74 F. 222 | 3rd Cir. | 1896
Tliis is a suit for the infringement of a common-law trade-mark. The complainant is an alien corporation, having its principal place of business at the city of Bremen, in Germany. The defendant is a domestic corporation located in the state of Pennsylvania. Both parties are engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling beer. The complainant claims that it was the first to adopt and use the word “Kaiser” as a trade-name or trademark for the product of its brewery, and that from the time of such adoption and use, in November, 1874, it has continued to export its beer, in kegs and bottles labeled, marked, or stamped “Kaiser Beer,” to its agents in the United States, where it has acquired a large and lucrative sale. The bill charges that the defendant makes and sells an article called “Kaiser Beer,” which comes into unlawful competition with the beer of the same name manufactured and sold by the complainant. The proofs establish the fact of priority of use by the complainant of the word “Kaiser” as a trade-mark in the United States, and it is admitted that the defendant uses the same word for a like purpose; but the latter denies the right of the complainant to the exclusive use of the word, because it has been long used in Germany to indicate a certain excellence of quality, or superiority over other beer, and to designate beer of a certain grade or color, irrespective of the brewery producing the same. There is some evidence tending to show that there was an occasional use of the word “Kaiser.” as a name for beer, in Germany, soon after the coronation of Emperor William I., but there is no evidence that it had been used or adopted as a trade-mark for beer in that country. Tt also
Reference had been made by the defendant’s counsel to the respective treaties of Germany and Austria with the United States in relation to trade-marks, — not, admittedly, as having any very material bearing on the questions at issue, but as illustrating the curious results which might follow the decree of the circuit court if affirmed. Article 17 of the German treaty reads as follows (Pub. Treaties, 259):
“With regard to the marks or labels of goods, or of their packages, and also with regard to patterns and marks of manufacture and trade the citizens of Germany shall enjoy in the United States * * * the same protection as native citizens.”
Article 1 of the Austrian treaty (Pub. Treaties, 35) contains the following provision:
“* * Sl If the trade-mark has become public property in the country of its origin it shall be equally free to all in the countries or territories of the other of the two contracting parties.”
It is suggested, rather than urged as an argument, that, the term “Kaiser” being open to common use in Germany and Austria, — the laws of those countries in relation to trade-marks being substantially alike,- — no subject of either should be permitted to secure the exclusive right to the use of that term as a trade-mark in the United States. The German treaty was intended to secure “the same protection” to German subjects doing business in the United States as