8 Paige Ch. 75 | New York Court of Chancery | 1840
The allegation in the complainant’s bill is, that the defendant has assumed the name of the complainant’s newspaper, for the fraudulent purpose of imposing upon the public and supplanting him in the good will of his established paper, by simulating the name and dress thereof; with the intent to cause it to be understood and believed by the community that the defendant’s newspaper was the same as the complainant’s, and thereby to injure the circulation of the latter. If this were in fact so, I should have no difficulty in making this order absolute. For although the business of publishing newspapers ought, in a free country, to be always open to the most unlimited competition, fraud and deception certainly are not essential to the most perfect freedom of the press. There is indeed no patent right in the names. Yet as the names of party newspapers, in these days, have no necessary connection with the principles which they advocate, and are manufactured as readily as the new names if not the new principles of political parties, there could be very little excuse for the editor of a new paper who should adopt the precise name and dress of an old established paper ; which would be likely to interfere with the good will of the latter by actually deceiving its patrons. In the case of Hogg v. Kirby, (2 Ves. 226,) Lord Eldon considered the publication by the defendant, of what upon its face purported to be a continuation of the plaintiff’s magazine, to be such a fraud upon the good will of that periodical work as to call for the interference of the court of chancery. And in the more recent case of Knott v. Morgan, (2 Keen’s Rep. 213,) Lord Langdale granted an injunction to restrain the defendant from running an omnibus, having upon it such names, words and devices as to form a colorable imitation of those which had previously been placed upon the omnibuses of the plaintiff; with the evident intention of obtaining a part of the business of the latter by deceiving the public. And this decision of the master of the rolls was subsequently affirmed by Lord Cottenham upon appeal.
In the absence of any thing which is really calculated to deceive the intelligent patrons of the complainant’s Democratic Republican New Era, the decision of Chancellor Sanford in Snowden v. Noah, (Hopk. Rep. 347,) is an authority against this application for an injunction, to restrain the defendant from publishing his paper, entitled “ New Era, revived by Richard Adams Locke, its orignal editor.”
The order to show cause is therefore discharged, with costs.