196 F. 955 | S.D.N.Y. | 1912
The defendants insist that infringement by them is not sufficiently established, and, in any event, that there was no fraud or deception in the two sales complained of because the buyers, who were respectively an attorney for the complainant, and a clerk in its employ, knew the nature of the goods they were buying, and that the goods upon which the trade-mark was stamped were of an inferior grade. It was also testified that the defendants, in addition to such sales, displayed for sale in their store 40 or 50 or so pieces of silverware which had stamped on them the anchor, the lion passant, and the old English letter G. The prima facie showing is sufficient to justify enjoining defendants
True enough, it is not conclusively shown that there existed an intention on the part of the defendants to deceive or defraud their customers; but, in a case such as this, force must be given to the presumption which arises from the infringement of a valid trade-mark. Gannert v. Rupert, 127 Fed. 962, 62 C. C. A. 594; Florence Manufacturing Co. v. J. C. Dowd & Co., 178 Fed. 73, 101 C. C. A. 565. There is no direct evidence to show that the silverware examined by the complainant’s witnesses, and the pieces bought by them, were obtained by the defendants from the firm of F. & M. Weintraub; but it appears by the affidavit of William H. Schmidt, read' on motion for temporary injunction, that the defendant firm had bought “Sheffield Plate” from F. & M. Weintraub.
The complainant is entitled to an injunction, but without an accounting.