Opinion by
The plaintiff sued to enjoin the defendant from “imitating or using the trademark, trade name, advertisements, bottle style or dress of the Plaintiff or any near similarity thereto, upon or in connection with beer or with the manufacture or sale thereof” in Pennsylvania or elsewhere within the plaintiff’s sales area and, more specifically, to enjoin the defendant from “using the name ‘Goblet’ upon or in connection with the sale of beer within the area aforesaid.” The bill also prayed for an accounting for profits to the defendant and damages to the plaintiff flowing from the defendant’s allegedly unfair competition. The defendant answered to the merits. After a hearing, the learned chancellor dismissed the bill of complaint at the plaintiff’s costs on the basis of an adjudication and decree nisi to which the plaintiff filed exceptions. The court en banc dismissed the exceptions and entered the decree nisi as the final decree. This appeal by the plaintiff followed. The material facts are not in dispute. The differences lie in the inferences to be drawn from them.
The defendant, Esslinger, Inc., is a Pennsylvania corporation having its place of business and plant in Philadelphia. It, too, is engaged in the manufacture and sale of beer which it has brewed and sold since 1868. In 1939, Esslinger, Inc., also began selling beer in seven-ounce bottles in Philadelphia and vicinity. It sold beer so bottled under its trade name “Esslinger” as the rest of its beer was, and had been, sold in Philadelphia regardless of packaging. The Esslinger seven-ounce bottles were not “steinies”; they were merely a smaller type of the conventionally shaped export bottles. The sales of the seven-ounce bottles labeled “Esslinger” were not good, possibly due to the fact that eight ounces of Esslinger beer from draught cost the customer five cents less than the seven-ounce bottle of the same beer, i.e., five cents more cost for an ounce less of beer. The costs of production were high because the export shaped seven-ounce bottle did not fit in the defendant’s bottling machines thus requiring
The plaintiff, by letter of its attorneys dated December 15, 1950, protested the defendant’s use of the name “Goblet” to identify its beer in “steinie” bottles. The exact time the defendant started marketing “Goblet” is not disclosed by the record, but it was some time between its decision in August 1950 to change to “steinie” bottles and adopt the name “Goblet” and the first advertisements of the product, so bottled and labelled, in April of 1951. Part of the defendant’s advertising campaign was aimed at retailers and stressed the greater profits to be made by their sale of “Goblet” beer. Due to a differential in transportation costs in favor of Esslinger, the retailer in Philadelphia could make a cent more on the sale
The plaintiff, concluding on the basis of these facts that it was being subjected to unfair competition by the defendant, brought this suit in equity on the theory that “Goblet” is so similar to “Goebel”, especially in sound and appearance, as to produce confusion and to make available to unscrupulous persons the means of exploiting the deception to the plaintiffs injury. The chancellor rejected the contention. In his nineteenth finding of fact he states that “The name ‘Goblet’ is not deceptively similar to the name ‘Goebel’ either in appearance, sound or meaning.” His third conclusion of law (really an ultimate conclusion of fact) found that “It is not reasonably likely that the average purchaser will be confused, misled or deceived by any similarity between the two names.”
The development of the law of unfair competition in 'America was, in large measure, the work of our federal courts during the period when they exercised the power, on the authority of
Swift v. Tyson,
The question, then, is whether the name “Goblet” which the defendant adopted for its “steinie” bottles of beer is so similar to the plaintiff’s trade name “Goebel” as likely to create confusion and thus facili
In the present case, both the plaintiff’s and the defendant’s products are sold to retail customers and consumed by them under substantially similar circumstances. It is not possible for the customer to exercise a very high degree of care as to the precise kind of beer served Mm. He asks for it by its name only. The beer for sale is not visible to the customer in advance, being kept in either a cooling tank or refrigerator underneath or behind the bar. The bartender reaches for a bottle, uncaps it and places it before the
The defendant argues that, where a “Goblet” was served when a “Goebel” was asked for, it must be assumed that the bartender did not have “Goebels” on hand because in none of the instances described was
The actionable wrong in a case of unfair competition based upon an alleged infringement of a trade name lies in the similarity of the names involved and not in their identity. For obvious reasons, a name is rarely copied exactly. In
Enoch Morgan’s Sons Co. v. Ward,
In
Stork Restaurant, Inc. v. Sahati,
The defendant, in addition to denying that its “Goblet” is confusingly similar to “Goebel”, raised two further defenses peculiar to equity, viz., (1) that the plaintiff came into equity with unclean hands and (2) that
The cases cited by the defendant are not in point. In
Philadelphia Dairy Products v. Quaker City Ice Cream Co.,
Under the undisputed facts of record, appraised according to the tests laid down in §729 of the Restatement, Torts, which this court has heretofore approved and followed, the defendant’s name “Goblet” for its “steinie” bottles is confusingly similar to the plaintiff’s trade name “Goebel” on its like bottles. As the defendant entered the particular field of commerce with knowledge of the plaintiff’s trade name and its prior use thereof on its “steinie” bottles, the defendant’s use of the name “Goblet” on its “steinie” bottles constitutes an infringement of the plaintiff’s trade name for which the plaintiff is entitled to injunctive relief: Restatement, Torts, §717 (1) (a) and (b). The learned chancellor correctly concluded as a matter of law that “The name ‘Goebel’ is a trade-name in the manufacture and sale of beer, and plaintiff is entitled to protection against its infringement.”
We are unable to see how, in the circumstances of the case, the plaintiff could prove damages in monetary terms with required legal certainty. The question is really not involved on this appeal and we mention it only because the bill contains a prayer for damages.
Decree reversed at the appellee’s costs and the record remanded with directions that an injunction issue in conformity with this opinion.
Notes
See, e.g.,
Celanese Corporation of America v. DuPont ae Nemours & Co.,
