170 P. 288 | Or. | 1918
The two plaintiffs allege in substance that for ten years prior to the filing of the complaint they have been conducting a barber school and college in Portland, as partners, for the instruction of persons desiring to learn the barber trade; that they carried on such business under the firm name and style of “Moler Barber College” and that they registered the same' as required by Chapter 154 of the Laws of 1913. They say that this name is well known throughout Oregon, the United States and Canada, as applied to barber colleges; that they purchased from one A. B. Moler of Chicago the right to use it in this state in the conduct of their business and that it is valuable to them on account of these facts.. They further assert that since February 23,1916, the defendant has
“The defendant, who is a subsequent manufacturer, cannot palm off his goods as those of his rival, the plaintiff, and escape the restraining hand of equity. It is not necessary to show by specific instances that purchasers have actually been deceived; but a court of conscience is justified in stamping the brand of commercial piracy upon the wares of defendant if he puts them upon the market in such form and manner as to deceive the purchasing public into the belief that such wares were made by plaintiff.”
The same doctrine is taught in Wood v. Wood, 78 Or. 181 (151 Pac. 969, L. R. A. 1916C, 251), and it is said in 10 Cyc. 151, cited by defendant:
*167 “While the name of a corporation is not in strictness a franchise, yet the exclusive right to its use may be protected in equity by the writ of injunction by analogy to the protection of trademarks, just as the name of an individual, a partnership, or a voluntary - association may be so protected; and the absence of a fraudulent intent is no defense to an action for such relief. ’ ’
The case of Clark v. Aetna Iron Works, 44 Ill. App. 510, cited by the defendant here, to the effect that the words composing the name of the defendant import a corporation in which there can be no property as of a trade name by a partnership, depends upon the older case of Hazelton Boiler Co. v. Hazelton Tripod Boiler Co., 142 Ill. 494 (30 N. E. 339). Those decisions have for their authority on that point a peculiar statute of the State of Illinois providing in substance that if any company, association or person puts forth any sign or advertisement, and therein assumes a corporate name for the purpose of soliciting business, without being in truth incorporated, it shall be punished by a fine. Our statute, being Chapter 154, Laws of 1913, not only does not make such assumption of name a criminal act, but permits it, provided the person or persons using it shall register their real names. The Illinois cases, based as they are on a different statute, are not controlling in the present juncture. Of course, if the plaintiffs were falsely pretending to be a corporation to be known by the name they seek to protect, equity would not give them relief because that would be to uphold them in the fraud. On the other hand, if, indeed, they are using the words in question as the name of their partnership in good faith and as permitted by the statute, equity will prevent a wrongful appropriation of it by another. All the cases in this state in which the subject has been con