The Coca-Cola Company brought this action against the Cleo Syrup Corporation to enjoin it from infringing the trademark “Coca-Cola” and from engaging in unfair competition, and for damages. The defendant denied the charges of infringement and unfair competition. The District Court’s findings were in favor of the plaintiff. The court entered a decree enjoining the defendant from:
“(a) Using in connection with the manufacture, offering for sale, or sale of any soft drink or a syrup for the preparation thereof, or ingredient thereof, or any other merchandise of substantially the same descriptive properties:
*417 “(1) The words Cleo-Cola as now used by the defendant or any like word or words or any colorable imitation of either of them as the words Cleo-Cola are now used and displayed.
“(2) Any name or names, word or words, device or devices, which by reason of the appearance thereof or otherwise, induce, or is likely to induce the belief that defendant’s goods emanate from plaintiff, or by its authority or which enables or is likely to enable the passing off of defendant’s goods as and for the goods of plaintiff.”
The defendant, in appealing from the decree, asserts:
1. “That the phrase Cleo Cola, even as now used and displayed by appellant, is not a colorable imitation of, and does not infringe any trade-mark or good-will rights that appellee may have in, to, or under, the phrase Coca-Cola; and
2. “That the name or phrase Coca-Cola, as used and applied by appellee on and in connection with its soft drink syrup and beverages made therefrom, is inherently false and deceptive and violative of and contrary to the public interest and the public policy of this country — that hence appellee is before this Court with unclean hands and consequently entitled to no consideration, respect, or relief whatsoever.”
The business, the trade-mark, and the product of the plaintiff are all so well known that they do not require description. The trade-mark “Coca-Cola” has long since come to mean the beverage produced and sold by the plaintiff. To the public generally, the trade-mark means nothing else. The question raised by the defendant’s second contention was effectively put to rest by the Supreme Court of the United States in Coca-Cola Company v. Koke Company of America, 1920,
And (at page 146 of
See also Dixi-Cola Laboratories v. Coca-Cola Co., 4 Cir.,
The defendant since 1935 has been engaged in making and selling a beverage similar in appearance to the plaintiff’s product. The defendant’s beverage is sold and advertised under the trade name “Cleo Cola”.
Whether the present dress or make-up of the trade name “Cleo Cola” renders that trade name so similar to the trademark “Coca-Cola” that the former deceives, or will probably deceive, purchasers and cause them to buy the product of the defendant in the belief that it is the product of the plaintiff, is a question of fact. The District Court, which was the trier of the facts, has determined that issue in favor of the plaintiff. This Court, upon review, will not retry issues of fact or substitute its judgment with respect to such issues for that of the trial court. Storley v. Armour & Co., 8 Cir.,
That there is more than a trifling similarity phonetically and otherwise between the trade name “Cleo Cola” and the trademark “Coca-Cola”, is apparent. Each consists of two four-letter words, each word commencing with the letter “C”. Originally the defendant did not simulate the distinctive script of the Coca-Cola trademark nor the color scheme used by the plaintiff to display its trade-mark. The defendant originally showed the name “Cleo Cola” upon a label the colors of which consisted of brown, light green, pink or flesh color, and white, the words “Cleo Cola” being shown in white upon a brown background. By successive alterations, the color scheme used by the defendant for displaying the trade name “Cleo Cola” was changed, and the name came to be shown, on its labels and advertising in red lettering upon a white background. At’ the times the successive changes in color were made, the defendant was familiar with the make-up of the plaintiff’s trade-mark and knew that it was shown in red letters on a white background or in white letters on a red background. When the red and white display was first used by the defendant, the lettering or script of the trade-name “Cleo Cola” differed materially from that of the trade-mark “Coca-Cola”. Thereafter, however, the defendant, in addition to imitating the plaintiff’s color scheme, simulated the distinctive script of the plaintiff’s trade-mark, with the flourishes which had always characterized that mark.
The burden was upon the plaintiff to show that the use by the defendant of the trade name “Cleo Cola” was calculated to deceive ordinary purchasers and to create confusion in the trade. Kann v. Diamond Steel Co., 8 Cir.,
There was also introduced by the plaintiff the evidence of numerous housewives, who testified that they had been shown bottles of the defendant’s beverage on which were displayed the defendant’s trade name, and had been asked whether *419 they had any thought as to who made the product, and that they had said, “the Coca-Cola Company” or “Coca-Cola people” or “Coca-Cola”. It is true that, at the trial, on cross-examination, many of them indicated that their confusion had resulted from the use of the word “Cola” in the defendant’s trade name. They admitted the obvious distinction between the words “Cleo” and “Coca”, and none testified that they had actually been deceived into purchasing Cleo Cola for Coca-Cola. Nevertheless, we think that this evidence was competent and relevant. It bore upon the issue whether the trade name “Cleo Cola”, when dressed in substantially the same raiment as the trade-mark “Coca-Cola”, was, or was likely to be, deceptive and confusing.
We think that the District Court was justified in concluding that the trade name “Cleo Cola” as presently made up and used by the defendant is deceptively similar to the trade-mark “Coca-Cola”, and that the deceptive similarity was deliberately brought about by the defendant. Men reasonably may be presumed to intend the natural consequences of their acts. This case is closely analogous to that of My-T Fine Corporation v. Samuels, 2 Cir.,
It is a fair inference here, as it was in the case of My-T Finé Corporation v. Samuels, supra, that the defendant copied the make-up of the plaintiff’s trade-mark as far as it dared, and further than it should have dared, and that it did this in order to divert customers from the plaintiff. This is an additional reason why such dissimilarities as there are between the name “Cleo Cola” and the trade-mark “Coca-Cola” did not require a finding by the District Court that the defendant’s trade name was not deceptively similar to the plaintiff’s trade-mark, and why the finding of infringement should be sustained.
The decree appealed from is affirmed.
