190 F. 927 | 6th Cir. | 1911
Lead Opinion
This is a suit by hill in equity, brought by the above-named complainant, the G. & C, Merriam Company, against the defendant, Saalfield, wherein the complainant alleges that for a long period of time it has been engaged in the publication and sale of a series of dictionaries, some large and comprehensive, and .others abridgments thereof, all founded on the original dictionary .prepared and published by Noah Webster, and severally bearing the name and title of “Webster’s Dictionary.” From this long use of that name in association with the name of the complainant, it is claimed that the distinctive name “Webster” has acquired a secondary meaning, and has long since come to be known, and is still known, by the public to signify the dictionaries published by the complainant. And thereupon the bill charges that the defendant is publishing and selling a parallel series of dictionaries, purporting to be Webster’s dictionáries, and bearing his name prominently on the title page and backs thereof, and is advertising its publications to the public as genuine Webster’s dictionaries, without any recognition of the prior right of complainant.
It appears from the record that the dictionaries of the complainant, which at the time of the commencement of this suit were being published and sold, and which are supposed to be counterfeited by the defendant’s dictionaries, have been copyrighted, but that these copyrights had expired. At all events, nothing is now claimed from any infringement of copyrights, and the case is planted solely upon the charge of unfair competition in business. But the fact that they have enjoyed the exclusive privileges afforded by the copyright law is one of much importance; for after that the exclusive privilege of the publisher is gone. lie has agreed that it should be, as the price of the protection he has been accorded; and it is not now to be doubted that the name of the author is part and parcel of the matter copyrighted.
The case was brought to the attention of the Circuit Court by a motion for a preliminary injunction. But at the hearing thereof the case was by stipulation of counsel submitted as upon final hearing oti the pleadings and proofs; it being agreed that the affidavits already filed should be treated as depositions, and certain other specified depositions taken in a case formerly depending in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Massachusetts between the present complainant and one Geo. W. Ogilvie should be considered as if taken regularly in the case before the court. The case was thereupon fully heard by Judge Tayler, who presided. The bill was dismissed, the court being of opinion that the present controversy was concluded by tile decree of the court in the Massachusetts case above referred to; it appearing that Saalfield was in privity with Ogilvie, who, as has been stated, was a party to the former suit, and that, as the court thought, the issues were the same as in the present case. The opinion of the court, which comes up with the transcript, indicates that the court, considering the facts to be the same as in the former suit, forbore to further consider the merits.
The case in the Massachusetts court comprehended an original bill filed by Ogilvie against the Merriam Company for the purpose of protecting its right to publish and sell a comprehensive dictionary which it was about to publish under the title of “Webster’s Imperial Dictionary.” ] t was therein complained that the Merriam Company was publicly denying the right of the complainant to publish the dictionary with that title and threatening to prosecute all persons engaged in the publication or sale thereof. The Merriam Company answered the bill, and claimed to justify its opposition to the publication of the dictionary of tile complainant upon the ground that it, the Merriam Company, had acquired by long-continued use an exclusive right to the use of the word “Webster,” which was the characteristic of the title of Ogilvie’s dictionary, in its. own publications of dictionaries, and that Ogilvie’s intended use of it in his own publication would be an im
“This dictionary is not published by the original publishers of Webster's Dictionary or by their successors.”
This amendment was sanctioned by the Circuit Court of Appeals, and the case was remanded for the entry of a final decree. 170 Fed. 167, 95 C. C. A. 423. Thereupon the following decree (omitting formal and irrelevant parts) was entered in the Circuit Court:
“Thai a. perpetual injunction issue in this suit, restraining the defendant, the G. & 0. Merriam Company, its officers, agents, attorneys, and servants, and all others claiming or holding through or under it, from publishing or issuing circulars, advertisements, or notices stating in form or effect, or in any manner claiming, that it. the defendant, or any other person, firm, or corporation claiming nruler or through it, has exclusive right to the use of the name ‘Webster’ in the title of dictionaries.
“That a perpetual injunction issue in this suit, restraining the cross-defendant, George W. Ogilvie, his agents, attorneys, servants, employe's, and all persons claiming or holding through or under him, from using as the name or title of his said dictionaries described in the amended cross-bill herein, to which this litigation relates, the words ‘Webster’s Dictionary,’ or •Webster’s Imperial Dictionary,’ or ‘Webster’s Universal Dictionary,’ or any equivalent thereto, upon the title-page, or upon the back or cover of said dictionaries, or in any advertisement, circular, notice, or announcement, referring to said dictionaries, unless accompanied by flie following statement, plainly printed upon the title-page, and in each said advertisement, circular, notice, or announcement, namely: ‘This dictionary is not published by the original publishers of Webster's Dictionary, or by their successors' — and especially from publishing or issuing in their present form the tiile-pjiges and backs of his said dictionaries and the circulars and advertisements in this suit adjudged misleading or deceptive, or in any other form of title-page, back, circular, or advertisement that is in any way calculated to deceive purchasers into purchasing complainant’s dictionary under the belief that it is a Webster's dictionary published by the G. & Ü. Merriam Company.”
A petition for a writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court of the United States was filed by the Merriam Company, hut the petition was denied. The foregoing final decree of the Circuit Court is the one which Judge Tayler held conclusive of the present controversy.
It is not to be implied from what we have said that we regard the
The averment of his answer that his publications are in conformity with the decision of the court in Massachusetts is too general, it gives no date from and after which he so conformed, and it is proven that at the time when the bill ,was filed he was not doing so. Moreover, the averment amounts to a mere conclusion of his own, and furnishes no data upon which the court can judge whether his opinion is correct or not. In response to an interrogatory attached to the bill, the defendant appends to his answer copies of his business advertisements and circulars to the trade, to which he refers as indicating his observance of the requirements of the Massachusetts injunction. But an inspection of them fails to show any purpose to do this. On the contrary, they show, by what they contain and what they omit to state, a purpose to keep in obscurity what his duty was to make plain. Copies of pictures of the defendant’s dictionaries are shown in some of these advertisements and circulars; but only the lettering on the back and the outside of the front covers is displayed, and in this the name “Webster” is prominent, but there is no hint to distinguish the book from the original Webster’s or its successors. We can only conjecture what appeared on the title-page. In short, we cannot doubt
With respect to the matter of an accounting, the case is beset with the same difficulties that were present in the.Massachusetts case, and were alluded to by Judge Putnam in the final opinion of that case, and for the present we shall make no order in that regard. This, however, we will do without prejudice to a motion for rehearing in that behalf, if the complainant is advised to make such an application.
The decree of the court below must be reversed, with costs, and a decree for the complainant should be entered, awarding an injunction such as indicated by this opinion. For the sake of conformity, we will direct the form of the injunction to be entered to be- that awarded at the final decree in the First circuit, copied in the foregoing opinion.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the foregoing opinion of Judge SEVERENS upon the construction thereof that what is there said regarding the defendant’s failure to conform to the limitations imposed upon him is confined to the situation existing at the time of the filing of the bill in the case before this court (which .was December 26, 1908), and which situation continued until after the final decree and injunction in the Massachusetts case (which were made and issued April 21, 1909), at some time after which date the defendant changed the title-pages and inscriptions of his new issues of dictionaries, as well as of his new advertising matter, for the apparent purpose of conforming to the injunction in the Massachusetts case. I think defendant’s liability is to be tested by reference to the requirements of that final decree and injunction.