In this action for injunctive relief the trial court sustained the defendant’s demurrer to the complaint without leave to amend, and denied a motion for leave to file a proffered amended complaint. Prom the judgment of dismissal which followed the plaintiff has appealed.
The proposed amended complaint alleged:
That the plaintiff, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, is a nonprofit California corporation organized in May, 1927, with its principal place of business in Hollywood; that its purposes are to represent and coordinate the various branches of the motion picture industry in their relations with each other, with other associations, both within and without the motion picture industry, and with the general public to advance the arts and sciences of motion pictures by conferring awards of merit to signalize outstanding creative achievements, by conducting research and furthering technological progress, and by promoting the interchange and development of knowledge through meetings, publications and
It was alleged that in October, 1937, the defendant, Jennie Benson, who for several years had conducted in her own name a dramatic and coaching school in Hollywood devoted to instructing persons in the art of acting for motion pictures and the stage, adopted and has since used for her school the name, “The Hollywood Motion Picture Academy”; that the plaintiff, in a written notice to the defendant, promptly protested the use of that name; that it was the defendant’s intention and purpose by the use of such name to deceive and mislead the public generally and that she has induced cer
If the complaint proffered herein stated a cause of action, the plaintiff was entitled to file it.
(Frantz
v.
Mallen,
Generic terms and words descriptive of place are not subject to exclusive appropriation.
(American Automobile Assn.
v.
American Automobile Owners Assn.,
The businesses of the parties are not directly competitive, although both are connected with the motion picture industry. By the use of the name Hollywood Motion Picture Academy the defendant does not take away from the plaintiff and draw to herself any business which the plaintiff other
The decisions of the courts for the most part are concerned with the principles applicable to infringement and unfair competition in respect to businesses which are directly competitive. But we perceive no distinction which, as a matter of law, should be made because of the fact that the plaintiff and the defendant are engaged in non-competing businesses. In situations involving the use of proper surnames in non-competitive businesses it has been held that where confusion was sho.wn as likely to result the relief should be accorded to the complaining party.
(Tiffany & Co.
v.
Tiffany Productions,
The plaintiff, as stated, is not depending upon the deceptive use of a trade-mark, but is alleging the deceptive and injurious use of what may be designated as a. trade name, and is seeking to have the secondary meaning which it has built up protected from encroachments and deceptive use by the defendant to its injury. The complaint shows that the defendant had conducted her school heretofore under her own name; that she conducts her school in Hollywood, which is a center of the motion picture industry, for the purpose of training actors; and that the plaintiff also operates from Hollywood. True, the word “Academy” in one sense denotes simply a school; but in a well-accepted meaning it also signifies an institution similar to a college or univers for the study of higher learning; also “a society of learm, men united for the advancement of the arts and sciences an literature, or of some particular art or science; as, the Freno
Academy”.
(Webster’s Few International Dictionary, sec
The case before us may be novel, but it does not follow that the plaintiff may not be entitled to some relief. In calling attention to the novelty of the facts in
American Philatelic Society
v.
Claibourne,
3 Cal. (2d) 689 [
The judgment is reversed.
Curtis, J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., and Gibson, C. J., concurred.
