176 Mass. 129 | Mass. | 1900
This is a complaint under St. 1895, c. 462, § 4, for using counterfeit trade-marks upon cigars. The defendants admitted that they were guilty subject to the question whether there was a valid registration of the trade-marks, in-eluding the question whether the statute was constitutional in
The trade-marks were recorded under St. 1893, c. 443, but it is not disputed that if properly recorded the liability for counterfeiting them is preserved by § 7 of the later act.
The act of 1893 provides that a “ person, association, or union” that has adopted a trade-mark as therein provided (see § 1) may file the same for record, etc., and “ shall file therewith a certificate specifying the name or names of the person, association, or union so filing ” the same, etc. § 4. The trade-marks in question were recorded by three firms, Alies and Fisher, Breslin and Campbell, and Henry Traiser and Company, and the certificate, in each case gave only the firm name as the name of the person, etc., so filing. It is argued that partnerships can come into this section only under the word “ person,” as “ association ” and “ union ” are shown by the context to mean associations like trade unions, that have officers, that the person who files is the person who has adopted the trade-mark under § 1, and that when those who have adopted and filed are more than one their names must all be set forth, as recognized by the words “ name or names ” above quoted.
We think that this argument puts into the statute a preciseness of specification that is not there. The words “name or names” are satisfied if applied to the case of two or more persons who have no conventional joint name. Perhaps other cases could be imagined. But the policy of the statute does not require all the names of the co-owners of a trade-mark, as is shown by its terms when the co-owners are an unincorporated association with officers. There is no more reason for requiring all the names of an ordinary partnership to be set out than there is for a similar requirement in the case of a larger one organized like the one referred to in Phillips v. Blatchford, 137 Mass. 510. The recording of trade-marks by ordinary partnerships is contemplated expressly in the words of the oath to be mentioned in a moment. An ordinary firm name gives more information about the members who compose the partnership than the name of a larger unincorporated association would give. If the words of the statute are to be taken with grammatical nicety upon a ques
The statute further requires the certificate to he “ accompanied by a written declaration, verified under oath by the person or some officer of the association or union by whom it is filed, to the effect that the party so filing such . . . trade-mark . . . has a right to the use of the same, and that no other person, firm, association, union, or corporation has the right to such use,” etc. § 4. The declarations accompanying the certificates in question were verified in each case by the oath of only one partner, and this again is urged as a failure to comply with the conditions of the act. Evidently the office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth has not understood the act to be so precise in this any more than' in the last mentioned requirement, as is apparent from the practice in the three instances before us; and we are of opinion that its understanding and practice are right. The oath of one of the persons by whom the trade-mark is filed is enough by the words of the statute when he is an officer of an unincorporated association. We are of opinion that it equally is so when he is the member of a firm. Whether if we had construed the statute more strictly a failure to comply with it exactly could be set up here, after the' Secretary of the Commonwealth had issued his certificate, we have not considered. See Whittemore v. Cutter, 1 Gallison, 429, 433; Crompton v. Belknap Mills, 3 Fisher, Pat. Cas. 536, 541; Seymour v. Osborne, 11 Wall. 516, 540, 541; Hoe v. Cottrell, 17 Blatchf. 546, 549.
The statute further requires the certificate to set forth the length of time, if any, during which the trade-mark has been in use. Two of the certificates read “since about 1888,” and one, “since the year 1888.” The former two trade-marks, in fact, had been in use two or three years, and the latter some nine years or more. It is objected that the time should have been set forth truly and in precise form. But the difference was to the disadvantage of the applicants, if of anybody, and is no ground for invalidating the registration.
There was no evidence as to where the defendants intended to.
-'Exceptions overruled.