190 F. 604 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1911
A motion was made in this cause some . time since for a preliminary injunction. When it was reached on the calendar the defendant’s counsel arose and presented the court the packages of both parties and said he would submit to any decree which the court recommended. The defendant’s package was an obvious imitation of the complainant’s, and I then required certain changes to be made, which the defendant has carried out in his present package. The parties agreed upon a form of decree, which the complainant says is violated by the defendant’s present package. This may perhaps be so in respect of features of imitation other than the registered trade-mark.
The complainant’s registered trade-mark is a rectangle with a heavy black band at the top and the picture of an old woman wearing spectacles and with a sadiron in her hand, accompanied by a broad red baud; the respective positions not being defined.
The defendant, on the other hand, has a rectangle representing an Indian drawing a bow inserted in a yellow arrow on the face of the package. The question, therefore, is, assuming the complainant’s registered trade-mark to be valid and not infringed, has this court jurisdiction to pass upon the general question of unfair competition?
Where the trade-mark has been found valid but not infringed, the Circuit Court of Appeals of this circuit has held that the Circuit Court has no jurisdiction of the question of unfair competition. Burt v. Smith, 71 Fed. 161, 17 C. C. A. 573; Hutchinson v. Loewy, 163 Fed. 42, 90 C. C. A. 1.
In the remaining category — that is where the trade-mark is found valid and infringed — there is a difference of opinion among the courts whether the Circuit Court has also jurisdiction of the other claim of unfair competition. Such jurisdiction was denied in patent suits in King v. Inlander (C. C.) 133 Fed. 416, and Cushman v. Fountain Pen Co. (C. C.) 164 Fed. 94. Judge Archbald in the Third circuit with some hesitation held to the contrary in T. B. Woods Sons Co. v. Valley Iron Works (C. C.) 166 Fed. 770, but he was not followed in the same circuit by Judge Elolland in the subsequent trade-mark case of Mecky v. Grabowski (C. C.) 177 Fed. 591.
The case under consideration falling within the second of the above categories, the motion is denied.