144 Iowa 509 | Iowa | 1909
The plaintiff began business in 1893 under the name and style of the “Robe & Tanning Company” at Leeds, a suburb of Sioux City. He has always conducted his correspondence and kept his bank account in that name and done most of his advertising in that name; but soon after beginning business letters, orders, and consignments began coming to him addressed “Sioux City Robe & Tanning Company,” and have continued ever since. Roth names
While a primary and common use of a word’ or phrase may not be exclusively appropriated, there may be a secondary meaning or construction which- will belong to the person who has developed it. In the secondary meaning there may be a property right. . ’. . Consequently unfair competition, is distinguished from trade-mark cases in this: That it does not necessarily involve the question of the exclusive right of another to use the name, symbol, or device. A word may not be capable of becoming an arbitrary trade-mark, and yet there may be an unfair use of the word which will constitute unfair trade. The whole doctrine is based upon the theory of protection to the public whose rights are infringed or jeopardized by confusion of goods produced by unfair methods of trade, as well as upon the right of the complainant to enjoy the good will of a trade built up through his efforts and sought to be taken from him by unfair methods.
One using the ordinary name of a commodity, business, or occupation in connection with the name of a
The principle is summarized tersely by Mr. Justice Holmes in American Waltham Watch Co. v. U. S. Watch Co., 173 Mass. 85 (53 N. E. 141, 43 L. R. A. 826, 73 Am. St. Rep., 263) :
It is desirable that the plaintiff should not lose custom by, reason of the public mistaking another manufacturer for it. It is desirable that the defendant should be free to manufacture watches at Waltham, and to tell the world that it does so. The two desirata can not both be had to their full extent, and we - have to fix the boundaries the best we can. On the one hand, the defendant must be allowed to accomplish its desideratum in some way whatever the loss to the plaintiff. On the other, we think the cases show that the defendant fairly may be required to avoid deceiving the public to the plaintiff’s harm so far as is practicable in a commercial sense. • It is true that a man can not appropriate a geographical name; but neither can he a color, or any part of the English, language, or even a proper name, to the exclusion of othersv whose names are like his. Yet a color in connection with a sufficiently complex Combination of other things may he recognized as saying so circumstantially that the defendant’s goods are the plaintiff’s as to pass the injunction line. New England Awl & Needle Co. v. Marlborough Awl & Needle Co., 168 Mass. 154, 156 (46 N. E. 386, 60 Am. St. Rep. 377). So, although the plaintiff has no copyright on the dictionary, or any part of it, he can exclude a defendant from a part of the free field of' the English language, even from the mere use of generic words, unqualified and unexplained, when they would mislead the plaintiff’s customers to another shop. Reddaway v. Banham (1896), A. C. 199. So, the name of a person may become so associated with
In that case defendant was enjoined from placing “Waltham” or “Waltham, Mass.,” on its watch plates.
In Viano v. Baccigalupo, 183 Mass., 160 (67 N. E. 641), the plaintiff had been carrying on the business of roasting peanuts some years on Fulton Street under the name “Boston Peanut Roasting Company,” when defendant engaged in the same business on the same street finder the name “Boston Trade Peanut Roasting Company,” and the court in granting the relief prayed, said: “The defendant has a right -to carry on his business of roasting peanuts for the trade, and to carry it on in Fulton Street in Boston, and to advertise that he is doing so; but he has no right in making these advertisements to steal the good will attached to plaintiff’s personality — the benefit of the public’s desire to have their peanuts roasted by the plaintiff.” And, after referring to some English decisions:
It is laid down in those cases that where the sole thing on which the plaintiff relies for relief against the defendant is a word common to the public, as in case of a geographical name, the plaintiff is not entitled to protec
In La Republique Francaise v. Saratoga Vichy Spring Co., 191 U. S. 427, 435 (24 Sup. Ct. 145, 146, 48 L. Ed. 247, 252), Mr. Justice Brown observed that:
Geographical names often acquire a secondary significance not only of the’place of the manufacture or production, but of the name of the manufacturer or. producer and the excellence of the thing manufactured or produced, which enables the owner to assert an exclusive right to such name as against every one not doing business within the same geographical limits, and, even as against them, if the name is used fraudulently for the purpose of misleading buyers as to the actual origin of the thing produced, or of passing off the productions of one person as those of another.
And Judge Burton, in Computing Scales Co. v. Standard Computing Scale Co., 55 C. C. A. 459 (118 Fed. 965), stated the doctrine with conciseness:
When the word is incapable of becoming a valid trademark, because descriptive or geographical, yet has by use
See Elgin National Watch Co. v. Ill. Watch Case Co., 179 U. S. 665 (21 Sup. Ct. 270, 45 L. Ed. 365); Pillsbury Washburn Flour Mills Co. v. Eagle, 86 Fed., 608 (30 C. C. A. 386, 41 L. R. A. 162); Mishell v. Prokop, 58 Neb. 628 (79 N. W. 552), turned on the evidence.
The right to be protected in the use of a geographical or descriptive name does not depend upon a proprietary right therein or an exclusive right to its use. It is enough if such name or description is so employed in connection with other words of designation as to particularly identify •the manufacturer or tradesman or his business. When thus identified, and, through advertising or long application, a business has been established under that name, another will not be permitted to pirate upon the good will of the proprietor’s customers and patrons by sailing under his flag without his authority or consent. The theory on which the use of geographical or simple descriptive names are not protected is that to do so would give a monopoly in the sale of goods even of those other than produced by the person doing business thereunder, and the public would be injured thereby, instead of being protected. Moreover, in such a case the name of the business, when assumed by another, is truthful, and not calculated to deceive; but the name under which plaintiff was doing business was not one usually or customarily employed in the description of a particular trade or occupation. On the contrary, it was a. combination of a word of such significance with another without definite meaning in connection with that of the locality. Had the name been “Sioux City Tannery,” the authorities cited by appellant would have been more in point. As it is, the