7 Daly 9 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1877
The findings of the^learned judge at special term that “ the article put up, advertised and offered for sale and sold by defendant under the title and name •“ cherry pectoral ” is well calculated to deceive and mislead purchasers and to induce them to believe that the said article of defendant is that of the plaintiffs : ” and that “ the defendant, with the wrongful intent to induce purchasers to believe
We have then, the undisputed circumstances that defendant has been careful to distinguish his preparation from plaintiffs’, by a marked difference in the color of the wrappers, the lettering and the arrangement of the words printed on the wrapper, and by distinctive announcements, the signs in his store and through his clerks. In fact he seems to> have taken precautions to prevent the two compounds from being confounded in the eyes of purchasers ; and to prevent-purchasers being misled or deceived into buying’ his medicine under the impression that it was plaintiffs’ medicine.
Defendant certainly did take advantage of the celebrity of plaintiffs’ preparation to which the name of “ Cherry P ectoral ” seems, from the findings, to have been exclusively applied in the trade, in the last thirty years or more, to gain a readier market for a preparation of his own which he called “ Cherry Pectoral.” Whatever popularity Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral had acquired as a medicine for throat and lung affections, he hoped to gain advantage from, by calling his medicine a Cherry Pectoral, thus inducing persons to try his compound, if they could be persuaded that one Cherry Pectoral was as good as another. To this extent, anda very great extent it is no doubt, defendant proposed to build up a-business upon and avail himself of, the fame which years of sale and a great expenditure of money for advertising on the part of plaintiffs and their predecessors had acquired for the well-known preparation they manufactured, but there is clean
It appears from the findings, that Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral is a medicine for the relief and cure of affections and diseases of the lungs and throat, of which medicine the extract of wild cherry is one of the beneficial ingredients. The word cherry ” describes, therefore, one of the ingredients of the compound, and the word “pectoral” describes the use and application of the medicine. The findings show that “ pectoral,” as an adjective referring to medicine for the throat and lungs, was known to scientific men, and was found in books of surgery, &c., before plaintiffs’ compound was invented ; and that medicines for the throat and lungs called “‘Pectoral Syrup,” and “Pectoral Wine,” appear in medical books prior to the plaintiffs’ use of the word; that a medicine called “ Britton’s Pectoral Syrup ” had been made and sold in Northamptonshire, England, before that time; that in dictionaries published before plaintiffs’ manufae,ture of “ Cherry Pectoral,” began in 1842, and of standard dictionaries of the English language, show that the word “pectoral,” as a noun, as well as an adjective, was ■and is a common established word in the language signifying a medicine for coughs, for the stomach and lungs, for the breast and for diseases of the breast. (Johnson’s Diet. {Ed. 1799); Dunglison’s Med. Diet. (Tit. “ Pectorals); ” Ree’s •Cyclopaedia; Richardson’s Diet.; Blunt’s (1681); Philips’ ■“New World of Words ”; Glossographia Anglicana (1707); ■Cole’s Diet. (1717); Kersey’s Eng. Diet. (1721); Bailey’s Diet. (1763); Johnson (1763) ; Ash (1765); Allison (1813); Worcester.) The word “ pectoral,” therefore, is common property, as descriptive of a medicine for diseases of the -chest, breast, lungs and throat, and no person can acquire an exclusive right to its use in that sense. The word “ cherry,” indicating an ingredient, or the sole or chief ingredient, as an extract or tincture of wild cherry in a medi
The late case of Caswell v. Davis (58 N. Y. 223) is controlling as a decision directly in point.
No attempt is made by defendant to infringe plaintiffs’ trade-mark in the name of “ Ayer,” in which they have an exclusive property, and the injunction prayed for against the use of the name “ Cherry Pectoral ” should have been denied.
Van Hoesen, J., concurred.
Judgment reversed, and new trial ordered costs to abide event.