72 F. 903 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois | 1896
In October, 1889, William A. Pct-tijolm left San Francisco, Cal., w'hcre he had been engaged in man
Eli Pettijohn, father of the three brothers already mentioned, was
The cause of action in the bill is unfair competition in trade. An injunction was prayed to stop the use by defendant of the name “Pettijohn,” in defendant's corporate name, and in the designation of defendant’s product, and to stop the use by defendant of its wrapper, or any wrapper showing the name “Pettijohn.” An ex parte injunction was granted in the state court. The cause was then removed to this court. After a somewhat prolonged contention in this court touching the validity of the service of process, which was decided adversely to the defendant, complainant moved that defendant “be punished, by fine or otherwise, as may seem proper to the court, for contempt of court in disobeying the injunction herein.” Defendant appeared to that motion,- and was permitted, without objection by complainant, to present at the same hearing a motion for the dissolution of said injunction.
Eli Pettijohn believed himself to be the originator of the article of food known as “rolled wheat.” The record seems to show a continuing effort or purpose on his part to establish a profitable business in the manufacture or preparation of that article. He was actually engaged in that business when he went from California to Minneapolis in November, 1893, as already mentioned. It can hardly be contended that he had not then the right to make, or rather to continue making, rolled wheat, and to market the same in packages bearing his name, in any part of the United States. Neither complainant nor its assigns could, by advertising the name “Petti-john,” prevent Eli Pettijohn from doing this. It would seem to follow, also, that he might secure the co-operation of others willing to assist Trim financially in the business, and that he might, with such co-operation, form a corporation for the purpose of carrying on such business: provided, always, he should take reasonable precautions to distinguish the business thus carried on by him from that of a competitor rightfully using the name “Pettijohn.” The defendant corporation took the name “Eli Pettijohn Cereal Company.” As already. stated, a picture of Eli Pettijohn appears on defendant’s wrapper, and, the name “Eli Pettijohn” appears in full, and in plain, large, and conspicuous type, and the product is called “Eli Petti-john’s Best.” The personality of this man, as distinguished from any other Pettijohn, is made as pronounced as possible; and the
Whatever ought to he the ruling as to the matters already spoken of. There is another point; in the case which seems to me decisive. Rolled wheat is an article made at divers mills in this country. Each mill appears to indicate its own product by its own peculiar markings. Each mill, in this way, preserves the identity of its own product, and commends it to the public, — in other words, retains its own patronage or good will. Several of these mills, as already stated, — two, at least, in Ohio, one at Chicago, and one in Iowa, — are