The complainant by its bill of complaint charges the defendants with infringement of its trade-mark and with unfair competition in trade. The matter comes before the court on an application for a preliminary injunction, upon bill and affidavits and answering affidavits. The proofs do not satisfactorily show infringement of the trade-mark, but do show unfair competition in trade with sufficient clearness to warrant at least a portion of the relief prayed for. The defendants, or one of them, the other actively participating, are transacting the same kind of business as the complainant under the name and style of the “No-Hole Hosiery Company.”
It appears that the complainant and its immediate predecessor in business have for the past 10 years been engaged in selling socks and stockings known as “Holeproof _ Hosiery.” Its trade therein has been largely advertised and a successful business established. One of the features of its trade consists in guaranteeing its product against holes resulting from wear for a period of six months. Each package which it puts out comprises six pairs of socks or stockings, and inclosed in the package is a guaranty of the character above stated. The
:\s already stated, the boxes, although of the same color, are not identical, although similar, but, taken in connection with the words "’no-bole” and the guaranty card, are susceptible of being confused, m the public mind, with the packages and product of the complainant. Thai this is so is not open to argument at this time, since the complainant’s affidavits show specific instances of such confusion. It is apparent that, while the package and guaranty card as accessories aid in producing this confusion, it is the use of the hyphenated word “no-bole” which is the culminating and controlling factor therein. Holeproof hosiery and no-hole hosiery convey to the casual purchaser the same idea, or at least leave upon his mind the same general impression. The defendants have been in business but a few months, and the affidavits permit the inference that they had the complainant’s name, package, and guaranty card before them when the}' conceived their own. If they had intended to carry on a bona fide business, they certainly would not in so many important respects have copied or closely imitated the complainant’s name and methods.
I am unwilling, however, to enjoin the defendants, at this time, from the use of the word “guarantee” or “guaranteed,” or from the C'sc of a yellow box in connection with the packing and sale of their hosiery, but nevertheless unhesitatingly reach the conclusion that the defendants upon this application should be enjoined against the use of the words “no-hole,” both in their business name and style, and also in connection with the advertising, packing, and sale of their product. A multitude of cases in which more remote approximations have been enjoined might he cited, were it at all necessary. The principles upon which the complainant herein is entitled to relief are clearly laid down in Fuller v. Huff et al., 104 Fed. 141, 43 C. C. A. 453, 51 L. R. A. 332, and cases therein cited. They should also be enjoined from the use of a guaranty card like or similar to that of the complainant. An injunction upon these lines imposes no undeserved hardship upon the defendants, since they had no right to trench, as they have done, upon the established rights and good will of the comAainaut, and under the guise of artifice and simulation acquire in a
In these respects an injunction will be denied