workers made by the
Owatonna Company and fixed their list price. The patents under
which the articles were manufactured were stated, and it was
provided that the Owatonna Company should protect the Creamery
Package Manufacturing Company from all suits for infringement,
defend the validity of the patents, and promptly attack infringers.
This provision is especially urged by plaintiffs as showing a
common and illegal purpose between the companies. It has not that
quality. It is but an assurance of title to the rights
conveyed.
But it is said that the contract between the companies dated
June 4, 1898, exhibits knowledge by the Owatonna Company of the
Creamery Package Manufacturing Company's purpose, and "fitted into
the scheme of the two defendant corporations to get a monopoly in
the United States;" and this, it is said further, "can only be when
all of the doings . . . are looked at as a whole from beginning to
end." We cannot concur. We have seen that the contract of June 4,
1898 (inserted above in the margin), was but a settlement of claims
growing out of reciprocal charges of infringement, and it has no
other connection with the agreement of February, 1898, than that
some of the claims were against corporations which were parties to
that agreement. It would be far-fetched to say that the Owatonna
Company could not assert rights or protect rights because they were
asserted or sought to be protected against corporations which had
become members of an illegal combination, without participating in
the guilt of such combination and becoming a joint conspirator in
its purposes. But it may be said that we are considering the
transactions isolatedly and ignoring
Page 227 U. S. 34
their combined effect. That indeed would be a fault, but in
order to compute their combined effect, we must estimate what
strength they have separately, and so far, on the face of the
contracts, there is nothing to inculpate the Owatonna Company.
But a united purpose is sought to be established between it and
the Creamery Package Manufacturing Company by the testimony of
witnesses to the effect that the contract of April 19, 1897,
between the Disbrow Manufacturing Company and the Owatonna Company
was urged by the president of the Creamery Package Manufacturing
Company, who represented that the acceptance of royalties by the
Disbrow Company was better than a continuance of competition. It is
not practicable to give all the testimony of what preceded and
induced that contract. The part most relevant to our inquiry is
that which related to the competition which existed between the
companies. A witness, who was president of the Owatonna Company at
the time, testified that it was suggested to him and other officers
of the company by Mr. Gates, president of the Creamery Package
Manufacturing Company, that a settlement ought to be brought about
by letter or otherwise with the Disbrow Manufacturing Company "so
as to get the two churns which were then being manufactured
together," and stated that he (Gates) had had some conferences with
the Disbrow Company, and he thought that, if the officers of the
Owatonna Company would go to Mankato
"there might be an arrangement made whereby that business could
be brought in connection with ours, and in that way eliminate the
competition that at that time existed between the Owatonna
Manufacturing Company and the Disbrow Manufacturing Company."
This object was expressed by the witnesses in different
ways.
The president of the Disbrow Manufacturing Company testified
that Gates urged that the Disbrow Company should
"stop manufacturing and make a contract with
Page 227 U. S. 35
the Owatonna Manufacturing Company, and let them have all our
patents on combined churns and butter workers and other things, and
combine the whole business under one head, and let them do all of
the manufacturing."
The witness testified that he at first rejected the proposition
and resented the manner in which the proposal was made, Gates going
so far as to declare, with a profane accompaniment, "You will do it
or we will put you out of business." But, subsequently,
negotiations were resumed and the president of the Creamery Package
Manufacturing Company explained that he wanted matters settled,
litigation stopped, "and a new arrangement made so that the whole
thing should be run under one head and one control," and in that
way "control the whole churn business." The witness formulated the
terms, which resulted, after some days of negotiation, in the
contract of April 19, 1897. But, during the negotiations, the
witness did not see the Owatonna Company's representatives until
they reached the point of signing the contract.
These declarations seem to be very arbitrary and unjustifiable
when standing alone, and to have had no other purpose than the
ruthless crushing of a competitor in the same line of business.
They take on another character, or rather the object of the
negotiations and the contracts which resulted from them take on
another character, when all the testimony is considered. It will be
observed from the date of those negotiations and of the contracts
that they preceded by nearly a year the contract between the
Creamery Package Manufacturing Company and its competitors, and
could have had no relation to it. And, besides, they had a natural
and adequate inducement. They were an adjustment of disputes and
litigation growing out of a contract between the Disbrow Company
and the Owatonna Company concerning the very same patents. In one
suit, the Owatonna Company was plaintiff against the Disbrow
Company; in another suit, the latter
Page 227 U. S. 36
company was plaintiff against the Owatonna Company, and both
suits were based on disputes as to rights or obligations arising
from the contract of October 2, 1893. The testimony also shows some
controversy between the Creamery Package Manufacturing Company and
the Disbrow Company in regard to other patents, but the effect of
it is not easy to estimate. There was also a contract entered into
between the Disbrow Company and the Creamery Package Manufacturing
Company on the nineteenth of April, 1897, settling matters growing
out of a contract between those companies, made on the twelfth of
October, 1896, by which the Disbrow Company made the Creamery
Package Manufacturing Company its exclusive sales agent for churns
and butter workers, and mortgaged to the latter company its plant.
