1 Ga. App. 100 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
(After stating the case.)
Browne on Trade Marks (2d ed.), §§451, 506, states that the party whose rights are infringed has his election of remedies; first, an action at law for damages; second, a suit in equity for an injunction, and an account of profits, etc. In Dennison Mfg. Co. v. Thomas Mfg. Co., 94 Fed. 651, 659, it is declared that “the law of trade-marks is but a part of the law of unfair competition in trade.” In Coats v. Thread Co., 149 H. S. 562, the court said: “Irrespective of the technical question of trade-mark, the defendants, have no right to dress their goods up in such manner as to deceive an intended purchaser and induce him to believe that he is buying those of the plaintiff.” In Reddaway v. Banham (1896), App. Cas. 199, it was held that one person was not entitled to pass off his goods as those of another, by selling them under a name which was likely to deceive purchasers. In the same case the learned judge said: “I can not help saying, that, if th.e defendants are entitled to lead purchasers to believe that they are getting the plaintiff’s manufactures when they are not, and thus to cheat the plaintiffs of some of their legitimate trade, I should regret to find that the law was powerless to enforce the most elementary principles of commercial morality. The name of a person, or work, forming, part of the common stock of language, may become so far associated with the goods of a particular maker that it is capable of proof that the use of them by themselves, without explanation or qualification, by another manufacturer, would deceive the purchaser into the belief that he was getting the goods of A, when he was really getting the goods of B.” The “Sapolio” case, reported in 43 Fed. 420, was, where the salesman of the defendant, when asked by an intending purchaser for “Sapolio,” would hand out a different soap, called “Pride of the Kitchen,” without explanation, and receive the customary price. It was held that this
We might cite many other cases where suits at law for damages were brought as the result of fraudulent and unfair trade, or use of another’s trade name or trade-mark, but we content ourselves with reference to the case of the Thedford Medicine Co. v. Curry, 96 Ga. 89, the headnote being as follows, “The declaration as amended alleging, in substance, that the plaintiff was profitably engaged in the manufacture and sale of a certain valuable medi
We cite the foregoing cases for the purpose of showing that both courts of equity and law have taken jurisdiction of cases of infringement of trade-marks, trade names, symbols, and devices, and unfair trade; the jurisdiction selected in each case being determined by the character and extent of the relief sought. If the plaintiff seeks redress alone in damages for the loss sustained by Lim, resulting from the unlawful acts complained of, he has a right to resort to a court of law, and can recover in such suit, if the proof entitles him to do so. If the plaintiff in the suit, in addition to his claim for damages, wants an accounting to determine the profits accruing to the defendant by reason of his unlawful conduct, and an injunction to restrain the defendant from the commission of further wrongs of a similar character, he must resort to a court of equity. We think this distinction is clearly established by authority, and is applicable in the determination of the question now under consideration.
In the liberal rules of pleading in this State, it is sometimes •difficult to determine whether the action is one of law or equity ; and in cases of doubt the character of the relief sought furnishes the test by which to determine the character of the suit. The piratical and fraudulent acts set out in the plaintiff’s petition demand legal redress. And while his petition is defective in some respects, the allegations therein made constitute a sufficient foundation on which, by proper amendment, a clear, legal superstructure can be built. We think the plaintiff has a more complete remedy-in a court of equity, but he has elected to bring his suit for damages only, in a court of law, and without asking for any affirmative equitable relief. The learned judge below held that the
In addition to eases cited in the body of this opinion, we cite: Hopkins on Unfair Trade, (actions at law) chap. 12, §111, bottom p. 240; Browne on Trade Marks (2d ed.), chap. 9, §§457, 470, 462 (remedy at law or in equity clearly recognized); Id. 460; (election of remedies) chap. 11, §§506, 507; 21 Enc. PI. & Pr. 752, 758, 750; 26 Am. & Eng. Enc. D. (1st ed.) 477.
Judgment reversed.