106 Wash. 72 | Wash. | 1919
Lead Opinion
The respondent was incorporated under the laws of the state of Washington in the year
For many years prior to 1900, the tool known as the diamond drill had been in nse thronghont the world, the feature which distinguishes the diamond drill from other drills being the use of a cutting surface set with carbon diamonds, the drill being used to secure a core of the rock in the line of the drill hole, this core being brought to the surfa'ce through the drill for examination. Prior to 1900, Knight and Stone had been employed by the Sullivan Machinery Company, which was engaged in the manufacture and sale of mining supplies, among them the diamond drill, and, incidentally, was contracting to drill with diamond drills for different individuals or companies desiring to have their properties prospected. Knight and Stone, leaving the employ of the Sullivan Machinery Company, engaged as partners in the business of drilling by contract with diamond drills for owners of property desiring to have mineral prospecting done by means of drilling. They then incorporated the respondent, ninety-five. per cent of the activity of which is contracting business, the other five per cent consisting of the manufacture and sale of diamond drills. Since 1904 these drills had been known
The respondent in its business had acquired a reputation for ability and reliability and had paid out large sums of money in advertising its business under the name of “Diamond Drill Contracting Company”, and had become well known in the diamond drill contracting business by the name of “Diamond Drill Contracting Company”. Mitchell for some years had oeen a diamond driller in the employ of the Sullivan Machinery Company and, after leaving that company, had been employed by the respondent for a few months in the year 1911 as a drill foreman. After he had organized the appellant company, it engaged, in Spokane, within a very few blocks of the main office of the respondent, in the diamond drill contracting business. It, also, as a minor portion of its business, engaged in the manufacture and sale of diamond drills of a design similar to that manufactured by the respondent, but made under what is known as the Jenkins’ patent. The„ appellant for sometime conducted its operations with drills manufactured by the respondent and purchased from it; but a few months before the beginning of this action, the appellant began to engage in the manufacture and sale of machines on its own account under the Jenkins’ patent.
At the time of the trial, there were in the United States and Canada some half dozen or more firms or corporations which were taking contracts to drill with diamond drills; but only one or two of these companies, other than the two involved in this litigation, included in their names the words “Diamond Drill Contracting Company,” one company so doing being the Smith & Travers Diamond Drill Contracting Com
Section 3680, Rem. Code, reads, so far as material to this controversy, as follows:
“No corporation shall take the name of a corporation theretofore organized under the laws of this state, nor . . . one so nearly resembling the name of such other corporation as to be misleading. The secretary of state shall refuse to file said articles of incorporation of any association or corporation violating the provisions of this section.”
The secretary of state, having accepted the filing of the articles of appellant, has exercised his discretion and determined that the two names are not misleading. The appellant argues therefrom that the respondent is bound by that determination, and in this action cannot collaterally attack the action of the secretary of state, and that such action can only be reviewed in a direct proceeding, and then only for mistake, abuse, or want of jurisdiction; and if there was ground for an honest difference of opinion, the secretary of state, having exercised his judgment, that exercise cannot be here reviewed. State ex rel. Megler v. Forrest, 13 Wash. 268, 43 Pac. 51.
It is probably true that the action of the secretary of state in allowing the filing of the appellant’s articles cannot be brought into question in this proceeding; and, in a direct action against the secretary of state for the purpose of securing the cancellation
“It may also be true that had the names of these corporations, instead of being exactly alike, only resembled each other with a difference such as to furnish room for an honest difference of opinion as to whether they so resembled each other ‘as to be misleading,’ thus presenting a question for the exercise of judgment on the part of the secretary for decision, we would not award relator relief by mandamus.”
