272 F. 505 | S.D.N.Y. | 1921
(after stating the facts as above). The issues in this case do not, I think, depend upon the decision in Singer Mfg. Co. v. June Mfg. Co., 163 U. S. 169, 16 Sup. Ct. 1002, 41 L. Ed. 118, so much as the defendant supposes. That case decided no more than that the existence of a patent during the period when the goods became known to the public might he a controlling element in determining whether the name under which they were sold indicated a single source of origin. Since then courts have several times said that the name of goods protected by patent might in fact indicate not only the kind of goods they were, but as well that they emanated from a single source. President Suspender Co. v. Macwilliam, 238 Fed. 159, 151 C. C. A. 235; Hughes v. Alfred H. Smith Co., 209 Fed. 37, 126 C. C. A. 179; Scandinavia Belting Co. v. Asbestos, etc., Co., 257 Fed. 937, 960, 169 C, C. A. 87; Searchlight Gas Co. v. Prest-o-Lite Co., 215 Fed. 693, 695, 131 C, C. A. 626.
In 1904, however, they began to get acquainted with it in a different way, for then all the larger manufacturing chemists began to make tablets, and the trade grew to extraordinary proportions. The consumer, as both sides agree, had long before the autumn of 1915 very largely abandoned consultation with physicians and assumed the right to drug himself as his own prudence and moderation might prescribe. In all cases — omitting for the moment the infringing product — the drug was sold in bottles labeled “Aspirin” with some indication of the name of the tablet maker, but none of the plaintiff.' It is probable that
This being the situation up to the autumn of 1915, the defendant seems to me to have effectually rebutted any presumption which the coined word might carry. However, the plaintiff argues along with this user large infringing sales of the drug were being made to consumers under the name “acetyl salicylic acid.” It has indeed proved that it was unable absolutely to protect the monopoly of the patent, and it is clear that large quantities were piratically sold, though, so far as this record shows, with uniform respect for its trade-mark. Further, a good many retail druggists swore, with undoubted truth, that their customers got accustomed to the use of the phrase and could either ask for the drug or get' it written out on a slip of paper and present that. I think I must accept the record as showing that this went on to a substantial, though obviously to a wholly indeterminate, extent. However, I need not accept, because I do not believe, that all the piratical drug was sold to the consumer under the name “acetyl salicylic acid.” This is inherently improbable, and evidence to the contrary was not produced by, and naturally not available to, the plaintiff.
After the autumn of 1915 the plaintiff totally changed its methods, and thereafter no tablets reached the consumer without its own name. But it is significant that even then it used the word “Aspirin” as though
Disregarding this, however, it was too late in the autumn of 1915 to reclaim the word which had already passed into the public domain. If the consuming public had once learned to know “Aspirin” as the accepted name for the drug, perhaps it is true that an extended course of education might have added to it some proprietary meaning, but it would be very difficult to prove that it had been done in 17 months, and in any case the plaintiff does not try to prove it. The issue in this aspect, indeed, becomes whether during that period the word had obtained a secondary meaning, and I do not understand that any such thing is claimed. If it is, I own I cannot find any basis for it in the record. Probably what really happened was that the plaintiff awoke to the fact that on the expiration of the patent its trade-mark would be questioned, and strove to do what it could to relieve it of any doubts. Yet, had it not been indifferent to the results of selling to the consumer, it could-have protected itself just as well at the time when consumers began to buy directly as in 1915. Nothing would have been easier than to insist that the tablet makers should market the drug in small tin boxes bearing the plaintiff’s name, or to take over the sale just as it did later. Instead of this, they allowed the manufacturing chemists to build up this part of the demand without regard to the trade-mark. Having made that bed, they must be content to lie in it. Hence it appears to me that nothing happening between October, 1915, and March, 1917, will serve to turn the word into a trade-mark.
The plaintiff argues that this is an innovation in the law. I think not. In two very recent cases the Supreme Court has taken the very point, though the division chanced to be territorial instead of arising from the facts of the market. In Hanover Milling Co. v. Metcalf, 240 U. S. 403, 36 Sup. Ct. 357, 60 L. Ed. 713, and United Drug Co. v. Rectanus, 248 U. S. 90, 39 Sup. Ct. 48, 63 L. Ed. 141, a trade-mark and a trade-name were refused protection, though valid elsewhere, in parts of the country where the buyers did not know that they signified the owner, and because they did not. Mr. Justice Pitney especially adverted to the basis upon which the whole law rests. “Cessit ratio, ces-sit lex.” If the rule applies to vertical divisions of the demand, it must apply to horizontal. Of course, we must not attempt too fine an application of such divisions, one reason perhaps for Mr. Justice Holmes’ concurring opinion in Hanover Mills v. Metcalf, supra. For example, in the case at bar it is impossible to provide for such rare retailers as may not, and such rare customers as may, know that “Aspirin” is a trade-mark. We can cut only so fine as our shears permit, and there will be ragged edges on either side.
In sales to consumers there need, however, be no suffix or qualification whatever.. In so far as customers came to identify the plaintiff with “Aspirin” between October, 1915, and March, 1917, this may do it some injustice, but it is impracticable to give any protection based on that possibility. Among consumers generally the'name has gone into the public domain. The defendant, as I understand it, makes no
I have not considered the question of the plaintiff’s title, as I assume, in view of the limited relief granted, the defendant will not care to press it. If not, I will do so upon request made within 10 days after this opinion is filed.
There will be no costs. I append a form for the mandatory part of the decree as to the trade-mark, which will serve unless the parties wish to have it modified:
“Against using the word ‘Aspirin’ in correspondence, invoices, bills of lading, and the like, or upon cartons, labels, or other marking, in any sales of ‘acetyl salicylic acid’ to manufacturing chemists, wholesale or retail druggists, or physicians. The defendant will be free to sell ‘acetyl salicylic acid’ direct to consumers under the name ‘Aspirin’ without suffix or qualification. The defendant in sales to retail druggists will also be free to pack tablets in bottles and boxes of fifty or less, labeled, ‘Aspirin,’ provided these bottles or boxes be wrapped or*516 boxed in containers marked 'acetyl salicylic acid manufactured by U. D. Co.,’ without the word ‘Aspirin/ and that in making such sales the correspondence, invoices, bills of lading, and the like refer to the drug so sold only as ‘acetyl salicylic acid.’ ”