201 F. 779 | S.D.N.Y. | 1911
One Joseph Cohen was in business before the bankrupt corporation was organized. He owned a registered trade-marjc, which he placed upon goods apparently manufactured and sold by himself. He turned over his business to the bankrupt corporation, which apparently took his assets and assumed his liabilities. He became the president of the corporation, but he did not formally assign to the corporation the registered trade-mark aforesaid.
The corporation so formed became bankrupt, and a trustee was duly appointed. Such trustee did not obtain possession of the certificate of registration of trade-mark. Shortly before the bankruptcy of the corporation, Cohen transferred to a third person the trade-mark, consisting of the letters “J. C.,” and “the good will of the business in which the trade-mark is used.”- That third person in turn conveyed the trade-mark and good will to a new corporation (in which Cohen was interested), which now desires to prevent the trustee from making the sale above referred to.
It results from the foregoing considerations that, while the present petitioner has nothing of legal value by reason of any assignment from Cohen, neither has the trustee anything to sell. Even if he ever owned the paper trade-mark, he only got it as legally appurtenant to the good will of the business of the bankrupt; but such good will could not survive the sale of the bankrupt’s chattels and the destruction of its business, for exactly the same kind of reason that made Cohen’s transfer invalid for lack of a good will to accompany it. The final situation is therefore this: The trustee wishes to sell something that he does not own, and, indeed, something that no longer exists; i. e., the good will of the bankrupt’s defunct business. And the party who seeks to prevent the sale rests his right to do so upon a worthless assignment from Cohen.
The trustee is therefore forbidden to make this sale.