But this view of the action of the secretary of state does not exclude the consideration of the other phase of § 3680, which provides that no corporation shall take the name of a corporation theretofore existing, nor a name so closely resembling the name of such other corporation as to be misleading. In other words, the section provides that no corporation shall take a misleading name, and that the secretary of state shall not allow the filing of the articles of incorporation of such company. As we have said, we cannot, in this action, interfere with the filing which has already taken place; but if the second company has taken the •name of a corporation theretofore existing or taken a name which is so similar thereto as to be misleading, we can prevent, in this action, the second company from continuing to use such name. Grand Lodge A. O. U. W. v. Graham, 96 Iowa 592, 65 N. W. 837, 31 L. R. A. 133; Society of the War of 1812 v. Society of the War of 1812, etc., 46 App. Div. 568, 62 N. Y. Supp. 355; Edison Storage Battery Co. v. Edison Automobile Co. etc., 67 N. J. Eq. 44, 56 Atl. 861.
This presents to us a question of fact as to whether the prefixing of the word “International” to the name theretofore used by the respondent is the adoption
Tbe employees of tbe appellant testified tbat, from tbe time of appellant’s organization until tbe time of trial, two letters, one telegram, but no telephone calls, bad been received at tbe office of appellant which were intended for tbe respondent; tbat tbe attention of tbe mail carrier having been called to tbe mis-delivery of these letters, no trouble of tbat character thereafter occurred. There was no evidence produced showing tbat there bad been any loss of business to tbe respondent by reason of this confusion which has been shown, nor has tbe appellant obtained any information concerning the respondent’s business, nor has tbe appellant taken advantage of tbe confusion, such as it was, to benefit thereby.
But confusion is not what is inhibited by tbe statute; “misleading” is tbe term, and tbat means, calculated to lead astray or lead into error, and must
The testimony here shows that the drill contracting business is confined to a very narrow field; the general public never is a customer. The activities of these companies is confined nearly exclusively to operating for mining men and concerns, and among such customers it is generally known who are available in the drilling field, and the corporate name does not mean as much as the reputation of the individual who does the actual drilling. No commodity or service is being offered to a large class of prospective customers by the respondent and appellant, but a very small group ever is in the market for this service, and this group is engaged in such business and is composed of such persons that the chance of any of them being misled by such similarity as exists in the two names here involved is remote indeed. The evidence does not disclose that there has been any such misleading, and we cannot say, as a matter of fact, that the evidence satisfies us that the names are so similar as to be misleading. Pacific Coast Condensed Milk Co. v. Frye & Co., 85 Wash. 133, 147 Pac. 865. The statute does not confine its protection of the name of a corporation first adopting it to any particular or special class of name, and the protection afforded is more
Section 9492, Bern. Code, prohibiting the counterfeiting or taking of similar trade-marks is analogous to § 3680; and under it we have held that any character of words may be trade-marked independently of the restrictions of the general trade-mark law.
“Bespondent’s second assertion is based on the ground that the word ‘groceteria’ is descriptive of the grocery business, and therefore is not such a word as could become the subject of a trade-mark. It would seem that the statute above quoted would be controlling here and answer this argument contrary to respondent’s contention.” Groceteria Stores Co. v. Tibbett, 94 Wash. 99, 162 Pac. 54, L. R. A. 1917C 955.
Bespondent says that it embarked upon what was virtually a new course of business when it entered into the diamond drill contracting business; that, prior to that time, although there had been contracting done, it had only been done as the incidental and minor operations of concerns primarily engaged in the manufacture and sale of drills; that, having thus entered into such business, it, in reality, created a new business, and therefore was privileged to take and hold a word descriptive of that business as its corporate name; and that, through the creation and development of its business, those words have now become possessed of a secondary meaning; that they now constitute a trade-name of the corporation, and that the name has acquired among mining men and the public generally a meaning different from the obvious meaning of the words, and that it now signifies
