234 F. 63 | 6th Cir. | 1916
The Prest-O-Lite Company, a manufacturer and distributor of acetylene gas for lighting automobiles and other vehicles, brought suit to restrain alleged unfair competition and infringement of trade-mark by the copartnership called the Bluff City Welding Company, which acted as sales agent for the Memphis Acetylene Gas Company, which latter company was permitted to become a co-defendant. Plaintiff stores its gas in portable, copper-plated steel cylinders, the container being marked “Prest-O-Lite Gas Tank” and bearing plaintiff’s corporate name as manufacturer, etched in the metal surface of the cylinder, together with a notice licensing its sale and use only when filled with gas and acetone compressed by plaintiff, who
The prominent grounds on which defendants contest plaintiff’s right to the relief granted are: (1) That defendants have not been guilty of fraud or unfair trade; and (2) that the attempt to limit the use to which plaintiff’s gas tanks shall'be put after sale by plaintiff is void, whether rested upon trade-mark rights or the system of exchanging filled for empty.tanks.
The case differs in no essential feature from- the Davis Case, and defendants’ contentions in the instant case are, with one exception, fully covered by what was said in the former case and in the opinion rendered by Judge Hollister in that case in the District Court. 209 Fed. 917. The views announced by us in the Davis Case are in harmony with the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Seventh Circuit in Searchlight Gas Co. v. Prest-O-Lite Co., 215 Fed. 692, 131 C. C. A. 626, and the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in Prest-O-Lite Co. v. Heiden, 219 Fed. 845, 135 C. C. A. 515, L. R. A. 1915F, 945. On the authority of these decisions, the order appealed from must be affirmed except in one particular: it forbids the refilling of or dealing in Prest-O-Lite tanks without “completely removing and permanently obliterating from said cylinders or tanks the said trade-mark ‘Prest-O-Lite,’ ” etc. Defendants’ only attempt to obliterate the trade-mark “Prest-O-Lite” is by covering it over with black paint. Such covering is no more permanent than the covering by printed paper label, held in the Searchlight, Davis, and Heiden Cases to be an insufficient obliteration. But by an amendment of the obliteration provision of the order in the Davis Case (made after the decision of the District Court in the instant case and subsequent to the amendment of the order in the Searchlight Case) the refilling or dealing in refilled Prest-O-Lite tanks was forbidden without “replating or enameling the outer surface of such cylinders or tanks so that the name of the Prest-O-Lite Company and the word ‘PrestO-Lite’ shall b.e obliterated to the complete extent that either plating or enameling can be made to so obliterate, and such obliteration by
Defendants, by their brief (presumably written before they learned of our amended order in the Davis Case), ask that the order, unless reversed, be made to conform to that in the Searchlight Case, which differs somewhat from that in the Davis Case. Plaintiff now consents to amendment conformably to that had in the latter case. We take it for granted that defendant would rather have the order conformed to that in the Davis Case than to have it affirmed.
The record is accordingly remanded to the District Court, with directions to modify the order so as to conform substantially to the amended order in the Davis Case. The costs of this court will be divided.