This is a bill to restrain the defendant from using the name “Fall River and New Bedford Express” in connection with a business carried on by him.
Facts found by the master, in so far as it is necessary to state them in order to show the grounds of this decision,
The fact that the defendant does not use the word “Company,” as does the plaintiff, is found by the master to be without significance, and we think the case should be dealt with as if the two forms were identical.
The judge rightly confirmed the master’s report and entered a final decree in favor of the plaintiff. A trade name, like a trade mark, may be assigned, as long as it remains associated with the same product or business with which it has become associated in the public mind. Hoxie v. Chaney,
When Driscoll took over that part of the plaintiff’s business which consisted in operating the Boston terminal he was to that extent the plaintiff’s successor, and he continued to operate in direct connection with the freight line between Boston and Fall River which the plaintiff still operated under the original name. This remained true after the removal from 153 Albany Street to 85 Albany Street. But when Driscoll sold out to the defendant the connection was broken, and it becomes at least doubtful whether it would not have been a deception upon the public to allow Driscoll to transfer the name for use in connection with a business which had never before used it and which was in direct competition with a business that had always used it. At any rate the business reestablished by the plaintiff at 153 Albany Street was so far a resumption of that which he had originally carried on there and so intimately connected with the business which the public knew as the “Fall River and New Bedford Express Company” that no obstacle exists to the resumption by the plaintiff of the rights reserved under his arrangement with Driscoll.
The fact that the defendant is an innocent purchaser for value does not save him. The defendant as a purchaser from Driscoll could acquire no greater title than Driscoll had. Driscoll’s right to use the name had terminated. The defendant is in the same position as the purchaser of a chattel from a bailee who had no power to sell it. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 106, § 25. Oliver Ditson Co. v. Bates,
Interlocutory decree affirmed.
Final decree affirmed with costs.
