8 Mo. App. 277 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action in the nature of an action of deceit, for damages for using what the plaintiff in his petition claimed
It appears that plaintiff had been for many years engaged in the wine and liquor business in St. Louis, on a. large scale, under the trade name of C. Conrad & Co. For nearly two years before the institution of this suit he had been putting up an excellent quality of beer, which he had, at great expense, introduced to the trade; and which was very favorably received in other cities, particularly in California and Texas. Budweis is a small town in Bohemia, where very good beer is made, and as plaintiff, who is not a brewer, seems to have believed, by some peculiar process. It appears, however, that the Budweiser process of making beer is not peculiar to Budweis. The beer which plaiutiff put up was manufactured for him by Anheuser & Co., a large brewing house in St. Louis. The directions of Conrad were that it should be brewed of imported hops and barley. It was brewed altogether from the best imported hops, which were imported and furnished for that purpose to Anheuser & Co. by Conrad himself. These imported hops are superior to any American hops. The barley was not imported; but it was the best, carefully selected American barley, and as good as any foreign barley. In brewing, the mash is prepared by infusion, or by decoction, or by a process in which the two modes are combined. In Budweis, the mash is prepared by infusion ; and this beer is so prepared. It costs to prepare it about two dollars a barrel more than the ordinary beer manufactured by Anheuser & Co., and is a better beer ; and is described by the experts examined as being an uncommonly good beer — a hop beer, of good color, bright and inviting in appearance. Conrad testifies that he has a peculiar process of bottling his beer, which is his secret, and which improves the beer. The defendant claims, and Uhrig swears, that the Conrad method of bottling is the same used by defendant, and is a known European process. For the purpose of protecting his interests,
The right of a manufacturer to his own particular trademark is one that the law fully recognizes. The courts interfere, both to protect the manufacturer in his particular trade, and to guard' the public against imposition. If the marks are so different that the ordinary buyer cannot be deceived, no wrong is done to the public ; and if the mark complained of is not shown to have been adopted and used by plaintiff, so that his business is not injured by its use by another, there is no ground for the action of deceit.
It is contended in this case that the mark simulated was not a trade-mark, and that words “ Budweiser Lager-Beer ” could not be a trade-mark. It is not important to this case to determine whether the device simulated is technically to be called a trade-mark or a label, nor is it important that the words “ Budweiser Lager-Beer,” by themselves •alone, could not be used as a trade-mark. The entire device simulated was that which had been adopted by a merchant to designate goods manufactured for him, and under his direction, and sold by him ; the device was adopted by him
Let it be granted that no one can have an exclusive property in the words “Budweiser Lager-Beer,” and that all lager-beer made in any town called Budweis is properly so called. The injury done in this case by defendant to plaintiff was, not in calling the beer sold by defendant Budweiser beer, but in affixing to the bottles of defendant’s beer a mark calculated to deceive the ordinary purchaser into the notion that the bottled beer of Uhrig was the article so carefully prepared by Conrad, by whatever name it might be called.
The owner of goods which he exposes to sale in market in his own right, is entitled to the exclusive use of any trademark devised and applied by him to distinguish them as being of a particular manufacture or quality, although he is not himself the manufacturer. Walton v. Crowley, 3 Blatchf. 440.
It is contended that the law can afford no protection to plaintiff, because his so-called trade-mark or label was in itself a misrepresentation. This beer, it is said, was not Budweiser beer. That it was not Budweiser beer, in the sense that it was not made in Budweis, is true. Neither was it imported beer. But it does not'appear that it was held out to the public either as actually made in Budweis or as a foreign article. The statement on the label explains that it was not made at Budweis, but by the Budweiser process. Whether there was anything peculiar to Budweis about this process or not, it seems that this beer was really made as beer is made in Budweis — of the best barley and hops, and with the same preparation of the mash.
The label states that it was made of the best Saazer hops and imported barley. If this was not literally true, the
The imitation of the label was a false representation that the goods to which it was attached were manufactured or sold by the person whose label was imitated ; and there was evidence that persons were deceived thereby, and that the public was thus defrauded. The variety of cases in regard-to trade-marks, as is remarked by Judge Robertson in Corwin v. Daley, 2 Bosw. 224, grows out of the various ingenious means used by traders to defraud each other, and to represent, without appearing to do so, that the articles dealt in by one are those of another. It was not a question in this case whether the words “ World-renowned Budweiser Lager-Beer,” used by themselves, without the other devices shown in this case can be a trade-mark, and whether a court of equity would, on the testimony in this case, enjoin their use. Others might, perhaps, employ these words with truth, and honestly. But no one could honestly adopt, for beer in bottles like the bottles used by plaintiff, the label which”defendant is shown to have used, if it so closely sim
It is not necessary to set out the instructions given or refused. The case was put to the jury on a theory as favorable to defendant as he could ask. If the views of the law of the case which we have expressed are correct, the instructions refused were properly refused.
Some objections were saved to the admission and exclusion of evidence, but in this we see no material error to warrant a reversal of the judgment.
As to the damages, the facts present a case of fraud on plaintiff and violation of his rights for which the action lies without proof of specific damages; and, the jury having found for plaintiff, he was entitled to such damages as the jury, on the whole evidence, should be satisfied he had sustained. And the damage was not confined to the loss of such actual sales as could be specifically shown to be lost, but the jury might make such inferences as to the loss and injury sustained by plaintiff as they might think warranted by the whole evidence in the case. Marsh v. Billings, 7 Cush. 322. We do not think the damages were excessive.
The judgment is affirmed.