“Q. Were you and Mr. Stone partners in the diamond drill contracting business? A. Well, yes, we came out here as agents and partners of the Sullivan Machinery Company. Q. Then afterwards you quit the Sullivan Machinery Company and went in business for yourselves? A. We did. Q. As partners, Knight & Stone? A. Knight & Stone, yes. Q. You continued in that relation until you incorporated in 1900? A. Yes, a couple of years. Q. During the time that you were partners, Mr. Knight, you were representing the Sullivan Machinery Company, and after that you were diamond drill contractors, weren’t you? A. Yes. Q. Mr. Knight, the words ‘diamond drill’ is a description of the drill that was exhibited there in your office this morning? A. Yes. Q. That is known as a diamond drill, isn’t it? A. That is known as a diamond drill, yes. Q. And the reason of that is because diamonds are used instead of steel for cutting the rock? A. I suppose that is the reason they call them diamond drills. Q. It is generally known and has been known for a long time? A. Yes, it is. Q. Where dicf that name originate? A. I think it was really originated in France. I think that is where the first diamond drill was made that I can find out. Q. How long ago? A. O, I cannot tell. Q. A couple of hundred years ago? A. No, about forty years ago, something like that. Q. Who were the first companies to use that in this country? A. Well, I don’t know. The Sullivan Machinery Company of Claremont, New Hampshire was the first and' the Toole Manufacturing Company of Chicago. Q. And the Toole Manufacturing Company was absorbed by the Sullivan Machinery Company, and it is now one and the same thing, isn’t it? A. Yes, it is now one and the same thing. Q. Were you in the employ of the Sullivan Machinery Company at that time? A. No. Q. When did you go into the employ of the Sullivan Machinery Company? A. In*85 1886. Q. Were they using the name diamond drill then in designating their diamond drills? A. They called themselves the Sullivan Machinery Company. Q. I understand. They designated this particular machine as a diamond drill, didn’t they? A. They advertised that they were manufacturing and selling diamond drills, yes, sir, certainly. Q. When you were with the Sullivan Machinery Company any person or association of persons that were doing a contracting business and using one of these machines were called diamond drill contractors, weren’t they? A. Yes, they have been called diamond drill contractors. Q. And they have been called that all over the world? A. All over the world, yes. Q. And that name did not originate with you? A. The Diamond Drill Contracting Company did. Q. I say the words diamond drill or diamond drill contractors did not originate with you? A, No, it did not originate with us. Q. How would you term a firm or association of people that were using diamond drills and doing* a diamond drill contracting business? A. I would call myself diamond drill contractors for prospecting mineral lands with a diamond drill. Q. Why didn’t you select your name as a corporate name? A. We thought that was a pretty good name. Q. Why did you select the name Diamond Drill Contracting Company? A. It was a euphonious, harmonious name. Q. Now, Mr. Knight, when you selected that name it was a name that was known generally by diamond drill salesmen, by diamond drill employes, and by people who contemplated having diamond drilling as a name given to designate a certain kind of business, didn’t you? A. Well, the fact of the matter is-Mr. Voorhees: Wait a minute. Q. I will ask it again. You knew, Mr. Knight, when you selected that name, that it was a name designating a given line of business, didn’t you? Just answer that question, yes or no? A. No, I don’t know as I did. Q. You don’t know that it did? A. No. Q. Didn’t you just testify a while ago that the machine was known as a diamond drill? A. Yes. Q. Didn’t you testify a while ago that ever since you had known anything about the business that*86 men who collected themselves together were known as diamond drill contractors? A. Yes, sir. Q. And didn’t you testify a while ago that any association of men were known as the diamond drill contracting company? A. These fellows were all- . . . Q. Didn’t you testify a while ago that when an association of men got together and went into this business they were known as diamond drill contractors? Just look at me. . . . A. Not entirely . . . They are not all called diamond drill contractors. Some are called exploration companies, and some call themselves diamond drill contractors, and some contractors for prospecting mineral lands with a diamond drill, and all the way down the line you can form one hundred combinations with those words. Q. But they are most generally known, Mr. Knight, as diamond drill contractors? A. I suppose you might say they are generally known as diamond drill contractors. Q. Now, Mr. Knight, isn’t it a fact that when you took that name you did not take it for its beautiful sound, but you took it because it is simple and generally designated the business you were engaged in? A. It certainly does designate the business we were in. When we took that name there were very few diamond drill contractors in this country. That was in the early days, and there was very little known about diamond drilling’ at that time, and all of these other fellows have come in since that time. Q. All of them? A. Every one.”
