146 N.Y.S. 22 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
The judgment appealed from adjudges and decrees that “the said trade-mark ‘Italian’ (registered by the plaintiff’s
The court found, as matters of fact, that both plaintiff and defendant are engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling silk underwear, and plaintiff has been engaged in said business for the past twenty years; that plaintiff’s predecessor, in the year 1893, adopted, originated and has since continuously used the trade mark “Italian” as applied to silk underwear of its manufacture, to indicate the origin thereof, and marketed and sold underwear under such trade m'ark; that at the time of the adoption of said- trade mark no other 'manufacturer of underwear had-applied said mark to under
That plaintiff’s predecessor made application for the registration of said trade mark to the Commissioner of Patents who allowed the. same and issued a certificate of registration on July 1, 1908; that Morris S. Siegel caused the defendant to be Mcorporated in December, 1911, after the underwear manufactured by plamtiff and its predecessor under its said trade mark had become well known to the trade and the purchasmg public and had acMeved great popularity, and said Siegel caused said name “ Italian” to be mcorporated in such corporate name of defendant with knowledge of plamtiff’s said trade mark and of the good will established by plaintiff and its predecessor in connection therewith and with the design of .benefitmg thereby; that defendant has sold its entire output of underwear (except petticoats) under its name of “Italian Silk Underwear Co.” and has packed its goods in similar boxes and attached prmted tags identical in size and shape to those used
These findings are sustained by the evidence. The claim is made that “ Italian,” being a geographical word, may not be appropriated as a trade mark. I consider this, first, under the United States statutes; and, second, under the principles of the common law as applied by the courts of this State.
1. The original United States statute, the act of July 8,1870 (16 U. S. Stat. at Large, 210-212, §§ 77-84), carried forward into sections 4937 to 4947 of the United States Eevised Statutes, providing for the registration of trade marks and assuming to confer exclusive jurisdiction upon the Federal courts in trade mark cases, was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States in United States v. Steffens (100 U. S. 82), that court saying: “The right to adopt and use a symbol or a device to distinguish the goods or property made or sold by the person whose mark it is, to the exclusion of use by all other persons, has been long recognized by the common law and the chancery courts of England and of this country, and by the statutes of some of the States. It is a property right for the violation of which damages may be recovered in an action at law, and the continued violation of it will be enjoined by a court of equity * * *. This exclusive right was not created by the act of Congress, and does not now depend upon it for its enforcement. The whole system of trade-mark property and the civil remedies for its protection existed long anterior to that act, and have remained in full force since its passage.”
Soon after this decision Congress passed an act, approved March 3,1881 (21 U. S. Stat. at Large, 502, chap. 138), respect
In Smail v. Sanders (118 Ind. 105) the court said: “The State courts have jurisdiction to enjoin a party from infringing the trade-mark of a competitor. The act of Congress assuming to confer exclusive jurisdiction upon the Federal Courts in trade-mark cases has been pronounced unconstitu tional. * * * These decisions settle the question, and, beyond all doubt, settle it correctly, since Congress has no more power to deprive the State courts of jurisdiction in trademark cases than it would have to deprive them of power to decide controversies concerning any other species of property. A trade-mark is not within the provisions of the Federal Constitution
Chapter 592 of the acts of the 3d session of the 58th Congress, approved February 20, 1905 (33 U. S. Stat. at Large, 724, chap. 592), entitled “An Act to authorize the registration of trade-marks used in commerce with foreign nations or among the several States or with Indian tribes, and to protect the same,” extended the trade mark provisions to interstate commerce. It likewise contained the provision of
Section 5 of said act (33 U. S. Stat. at Large, 725, 726) provides in part as follows:
“ Provided, That no mark which consists merely in the name of an individual, firm, corporation, or association, not written, printed, impressed, or woven in some particular or distinctive manner or in association with a portrait of the individual, or merely in words or devices which are descriptive of the goods with which they are used, or of the character or quality of such goods, or merely a geographical name or term, shall be registered under the terms of this Act: * * * And provided further, That nothing herein shall prevent the registration of any mark used by the applicant or his predecessors, or by those from whom title to the mark is derived, in commerce with foreign nations or among the several States, or with Indian tribes, which was in actual and exclusive use as a trade-mark of the applicant or his predecessors from whom he derived title*613 for ten years next preceding the passage of this Act.” (See, also, 36 U. S. Stat. at Large, 918, chap. 113, and 37 id. 649, chap. 7, amdg. said § 5.)