The other provisions of the contract concern the adjustment of the
relations between all of the companies under the contemporaneous
contracts, and need not be stated in detail. It is clear, then, as
we have already said, that what transpired on the nineteenth of
April, 1897 -- negotiations and contracts -- had no relation to the
contract of February, 1898, and had for their inducement and object
the settlement of controversies and rights growing out of the
contract of October 2, 1893, between the Disbrow Company and the
Owatonna Company, and that of October 12, 1896, between the Disbrow
Company and the Creamery Package Manufacturing Company, and the
proposition of the latter company to become the sales agent of the
churns made by the Owatonna Company. All of this is very
complicated in the statement, but is simple enough in the results,
and can be definitely estimated as to actual and legal effect. We
may therefore sum up by saying that the Disbrow Company, by its
contract with the Owatonna Company, did nothing more than confirm
or enlarge the rights which the Owatonna Company had obtained, by
the contract of 1893, and conveyed to it the exclusive right
Page 227 U. S. 37
in the patents for certain named royalties. This was no
violation of law. The Owatonna Company did nothing more in its
contract with the Creamery Package Manufacturing Company than to
make that company its exclusive sales agent, and this was no
violation of law. Both contracts had natural and adequate legal
inducements and conveyed rights that could, under the law, be
conveyed, and, as a necessary incident to the conveyance, one only
of the parties could thereafter exercise them. It may be that the
Disbrow Company was to an extent in competition with the Owatonna
Company, but it was a competition in part at least, which, it was
contended, was illegally conducted against rights which had been
transferred in 1893. But, be that as it may, we repeat, patent
rights may be conveyed partially or entirely, and the monopoly of
use, of manufacture, or of sale, is not one condemned by law.
It is, however, urged that the infringement suits brought by the
Creamery Package Manufacturing Company and the Owatonna Company
against plaintiffs were provided for by the contracts between the
Owatonna Company and the Disbrow Company, and their coincidence in
time is urged as proof of concerted action on the part of
defendants and of a conspiracy to destroy plaintiffs' business. The
contention is that the bringing of those suits was not a single and
isolated act, but was a part of the more comprehensive plan and
scheme to secure a monopoly in the United States of the business of
making and selling creamery supplies, or, more accurately, counsel,
say, to continue and maintain the monopoly already acquired. And it
is contended that the attempt was successful in that it destroyed
plaintiffs' business. That these contentions are untenable we have
demonstrated. The contracts, we have shown, were legal conveyances
of rights, and the provision for the prosecution of infringement
suits was but an assurance of those rights. Patents would be of
little
Page 227 U. S. 38
value if infringers of them could not be notified of the
consequences of infringement, or proceeded against in the courts.
Such action, considered by itself, cannot be said to be illegal.
Patent rights, it is true, may be asserted in malicious
prosecutions as other rights, or asserted rights, may be. But this
is not an action for malicious prosecution. It is an action under
the Sherman Anti-Trust Act for the violation of the provisions of
that act, seeking treble damages. This, indeed, plaintiffs take
special pains to allege, that there may be no confusion about the
right or grounds or extent of recovery. The testimony shows that no
wrong whatever was committed by the Owatonna Company, and the fact
that it failed in its suit against plaintiffs does not convict it
of any.
This is enough to dispose of the case, for the foundation of the
complaint is that the defendants entered into a contract or
combination in restraint of trade which caused damage to
plaintiffs, and the guilt of the individual defendants and of the
two corporations and of all of their officers, servants, and
stockholders, is very carefully alleged. It was in this aspect that
the case was tried.
But plaintiffs urge that the Creamery Package Manufacturing
Company was of itself a combination offensive to the statute, and
that they were entitled to go to the jury as to that company. But
the contention was not made in the circuit court, nor was it made
in the circuit court of appeals. The case was tried and ruled upon,
as we have seen, on the ground of the cooperation of the defendants
in a scheme of monopoly and restraint of trade. There was no
liability asserted in the circuit court or in the circuit court of
appeals against one of the defendants separately from the others.
