36 F. 324 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1888
After issue joined and proofs taken, the plaintiffs moved to further amend their bill. The motion was denied, with leave to renew it at the hearing. It has been renewed, and is now granted, to make the case symmetrical. The plaintiffs’ firm have for a very long time made six-cord sewing thread, and sold it on spools of light-colored wood, holding 200 yards each; and since about 1842 have used on each spool-head a circular label, smaller than the head, of light gold color around a dark center, having a dark line around near the margin, and the firm name and the words “Best Six Cord” in a circle inside the line on the gold ground, and the number of the thread with the figures and letters “200 yds.” in light gold color on the dark ground of the center, leaving the wood of the spool bare around the label. On April 5,1870, design letters patent No. 3,939 were granted to Hezekiah Conant for embossing the number of the thread in figures on the, wood of spools in spaces around the label, to run seven years, and were acquired by the plaintiffs. Since about 1873 they have used these embossed numbers on their spool-heads in connection with the label. The defendants make six-cord sewing thread, and sell it on spools holding 200 yards each, and since 1878 have used substantially such a label with the name of the Merrick Thread Company substituted for that of the plaintiffs, the figures and letters “200 yds.” omitted, a star in place of the number in the center, and the number at one side, in connection with similar embossed numbers on the margin of the spool-head. The bill is brought, as it stands amended, for relief against such use of these labels and embossed numbers.
The plaintiffs have no monopoly of six-cord thread, or of the sale of it in lengths of 200 yards on spools. All others have a right to manufacture it, put it up in that form, describe it, and dispose of it. They have an exclusive right to the reputation acquired by their thread, and to have the thread pass current in trade as theirs, and no one has the right to give currency to other thread than theirs as theirs. McLean v. Fleming, 96 U. S. 245; Trade-Mark Cases, 100 U. S. 82. The words “Best Six Cord” are merely descriptive of the quality, and the figures merely denote the size of the thread. These are all the statements that are common to both labels, and these could not be appropriated by the plaintiffs to the exclusion of others for these purposes. Manufacturing Co. v. Trainer, 101 U. S. 51. When the patent expired the use of the embossed numbers for all lawful purposes became free to all. Grant v. Raymond, 6 Pet. 218. These principles are not much controverted, but the plaintiffs insist that their long use of these words and figures, dig-