delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a bill to restrain the infringement of the trade marks “ Java ” and “ Bourjois ” registered in the Patent Office of the United States. A preliminary injunction was granted by the District Court,
The defendant,•finding that the rate of exchange enabled her to do so*afN), profit, bought a large quantity of the same powder in France and is selling it here in the French boxes which closely resemble those used by the plaintiff except that they have not the last quoted statement on the backs, and that the label reads “ Poudre de Riz de Java,” whereas the plaintiff has found it advisable to strike out the suggestion of rice powder and has “ Poudre Java ” instead. There is no question that the defendant infringes the plaintiff’s rights unless the fact that her boxes and powder are the genuine product of the French concern gives her a right to sell.them in the present form.
We are of opinion that the plaintiff’s rights are infringed. After the sale the French manufacturers could not have c.ome to the United States and have used their old marks in competition with the plaintiff. That plainly follows from the statute authorizing assignments. Act of February 20, 1905, c. 592, § 10, 33 Stat. 727. If for the purpose of evading the effect of the transfer, it had arranged with the defendant that she should sell with the old label, we suppose that no one would doubt that the contrivance must fail. ’ There is no such conspiracy here,
Decree oj Circuit Court of Appeals reversed.
