215 F. 795 | E.D. Pa. | 1914
Specific findings of facts and conclusions of law, so far as are necessary to the ruling of the case now made, are filed herewith.
It is not altogether easy to find a phrase which will accurately present the precise points involved in a decision of this case. The facts themselves may be soon stated, and are not in serious dispute. The general questions involved relate to charges of unfair competition and infringement of a proprietary trade-mark.
The plaintiff and defendant each is a manufacturer of canvas belting as a substitute for leather. The methods of manufacture in use by all such makers are, generally speaking, the same. Cotton duck is folded in such manner as to make a strip of the required width and thickness. It is then stitched together longitudinally so as to make a band, whose ends may be fastened together to form a belt. The material is treated with oil, and then painted on the surface sides of the canvas strips. The practical result is that the edges also are colored with the paint. This treatment is functional; acting as a preservative
Waiving the question of the validity of this trade-mark, and conceding it to give a proprietary right to a green color applied to one edge of the belting, the plaintiff complains of the defendant, not in that it has put one green edge on its belting, but in that it has colored both edges “a brilliant black.” This brings the plaintiff up against this dilemma. It must either admit that making the two edges black is not an infringement of a one green-edge trade-mark, or it must claim this trade-mark to cover any colored, or at least black-colored, edges, thus giving it the same protection under its limited trade-mark it would have had under one in its broadest form. A claim that the coloring of both edges of a belt black is an infringement of a trademark which consists of “a green line or stripe,” or, as the drawing shows, a hand or border of green, cannot be sustained unless there is such a resemblance as to be deceptive in fact. A claim of monopoly of right, either at common law or under the trade-mark statutes, in the privilege or practice of making the edges of the belting of any col- or is certainly too broad.
As we are constrained to find against the plaintiff the fact of unfair competition and infringement of its trade-mark, the question of the validity of such trade-mark and plaintiff’s proprietary right in the use of the green edge need not be inquired into.
' The bill of the plaintiff is therefore dismissed, with costs to the defendant. Counsel may submit a, form of decree in accordance with this opinion for approval.