Thе defendants appeal from a judgment enjoining them from using the name, “Uncle Sam” or “Uncle Sam’s,” upon a toy bank, and directing them to account tо the plaintiff for profits and damages. The facts are as follows. The business of the plaintiff and of its predecessor (it will not be necessary to distinguish bеtween them), has been and still is the manufacture of toy banks, which since 1907 it has continuously sold under three registered trade-marks, in all of which the most characteristic feature is the words, “Uncle Sam’s.” The banks have been marketed at between fifty-nine cents and two dollars and a half; that which has had the largest sale contained a registering device which automatically opens the bank when ten dollars have been deposited. The plaintiff has guaranteed all its banks against mechanical defects, has on occasion been called upon to respond, and has always donе so. It has advertised very extensively for many years, and the mark may be assumed to have come to indicate to the buyers of, toys for retail deаlers generally throughout the country that the plaintiff makes any toy banks which bear it. The defendant, J. Chein & Co., Inc., makes tinware of various kinds, such as pails, dishеs and the like; and in the early part of 1941, it added to these a rudely made tin toy bank, in shape and color made to imitate the hat which is part of the accredited costume of the figure, “Uncle Sam.” A slit in the top received coins and the bottom was 'removable to take them out; upon thе top was the legend: “Uncle Sam Bank.” The retail price of this bank was only ten cents; the defendant, Woolworth Company, alone has sold it, but it has sold a very large number. Both defendants knew of the plaintiff’s trade-mark during the period involved in the suit.
There is no basis for the assumption that anyone who bought one of the defendants’ banks would be led to do so because he supposed that the plaintiff was its source. As we have said, the witnesses who testified that they knew the plaintiff’s product by that name, were buyers of toys for retail dealers, and such buyers do not buy on the faith of a trade-mark, but are always directly acquainted with the seller with whom they deal. There is no reason to believe that anyone who bought the defendants’ tawdry little gadget for use— any customer proper — has ever supposed that “Uncle Sam’s” meant the plaintiff, or that it signified to him any single source whatever. Moreover, еven if he had so supposed, there is not the slightest reason to think that it would have had any influence in determining him to buy; and every reason to believe that it would not. Such cheap trifles are bought on their face, so to say: for what they seem to be. Those who buy them care nothing who makes them, because they never even remotely expect to resort to the maker; nor do they rely upon his business integrity, or any proven quality of the wares.
If the plaintiff is to succeed in putting the defendants to an accounting, it must be, not because they have stolen its customers by masquerading under its name, but beсause it has acquired some monopoly of the words, “Uncle Sam,” as such. That would, however, run counter to the whole basis of the law of the subjeсt; for a trademark never really gives any property in the words themselves; all it does is so to identify the “owner” that its use by others can be said to divert tо them customers who might otherwise have bought of him. Restatement of Torts; § 715, Comment b. Mishawaka Manufacturing Co. v. Kresge Co.,
The case is not so clear as to the injunction, because for that it is not necessary to find that the plaintiff has actually lost any sales, or even that it is likely to lose any. Moreover, although, as we have said, buyers for rеtailers will by no possibility actually buy the defendants’ banks because they suppose themselves to be dealing with the plaintiff, they may see the banks on sale and may assume from the name, “Uncle Sam,” that the plaintiff makes them; and conceivably it may hurt the plaintiff in their eyes to learn that it is putting out so paltry a product. True, there is no evidence that in fact this has, or will, hurt the plaintiff’s reputation; nevertheless, it is now well settled that in such a situation the first user of the mark has an interest which courts will recognize; he need not expose his good name to the hazards of another’s conduct, but may stoр its use even though he cannot show that that use will result in the actual loss of trade. Yale Electric Corporation v. Robertson, 2 Cir.,
Judgment reversed; complaint dismissed.