The said statute, with particular reference to the ten-year clause, was construed by the Circuit Court of Appeals of this circuit in Davids Co. v. Davids (178 Fed. Rep. 801). Noyes, J., said: “ The first question, then, is whether a name must be valid as a technical trade-mark to come within the 10-year clause. If this be so, the clause has no force or effect. Technical trade-marks are entitled to he registered under the act regardless of length of use. The owner of a valid common-law trade-mark may register it any time, and he has no greater or less privilege on account of its long use. There is no necessity for thus construing the 10-year clause so as to render it ineffective. In our opinion there is a distinction between the words £ mark ’ and £ trade-mark ’ as used in the clause. It provides that nothing shall prevent the registration of any ‘ mark ’ used as a £ trade-mark ’ for more than 10 years. The evident purpose is to permit the registration of marks not amounting to technical trade-marks, but which have been long used as such. * * * It would seem that Congress in the 10-year clause recognized the principle, so often stated by the courts, that words which through association with products have acquired secondary meanings will be protected, although not amounting to technical trade-marks, and intended to permit their registration -under certain conditions. The act makes a mark actually and exclusively used the requisite period entitled to registration as a trade-mark. And if it is entitled to registration it is entitled to protection. We are unable to appreciate the distinction sought to he drawn by the defendant between the right to register a trade-mark and the right to protect it. * * * With respect to names, descriptive words and geographical terms, we are of the opinion that the proviso prevents their registration if they have been in use for less than 10 years, but that the 10-year clause entitles them to registration if they have been actually and exclusively used for more than that period before the passage of the act.”
In Coca-Cola Co. v. Nashville Syrup Co. (200 Fed. Rep. 153) Sanford, J., said: “The effect of the proviso in section 5
In New York Mackintosh Co. v. Flam (198 Fed. Rep. 571) Holt, J., said: “Moreover, the evidence shows that it was used exclusively by the complainant more than 10 years before registration, and, therefore, the provisions of section 5 of the Trade-Mark Act of 1905 * * * apply, that, in such a case, the fact that the term was originally descriptive does not prevent registration.” And to the same effect are Coca-Cola v. Deacon Brown Bottling Co. (200 Fed. Rep. 105); Coca-Cola v. Am. Druggists’ Syndicate (Id. 107); American Lead Pencil Co. v. Gottlieb & Sons (181 id. 178).
It appearing that the plaintiff and its predecessor had exclusively used the mark here in question, although a geographical term, for more than ten years prior to its application for registration, it was properly admitted to such registration and the certificate therefor having been duly issued it is entitled to protection.
2. It appears conclusively in the evidence that the word “ Italian ” as applied by the plaintiff to its goods has acquired a secondary or fanciful meaning, or, as is expressed by certain witnesses, who are buyers for large concerns, “ It is a by-word. ” It does not mean, and is not understood to mean by those selling or purchasing the goods, that the underwear marked by it was manufactured in Italy or by Italians, or that the silk of which the underwear is composed was produced in Italy or imported therefrom. It is the evidence that no silk for the weaving or manufacture of such underwear is brought to this country from Italy; that neither the plaintiff nor the defendant uses such silk in the manufacture of underwear produced and sold by either of them. The silk used by the plaintiff is Japan silk of a high quality; the underwear is woven by the method employed in the weaving of silk gloves and is of high quality and runs in price from $24 a dozen to $300 a dozen. The articles manufactured and sold by the defendant are produced from a lower grade of Japan silk and are sold from $11.50 a dozen to $100 a dozen. The plaintiff manufactures
