delivered the opinion of the court.
This is the suit referred to in
Donnell
v.
Herring-Hall-Marvin Safe Company, ante,
p. 267. It was brought by the petitioner against the respondents to enjoin them from carrying on their business under their present name or any name calculated to make purchasers believe that they are dealing with the establishment founded by Joseph L. Hall, or with the plaintiff, and also to enjoin them from advertising or marking their product as Hall’s Safes. Tne facts are stated in the case referred to. In brief, the petitioner is the successor by purchase to the business of Hall’s Safe and Lock Company, an Ohio corporation founded by Joseph L. Hall, a safe maker of repute, the stock of which belonged to his estate and his children. The respondents are sons of Joseph L. Hall and an Ohio corporation formed by them in September, 1896, immediately after they were discharged from their contracts with the purchasing company. It has been decided that the Halls did not give up the right to do business in their own name by the part they took when the original company sold out, and that the petitioner has the right, but not the exclusive right, to use the name Hall. Its rights arise by way of succession, out of the priority of the original company, not out of contract. This case requires us to discuss a little further what the respective rights of the parties are. The decision below is to.be found in 146 Fed. Rep. 37, and
We think it clear, as was conceded in the other case, that the plaintiff got all the grantable rights of the original company, including that of using the name Hall. It is true that trade names were not mentioned in the deed, but its language
The original company, from 1867 to 1892, was attaching to Hall’s safes the reputation that made the name famous and desired. Whoever achieved it did so through the medium of the company. The good will thus gained belonged to the company, .and was sold'by it, with all its .rights, when it sold out. See
Le Page Co.
v.
Russia Cement Co.,
51 Fed. Rep. 941, 943. So that the question is'narrowed to what its rights would have
The principle of .the duty to explain is recognized in
Howe Scale Co.
v.
Wyckoff, Seamans & Benedict,
We are not disposed to make a decree against-the Halls personally. That against the company should be more specific. It should forbid the use of the name Hall, either' alone or in combination, in corporate name, on safes,'or in advertisements, unless accompanied by information that the defendant is not the original Hall’s Safe and Lock Company or its suceeissor, or, as the case may be, that the article is not the product of. the last named company or its successors. With such explanations the defendants may use the Hall’s name, and if it likes may show that they are sons of the first Hall and brought ; up in their business by him, and otherwise may state the facts.
There is a cross bill seeking to prevent the plaintiff from making use of the names Hall’s Safe and Lock Company, Hall’s Safe, &c., but it does not need separate consideration. The defendant shows nothing of which it can complain or which should bar the plaintiff from its relief. The portion of the decree dismissing the cross bill is affirmed.
Decree modified and, affirmed.