While individuals or corporations may do business under names which consist merely of descriptive words, or generic or geographical words, or words in common use, or words out of their common tise, or may create new words or new combinations of letters which cannot be properly designated as accepted words; yet, an individual or corporation taking as a business name words which are merely descriptive of the business in which he or it is engaged will not be protected in the exclusive use of that name,
We are not beré concerned witb tbe question of tbe infringement of a trade-mark nor witb tbe question of a trade-name as applied to a class of commodities, but this case only presents tbe question of a trade-name as it relates to a business. Northwestern Knitting Co. v. Garon, 112 Minn. 321, 128 N. W. 288. Tbe respondent, while it contends tbat it was tbe first one to engage as a company in tbe diamond drilling contracting business, does not claim tbat, by reason thereof, it occupied any exclusive field. It concedes, as it must, tbat any one possessed of a diamond drill and tbe desire to contract for service therewith may do so, but merely contends tbat it is entitled to tbe exclusive use of tbe name “Diamond Drill Contracting Company”. It must be conceded tbat a corporation cannot adopt words purely descriptive of an already existing business and tbus acquire an exclusive right to tbeir use. Elgin Butter Co. v Elgin Creamery Co., 155 Ill. 127, 40 N. E. 616; Industrial Mutual Deposit Co. v. Central Mutual Deposit Co., 112 Ky. 937, 66 S. W. 1032.
In its final analysis, then, this point in tbe case is resolved into tbe determination of a question of fact. If tbe respondent, when it organized, can be said to bave been tbe discoverer, promoter, and pioneer in a new business, it might then bave given to tbat business a name wbicb it could exclusively enjoy as
This evidence is not such as to establish the status of the respondent as the originator of the business, and cannot entitle it to the exclusive use.of the words which it has adopted as its name. The fact that there were diamond drill contractors at the time respondent
Those cases in which we have heretofore protected a trade-name from unfair competition are cases in which, to the words descriptive of the business, has been added some fanciful word, or a word of personal or geographical significance, and partaking of the nature of a fanciful name, the entire name thus becoming something more than a mere description of the business in which the company using it was engaged. In these cases, the originality of such combination has been protected. These cases are distinguished from the case at bar by the fact that here the respondent has added nothing to words merely descriptive of its business. Eastern Outfitting Co. v. Manheim, 59 Wash. 428, 110 Pac. 23, 35 L. R. A. (N. S.) 251; Rosenburg v. Fremont Undertaking Co., 63 Wash. 52, 114 Pac. 886; State ex rel. Collins v. Howell, 80 Wash. 649, 142 Pac. 1157; Martell v. St. Francis Hotel Co., 51 Wash. 375, 98 Pac. 1116; Wright Restaurant Co. v. Seattle Restaurant Co., 67 Wash. 690, 122 Pac. 348; San Francisco Oyster House v. Mihich, 75 Wash. 274, 134 Pac. 921; New York Life Insurance Co. v. Orpheum Theater & Realty Co., 100 Wash. 573, 171 Pac. 534.
A case illustrative of the use of words not descriptive of the business at all but purely fanciful or orig
The decree of the lower court is cancelled and the action dismissed.
.Tolman, Mount, Mitchell, Main, Parker, and Holcomb, JJ., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting)— We dissent. A corporation cannot adopt words purely descriptive of an already existing business, and thus acquire an exclusive right to their use. Elgin Butter Co. v. Elgin Creamery Co., 155 Ill. 127, 40 N. E. 616; Industrial Mutual Deposit Co. v. Central Mutual Deposit Co., 112 Ky. 937, 66 S. W. 1032. The diamond drill was being used when the respondent was incorporated, but the diamond drill contracting business did not exist as a well recognized form of contracting business. As far as it existed, it was purely incidental to the manufacture and sale of diamond drills by one or two corporations whose names did not indicate that they were engaged in the diamond drill contracting business. It, then, is true that the respondent, through its advertising, its efforts, and its conduct of its business, has developed a contracting business for the drilling by diamond drills where no such business had theretofore existed on any such scale. It is true that the name under which it operated is composed of words which are merely descriptive of the business in which it is engaged, that it invented no new name, created no combination of let
These words were, as we have indicated, merely descriptive or generic words, and probably could not have been protected under the trade-mark law, but are entitled to protection, if, through their use, they had acquired a secondary meaning. In other words, these descriptive words have become cemented into a trade-name, and have solidified into a definite and determined combination the name of the respondent, which identifies the respondent and its business and the use of which name will be protected.
