253 S.W. 308 | Tex. App. | 1923
Both appellant and appellee are doing a general plumbing business in the city of Dallas. Appellant has been doing business under the name of "Dallas Plumbing Company" for a period of about 20 years. Until the year 1914 the name was used to designate a copartnership, but during the year 1914 it was incorporated and the same name adopted as its corporate name. Appellee uses the name of "Dallas County Plumbing Company" merely as a trade-name. When the name was first adopted the business was operated by the present owner, J. F. Grimm, and one Boone, as a copartnership. At a later time appellee Davis was interested in the business as a partner with Grimm; but, at the time the suit was filed, appellee J. F. Grimm was the sole owner of the business, Davis having no interest in it whatever. The suit was filed by appellant praying for an injunction restraining appellees Grimm and Davis from using "Dallas Plumbing Company" in its trade-name, and restraining them from advertising their business in the city of Dallas, Tex., by using "Dallas Plumbing Company" in connection with its name, and also for damages alleged to have been occasioned it by the use of the name adopted by appellee.
The application for a temporary writ of injunction was set down by the court for hearing, and, at said hearing, appellees filed an answer denying all of the equities set up in appellant's petition. After a hearing on the issues thus joined by appellant's sworn petition and appellee's sworn answer, the court denied the prayer for a temporary writ of injunction, and the case is brought to this court for review.
The court necessarily found against appellant on its charge of appellee's having adopted the name under which he was doing business for the fraudulent purpose of securing patrons that otherwise would have gone to appellant; also, on its charge that use was made by appellee of such name for the purpose of deceiving the public and the patrons of appellant by causing them to believe they were giving their business to appellant. The question then to be decided by this court is: Are the two names so similar as that any person with such reasonable care and observation as the public general is capable of using, and may be expected to exercise, would mistake the one for the other and deal with the one business concern when he intended to deal with the other? Caffarelli Bros. v. Western Grocer Co.,
Affirmed.