122 N.Y.S. 360 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1910
The .plaintiff and the defendants each seek to restrain the other from using the name “American Peroxide & Chemical Company ” and the word “American ” to indicate a brand of goods sold. The plaintiff further seeks to have the defendants enjoined from selling and offering for sale such goods, namely, peroxide of hydrogen, in bottles and wrappers which he claims are similar in shape and color to those used by him. In 1902 the defendant Hamlin and others organized in Hew Jersey a corporation called the American Peroxide & Chemical Company. Hamlin was the active manager of this company, which manufactured and sold under its own name a brand of peroxide of hydrogen which acquired some reputation in the trade. In 1905 Hamlin severed his connection with the company. Shortly after-wards he organized the defendant Ilydrox Chemical Company, which has been actively engaged since that time in the manufacture and sale of peroxide of hydrogen. After Hamlin’s withdrawal the business of the American Peroxide & Chemical Company diminished, until finally, about a year afterward, it was decided to sell the assets and dissolve the corporation. The plaintiff purchased such assets and obtained a bill of sale signed by the company’s vice-president, Carroll, whose action was subsequently ratified by the board of directors. Furthermore, the company received the consideration for the transfer, amounting to $5,500, and has never made any effort to question the validity of the sale. Hnder such circumstances the defendants, who were strangers to the transaction, cannot attack it. Although the stockholders had voted to dissolve the company, and all its property had been transferred on ¡September 1, 1906, the dissolution was not completed until later in the month, namely, on September twenty-fourth, owing to the necessity of advertising the notices required by the Hew Jersey statute in such proceedings. Meanwhile, and on September first, the plaintiff had commenced to do business in this ¡State under the name of the American Peroxide Chemical Company, and has so continued ever since. The defendant Hamlin had been aware of the negotiations which resulted in the purchase by the plaintiff, and had himself made efforts to become the buyer.
Judgment for plaintiff.