In Newman v. Alvord (51 N. Y. 189) the trade mark claimed by plaintiffs consisted of the use of the word “Akron ” in designating a cement manufactured by them near the village of Akron, Erie county, N. T. They and their predecessors had used the word “ Akron ” as a trade mark to designate the origin and quality of their cement for over thirteen years before the commencement of the action. The defendants manufactured a cement in. Onondaga county, near Syracuse. They knew that the plaintiffs had for years used the word “ Akron ” as a trade mark to designate the origin and place of manufacturing their cement. They applied the word to designate their cement by calling it “ Akron cement.” The Court of Appeals in affirming a decree granting a perpetual inj unction said: ‘‘ The trade mark must be used to indicate not the quality, but the origin or ownership of the article to which it is attached. It may be any sign, mark, symbol, word or words, which others have not an equal right to employ for the same purpose. I can perceive no reason why it may not be the name of a place. * * * It is sometimes said, in the cases to which our attention has been called, that the claimant of a trade mark must have the exclusive right to it. This form of expression, I apprehend, is not strictly accurate. The right must be exclusive as against the defendant. It is generally sufficient, in such cases, if the plaintiff has the right and the defendant has not the right to use it. The principle upon which the relief is granted is that the defendant shall not be permitted, by the adoption of a trade mark which is untrue and deceptive, to sell his own goods as the goods of the plaintiff, thus injuring the plaintiff and defrauding the public. Here the .plaintiffs had given a reputation to the Akron cement in market. They had always been its principal manufacturers and sellers, and, at the time of the commencement of the suit, the sole parties who could be injured by the fraudulent use of the trade mark by the
In Koehler v. Sanders (122 N. Y. 65) the court said: “ There are cases where the right to use a name to designate a product is so qualifiedly exclusive that the right to the protection of its use against infringement. by others, rests upon the ground that such use by them is an untrue or deceptive representation. This may be applicable to a geographical name designating a locality or district, and which has been adopted by one .as a trade mark and afterwards deceptively used by another upon similar articles. ” In Fleischmann v. Schuckmann (62 How. Pr. 92) it was held, Van Vorst, J., that “ Vienna” may be exclusively appropriated for a trade mark for a particular kind of bread, as it is a purely arbitrary designation, and is in no manner descriptive either of the ingredients or quality of the article. The word “Alderney ” may be exclusively appropriated as a trade mark for oleomargerine, as such is entirely arbitrary, and in no respect descriptive of the article. (Van Brunt, J., Lauferty v. Wheeler, 63 How. Pr. 488.) So the word “German,” when not used in a geographical sense, being applied .as an arbitrary name, may be appropriated as the name for sweet chocolate, so as to make the use of the word “Germania,” as applied to sweet chocolate, an infringement. • (Baker & Co. v. Baker, 77 Fed. Rep. 181.)
This principle may be regarded as the ground for- decision in the following cases in which geographical names have been protected as trade marks: “Ethiopian,” for black cotton stockings (Hine v. Lart, 10 Jur. 106); “Indian Pond” and “Green Mountain,” for scythe stones (Pike Mfg. Co. v. Cleveland Stone Co., 35 Fed. Rep. 896); “Quinnebog,” “Western Red Ends” and “Lake Huron,” for scythe stones taken from quarries situated at or near Grindstone City, Mich. (Cleveland Stone Co. v. Wallace, 52 Fed. Rep. 431); “Taylor’s Persian Thread,” for thread manufactured in England (Taylor v. Carpenter, 3 Story, 458, Cas. No. 13,784; Taylor v. Taylor, 23 L. J. Ch. [N. S.] 255; Taylor v. Carpenter, 11 Paige, 292;
In a note to the decision in the Elgin National Watch Co. Case (179 U. S. 665), as reported in 45 Lawyers’ Edition, 365, 370, citations from the Official Gazette are given showing that in the United States Patent Office geographical names were registered as trade marks as wholly fanciful or arbitrary in their signification, as follows: “Dublin,” for soap made in this country; “ German Syrup,” for a medical compound not a German product; “Dover,” as applied to household goods manufactured by a Massachusetts corporation in its factory at Cambridge and its place of business at Boston; “Vienna,” for flour manufactured at Pittsburg; “Florentine,” for rolled plate glass; “Menlo Park,” for time-keeping instruments made at Canton, O.
In International Cheese Co. v. Phenix Cheese Co. (118 App. Div. 499) a manufacturer at Chester, N. Y., was upheld in his claims to the trade name “ Philadelphia Cream Cheese.”
It seems to me that the plaintiff has. clearly established, as against the defendant, an exclusive right to the word “Italian” in connection with the silk underwear manufactured by it and that the defendant’s appropriation and use of the word in 1911, after plaintiff had made it valuable by long years of use, by registration in the Patent Office, and by building up a large and successful business was a violation of plaintiff’s rights. The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs and disbursements to the respondent.
Ingraham, P. J., Laughlin, Scott and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
See U. S. Const, art. 1, § 8.—[Rep.