It is to be remembered that we have not here under consideration a trade-mark infringement. Northwestern Knitting Co. v. Garon, 112 Minn. 321, 128 N. W. 288. We must concede that the respondent has no right, and it is claiming none, to the exclusive possession of the field of diamond drill contracting. That field is open to whoever has a diamond drill and the desire to contract for its operation; but the respondent is entitled to use exclusively those words which it assembled and used to designate a new business which it had placed in the field of operation. The respondent has taken and opened a new field of industry and given to it a name, which name in its use has become
The appellant contends that, in any event, the respondent has shown no such injury by the appropriation of its name as to entitle it to the relief sought. It may be that the evidence does not disclose that there has been a great deal of confusion in the affairs of respondent by reason of the appellant’s use of the name; but it is not necessary that there should be such a showing in order for respondent to maintain its right to its trade-name. It is sufficient to show that probable injury would result if it .is shown that actual interference has taken place, that is sufficient injury to entitle it to an injunction.
The argument of appellant that this case presents no question of a trade-name is stated as follows:
“When the respondent adopted the descriptive words they were not descriptive of the respondent’s business alone, for others were in the same business and remain so to this day. The doctrine of secondary meaning does not apply to a name under which an individual or association does business where the words composing the name are merely descriptive of the business. ‘The entire doctrine of trade names presupposes that the public have no need to use the word in referring to the article to which it is applied. Thus the public has need of the word ‘Ivory’ to describe elephants ’ tusks; it has no need of the word ‘Ivory’ to describe soap.’ Ninas on Unfair Competition, 67 Second Edition. So the name which through use may ac*94 quire a secondary meaning, while it may be a word in common nse and publici juris as a part of the English language, must not be a word necessarily descriptive of the article or business to which it is applied. As suggested by Mr. Nims no one could acquire the exclusive right to the word ivory as applied to elephants ’ tusks, because necessarily descriptive, yet the right to use the same word in connection with soap may be acquired because the word was not, until used by the makers of Ivory Soap, in any way descriptive of soap. There can be no secondary meaning of a word until that word has been so used in connection with an article or business that in the understanding of the public the word no longer has its usual significance but is understood to mean the goods or business of the complainant. Its use then becomes a representation that the article or business with which it is connected is the article or business of the complainant.”
Throughout the appellant’s brief, it recurs to the fact that, when the respondent adopted the descriptive words, they were not descriptive of the respondent’s business alone for the reason that there were others in the same business. This is best exemplified by the concluding paragraph of appellant’s reply brief:
<i;That the incorporation of respondent under the name assumed by it did not determine its right to the exclusive use of that name; that right depended, not upon the secretary having granted it a charter under that name, but upon whether the words or combination of words composing its name were such that it could lawfully appropriate them to its exclusive use, as having invented or coined them, or being the first to use them. That it may have been the first corporation to make use of them in a corporate name gives no exclusive right. If they were in common use, they had become free to all. ’ ’
With these contentions, we must agree as a matter of law; but, as we have already shown, the respondent was not only the first to use' the name, but was the
The offense of the appellant does not lie in the use of the common words employed to describe its business, but in the adoption of a combination of words which will tend to the confusion of respondent’s business. A complete answer to the argument of the majority is to be found in the statute. There is no room for construction. The question is not whether, in the opinion of the judges, the names may be similar or dissimilar, but whether the name adopted so nearly resembles “the name of such other corporation as to be misleading. ’ ’ This result is evident to the mind and is confirmed by the proof. If the statute will not protect a business unless it has coined some new word as descriptive of its business, or as a name to designate and distinguish it as a corporation, it is a vain and useless thing. Respondent, having virtually created a business which did not exist before, is entitled to the use of the particular name which it applied to that business to the exclusion of other corporations who have the right to engage in the same business, but not under the name containing the words “Diamond Drill Contracting Company.”