205 N.Y. 459 | NY | 1912
This is a suit to restrain the defendant from using a corporate name so closely resembling that of the plaintiff as to be calculated to mislead and deceive the public and persons having transactions with either corporation. The plaintiff has been awarded the injunction which it sought, and upon a unanimous affirmance of the restraining judgment the defendant has appealed to this court. Although there are nominally two defendants, they constitute but one organization and will be treated as one defendant in this opinion.
The plaintiff was incorporated by a special act of the legislature (Laws of 1871, chap. 88) under the name of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, “to protect and aid its members, and their families, and to accumulate a fund for that purpose, which said fund shall be used and appropriated for no other purposes whatsoever; ” and it is authorized to acquire and hold real and personal estate to the value of $200,000, to sell and dispose of the same, to have and use a common seal and to establish branch organizations. The corporation has grown and prospered, being now represented by branches in many , other states of the Union and having an aggregate membership of about 280,000 persons.
The defendant corporation, on the other hand, is of comparatively recent origin, having been organized
The grievance of the plaintiff is that the defendant has pursued a course designed to mislead and confuse the public by a deceptive imitation of the plaintiff’s name, seal, emblem, membership card and the titles of its officers. This grievance is established by the findings of the trial judge at Special Term and the unanimous affirm • anee thereof by the Appellate Division, which precludes us from considering any of the points of the appellant based upon the alleged insufficiency of the evidence.
There is one question of law, however, which may appropriately be discussed, since it does not appear ever to have been expressly passed upon by this court — and that is the right to injunctive relief against the unfair and misleading use of a corporate name in the case of a benevolent or fraternal association, where it is not carrying on any trade or industrial or financial business which can be injuriously affected by the action of a simi
The question has seldom been presented to courts of last resort, but the case of International Committee of Young Women’s Christian Associations v. Young Women’s Christian Association of Chicago (194 Ill. 194) is an authority to the same effect. The Young Women’s Christian Association of Chicago was one of the large number of associations of women, incorporated and unincorporated, which have existed in this country during a long period and had been affiliated with one another through the agency of biennial conferences. It was organized in 1877. Its managing board was made up of representatives from nearly all the evangelical churches in Chicago, but no religious or sectarian test had been required of the voting and managing members except that they should be of Christian character. At one of the biennial conferences a movement was set on foot to
The public policy of this state against permitting the use of misleading names by corporations of any character is evidenced by the legislation on the subject. Thus the General Corporation Law (Laws of 1909, ch. 28, § 6, as amended by Laws of 1911, ch. 638) provides that no certificate of incorporation of a proposed corporation having the same name as a corporation authorized to do business under the laws of this state, or a name so nearly resembling it as to be calculated to deceive, shall be filed or recorded in any office for the purpose of effecting its incorporation or of authorizing it to do business in this state. This provision is a substantial re-enactment of a section in the first General Corporation Law (Laws of 1890, ch. 563, § 4). Even more expressive of the legislative intent to repress the deceptive adoption of preexisting corporate names is section 948 of the Penal Law,
The appellant insists that the names of the parties here have not enough similarity to support the action; and that in any event the judgment should not go further than to prohibit the use of the defendant’s name without the prefix “Improved” and the suffix “of the World.” We think that the names are so similar as to be extremely likely to deceive and that a limitation of the injunction in the manner suggested would not give the plaintiff the relief to which it is entitled. Indeed, the plaintiff’s organization has become so well and widely known simply as Elks (as the trial court has found) that the assumption of a title containing that appellation by any other independent benevolent corporation or fraternal order would in and of itself convey the false impression that there was some connection between them. Therefore, the learned judge at Special Term was right in enjoining the defendant from in anywise using the word Elk or Elks as part of its title or incorporation. The case would be quite different if the members of the defendant organization had ever been members of the
We think the judgment goes too far, however, in for- ' bidding the defendant from using the same titles for its officers as those borne by the officers of the plaintiff. We can perceive no valid legal objection to the use of such titles as exalted ruler, esteemed leading knight, tiler, etc., by any association which chooses thus to designate ' its officials. This is a harmless imitation of the plaintiff, complimentary rather than otherwise. The prohibition against the use of the colors of the plaintiff corporation, to wit, purple and white, should also be stricken from the judgment. A case might arise in which the use of a particular combination or arrangement of colors ought to be forbidden, but no such general prohibition as this can be sanctioned.
The chief practical effect of the present judgment is to compel the defendant to adopt another name which contains no reference to the Elks. Its organization is not interfered with, and it may continue to exercise all its fmictions just as before. If its members desire the name of an animal, there is a long list of beasts, birds and fishes which have not yet been appropriated for such a purpose. It is only the virtual misrepresentation that they are Elks that is complained of here.
. The judgment should be modified by striking out the
Cullen, Oh. J., Gray, Haight, Vann, Werner and Chase, JJ., concur.
Judgment accordingly.