235 Mass. 553 | Mass. | 1920
This is a suit in equity to restrain the defendant from using the name Burns Detective Bureau, Burns Detective Agency or Burns Agency. The master found that the plaintiff, in November, 1909, was licensed as a private detective by the city of Cambridge where he lived, and in that year opened an office in Boston, which he still maintains. He did business principally in New England. On January 27, 1911, he filed with the Secretary of the Commonwealth a form of advertisement, “Burns Detective Bureau,” and a certificate of record was issued. From that time until the present he used the name “Burns Detective Bureau” on his signs and in the Boston city directory. He was listed in the Boston telephone directory as “Burns Detective Bureau,” and under this name advertised in the newspapers and other publications. Since 1911 he has continued the detective business, advertising under the name of “Burns Detective Bureau,” and was known among those interested in the private detective business in the vicinity of Boston. The defendant opened an office in Boston in February, 1911. It had offices distributed throughout the larger cities of the United States, and in Mon- ' treal, London and Paris, and is entitled to the exclusive service of William J. Burns. In October, 1913, its name was changed from “The William J. Burns National Detective Agency, Inc.” to its present one. It appeared in the Boston directory and in the telephone directory as “Burns William J. National Detective Agency Inc. The,” and “Burns William J. International Detective Agency Inc. The.” It also appeared in the business listing of the Boston city directory for 1913 as “Burns Detective Agency The William J. National, Inc.” and in the telephone directory for Boston and vicinity in 1915 and 1916 as “Burns Detective Agency, The William J. International Inc.”
William J. Burns had the right to use his own name in his business as a detective, to incorporate and carry on a detective agency. “Every one has the absolute right to use his own name honestly in his own business for the purpose of advertising it, even though he may thereby incidentally interfere with and injure the business of another having the same name. In such case the inconvenience or loss to which those having a common right to it are subjected is damnum absque injuria. But although he may thus use his name, he cannot resort to any artifice or do any act calculated to mislead the public as to the identity of the business firm or establishment, or of the article produced by them,
In the light of these principles the plaintiff has not shown that he is entitled to equitable relief. The only use of the defendant’s name that was likely to cause anything more than incidental confusion of the plaintiff’s agency with the defendant’s, was in the arrangement in the telephone directory, where the words “Burns Detective Agency” preceded the name “William J.” Even if this finding were correct, the defendant practised no fraud in the use of its name; it did not attempt by any artifice to deceive the public or induce the plaintiff’s patrons to deal with it upon the supposition that they were dealing with the plaintiff, and there was no evidence that the change in the defendant’s name or in the telephone directory was made for the purpose of misleading the plaintiff’s customers. Although the plaintiff had an office in Boston two years before the defendant entered the field, and was entitled by priority of use to the name “Burns Detective Bureau,” there is nothing in the master’s report to show (to quote the words of Mr. Justice Holmes in L. E. Waterman Co. v. Modern Pen Co. supra) that “the profit of the confusion is known to and, if that be material, is intended by” the defendant. In fact, the master finds specifically that the defendant did not secure the change in the listing in the telephone directory for the purpose of deceiving the plaintiff’s patrons.
We are unable to distinguish the case at bar from International Trust Co. v. International Loan & Trust Co. 153 Mass. 271, 277, 278, where it is stated that the “International Loan and Trust Company of Kansas City, Mo.” could not be, as a matter of law, mistaken by rational people for the “International Trust Company”: “It is not sufficient that some person might possibly be misled, but the similarity must be such that ‘any person, with such reasonable care and observation as the public generally are
There was some evidence tending to show a slight diversion of business, but one seems to have gained and lost nearly as much as the other, and what confusion there was in the mail was shown to be trifling and could hardly be said to have been occasioned by the listing in the telephone book. From the facts reported, we see no reason why an injunction should issue.
Bill dismissed.