123 F. 205 | D.N.J. | 1903
The bill in this case recites that the complainant is engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling a beverage or stimulant known as “Ginger Brandy”; that the business was begun by his father in 1856, and has been continued ever since by him or his successors, and the product thereof has been
There is no denial by defendant of his use of labels like the complainant’s Exhibits 2, 3, and 4, and the sale of his ginger brandy in bottles to which such labels are attached, so that the only question presented to the court is whether the defendant’s labels are so nearly like those of complainant as to cause confusion in the minds of intending purchasers, whereby they would be apt to mistake the goods of the defendant for those of the complainant. It is not necessary that the resemblance should be such as would deceive first or intelligent purchasers. It is sufficient if it be calculated to deceive the unwary, the incautious, or the ignorant purchaser. Neither need the resemblance be so great that one would be deceived who should see the labels placed side by side. If an ordinary purchaser, looking at the article offered to him, would naturally be led, from the label attached to it, to suppose it to be the product of a rival manufacturer, and would purchase it in that belief, the court will enjoin the use of such article as fraudulent. This being the well-settled law, the only question presented is one of fact, viz., is the defendant’s label calculated to deceive the ordinary purchaser of that character of goods? If we examine the exhibits, we will see that the size, shape, and color of the labels are the same; that the color and size and position of printed matter on the labels are alike; that the descriptions setting forth the nature and quality of the article, as well as their division into lines, and the decoration of the label with scrolls, and the location of the manufacturer’s title, are similar. It will be observed that the defendant uses a separate “caution” label, and that it is of the same size, color, and arrangement of printing; also that it has a subscription of maker’s title. It is true that there are differences in labels, such as substitution of the words “Imperial” for “Cauffman’s,” the omission of the word “Celebrated,” and other differences, such as the wording of the “caution” and the name subscribed thereto. It is not, however, the dissimilarities which are the test, but the resemblances. As was said by Judge Lacombe in Hansen v. Siegel-Cooper Company (C. C.) 106 Fed. 690: “It is possible, but highly improbable, that two persons, neither of whom had ever seen or been informed of the other’s design, might have produced packages as similar as the two before the court.” I am unable to account for the
Let an injunction be prepared in accordance with the prayer of the bill.