This is an appeal from an injunction pendente lite enjoining the defendant from using the word, “Waterman,” upon razor blades. The bill and affidavits showed without contradiction the following facts: The plaintiff is, and for fifty years has been, a manufacturer of fountain pens and other similar articles, upon which it has continuously used the name, “Waterman’s.” On October 21, 1930, it registered the name as a trade-mark for fountain pens, mechanical pencils and similar writing instruments; it has never manufactured razor blades. The defendant is engaged in soiling drugs, face powder, perfumes, cosmetics, hair ionics and other similar articles, to which he lias recently added razor blades sold under the name “Waterman,” which he offers no excuse for pirating. The plaintiff alleged that he was acting in conjunction with one, F. A. Vfaterirían, of Oakland, California, who was selling as one bargain, a fountain pen and a package of razor blades, under the name “Waterman”; but this the defendant denied, and the judge for this reason refused to consider this feature of the charge. The plaintiff is a corporation organized in New ’fork, and the defendant is a citizen of New York; the jurisdiction of the District Court therefore depended upon the registration of the mark.
It is now well settled in this country that a trade-mark protects the owner against not only its use upon the articles to which he has applied it, but upon such other goods as might naturally be supposed to come from him. Aunt Jemima Mills Co. v. Rigney,
In point of jurisdiction we might find difficulty, were it not for the recent decision of the Supreme Court in Hurn v. Oursler,
In tliat case the plaintiff had joined a suit for infringement of the statutory copyright of a play with a suit for unfair use of the play. Later by amendment he added a cause of suit for violating his literary property in the play. The acts constituting the wrong were in all eases the same and on the merits he had no case. The court dismissed the cause of suit on the literary property for lack of jurisdiction, both parties being of the same state, but dismissed the bill on the merits not only on the cause of suit on the statutory copyright but on the common law suit for unfair competition. The. result would have been otherwise had the suit on the statutory copyright been too unsubstantial to invoke any initial federal jurisdiction. Since it was not, the suit for unfair use of the play was not a new “cause of action,” but a separate “ground” of the statutory “cause of action,” which carried it along. We understand that A. Leschen Rope Co. v. Broderick Co.,
Decree affirmed.