Concert and cooperation was asserted against all, and a ruling was
not invoked as to the separate liability of either. One Frank
LaBare was a party defendant, and as to him plaintiffs made a
motion that "the case be dismissed and dropped." The court denied
the
Page 227 U. S. 39
motion for some reason, and then plaintiffs' counsel said: "We
desire to proceed with the case as against the defendants, the
Owatonna Manufacturing Company and the Creamery Package
Manufacturing Company." The plaintiffs then offered to prove that
they had not infringed the patents sued on by the defendants. It is
manifest therefore that the separate liability of the Creamery
Package Manufacturing Company is an afterthought, and urged in this
Court for the first time.
There are twenty-seven errors assigned upon offers of testimony
excluded or upon other rulings of the circuit court. These we have
examined, and find that, in the view taken by the courts below of
the case and that which we take, there was no error of substance
committed.
Judgment affirmed.
* The first of the agreements between the companies was made
April 19, 1897 (that was before the contract of February 24, 1898)
and recited that the Owatonna Company was the owner of certain
patents covering combined churns and butter workers, and was
manufacturing the same, and that, as the Creamery Package
Manufacturing Company was desirous of handing the same as sole
agents, the agreement was made. It conveyed five patents issued
between January, 1893, and August, 1896, and applications for
another. There were provisions as to the size, material, and other
details; also as to royalties to be paid to the Disbrow
Manufacturing Company. And the Owatonna Company agreed to protect
the Creamery Package Manufacturing Company from all suits for
infringement of the patents, or claims for damages arising out of
the sales of the churns, and promptly and vigorously to attack
infringers, and to procure patents on all improvements made by it
or by any person in its behalf.
There was an addition to the contract, made June 4, 1897, in
regard to the repair parts of the "Winner" churns and the repair
and perfection of the same, and the rebate from the billing
price.
On January 12, 1898, a supplemental contract was made by the
same parties as to the disposition of the royalties received under
a license contract made September 30, 1897, with the Cornish,
Curtis & Greene Manufacturing Company, of Fort Atkinson,
Wisconsin.
On June 4, 1898, another agreement was made between the parties
which referred to the agreement of April, 1897, and to the pendency
of litigation based on the infringement or charges of infringement
of the patents with which that contract was concerned. For the
purpose of adjusting all claims growing out of such infringement,
and settling the litigation between the Owatonna Company and F. B.
Fargo & Company, whose rights the Creamery Package
Manufacturing Company had acquired, it was agreed that one of the
suits which was named, and in which proofs had been taken, should
be brought to a speedy hearing and all other suits dismissed.
The Creamery Package Manufacturing Company agreed not to
manufacture the machine known as the "Winner" or the "Disbrow,"
both referred to in the contract of April, 1897, called the "sales
contract," or any other of a described kind made by the Owatonna
Company, but was at liberty to manufacture and sell churns and
butter workers of any other construction. Satisfaction of all
royalties, damages, and costs was agreed on.
The sales contract was continued in force, and there was added
to it a provision entitling the Owatonna Company to furnish 55% in
value at list price of the churns and butter workers sold by the
Creamery Package Manufacturing Company in each year after the date
of the contract. If less than that percentage should be made and
furnished by the Owatonna Company, certain sums were provided to be
paid by the other company. And the latter company agreed not to
discriminate against the machines manufactured by the Owatonna
company in favor of machines of its own manufacture or of other
manufacturers, and that it would give to the machines of the
Owatonna Company the same effort and energy to effect their sale.
The Owatonna Company agreed to protect the patents and prosecute
infringers and give assistance to the Creamery Package
Manufacturing Company in the prosecution of infringers. Permission
was given to the Owatonna Company to use the "Disbrow" and "Winner"
churns owned by the Creamery Package Manufacturing Company or to be
acquired by it. There was also an agreement made on the fourth of
June, 1898, between the parties in settlement of claims on account
of the use of patents with certain other parties besides F. B.
Fargo & Company, whose business the Creamery Package
Manufacturing Company had acquired. There was a provision for
paying royalties to the Disbrow Company, with other details not
necessary to mention.
On January 1, 1903, another agreement was entered into between
the parties which disposed of and adjusted rights and contentions
as to patents for a machine called a pasteurizer and cream ripener.
By an agreement made January 1, 1903, the prices provided for in
the sales contract were changed in certain particulars.