Lead Opinion
This is a suit instituted February 23, 1904, in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis for damages for the infringement of a trade-mark. On a jury trial October 19, 1904, plaintiff had a verdict for one cent compensatory damages and $500' punitive damages, and judgment accordingly. On appeal to the St. Louis Court of Appeals the judgment was reversed in an opinion reported in
The Judge & Dolph Drug Company, one of the defendants, is a corporation engaged in selling drug’s and cigars at retail in St. Louis for a good many years. Defendant Taylor was the cigar clerk of the company from October, 1900, to the time of the trial.
Plaintiff claimed in his petition that he had been making and selling cigars in St. Louis for fifteen years under a trade-mark which was composed of the words “Flor de Lampert” and the picture of the plaintiff, which trade-mark was by the plaintiff on February 26, 1892, filed and recorded in the United States Commission of Patents Office.
That by reason of the quality of the tobacco used and the efforts of plaintiff in advertising the same, the plaintiff’s cigars sold under said trade-mark had gained great reputation on account of their excellent quality; and that during all that time plaintiff had received large profits from the sale of the cigars. That plaintiff during the time from March 11, 1902, to February 15, 1904, sold to defendants cigars so manufactured by plaintiff, on the boxes of which was said
The answer admitted the corporate existence of the drug company, but was, in effect, otherwise a general denial.
The evidence tended to establish all the allegations of the petitiоn, and tended to show several sales by Taylor as such clerk of substituted inferior cigars from boxes having said trade-mark. '
Defendant Taylor was arrested and fined in the Federal court for violation of the revenue laws in such sales. The revenue officers testified to* finding the substituted cigars in boxes having plaintiff’s trademark, in the defendant’s store, and at the same time finding plaintiff’s genuine cigars in another such box. The president of defendant drug company loaned Taylor $25 to pay his fine in the Federal court and retained him in its employ.
Mr. Bierman, deputy collector of internal revenue, testified that he bought three of the substituted cigars and that two were left in the box; he went out and gave the cigar to Mr. Lampert, and when he went back there were sixteen сigars in the box. On cross-examination by defendant’s counsel, Mr. Atwood, deputy collector of internal revenue, testified that complaints had been made to him by various other cigar makers that defendants were substituting their cigars. Mr. Farrar,
There was no direct evidence to show that any one connected with the drug company except Taylor had any knowledge of the infringement. Mr. Judge, president of the drug company, disclaimed any knowledge of any substitution of cigars, and testified that the company carried a $90,000' stock of goods with $80,000 insurance and was worth net $10',0,00l, with $15,000 capital stock.
The fourth and fifth instructions were as follows:
" 4. The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the defendants wilfully and maliciously, between the dates of November 1, 1903, and February 15, 1904, sold cigars which were not manufactured by plaintiff, from boxes having thereon the trade-mark and picture of plaintiff, as cigars manufactured by plain! iff, and if the jury further finds from the evidence that the plaintiff is entitled to compensatory or actual damages in any sum whatever, as defined in other instructions given to them, then they are at liberty to find in addition to said actual damages such further sum in the way of exemplary or punitive damages, by way of punishment to defendants, and as an example to others, as in their sound judgment, under all the evidence in the case, they believe the defendants ought to pay, nоt exceeding $5,000.
“5. The jury are instructed that malice is the wilful or intentional doing of a wrongful act without legal justification or excuse.”
OPINION.
I. The trial court properly refused defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence. The evidence fully covered the plaintiff’s case as made by the plead
II. Whether exemplary damages are recoverable where there are allowed only nominal actual damages is a question as to which the authoritiеs are divided, the courts of this State and the Federal courts, as well as legal reason, and the greater weight of authority, being in favor of such recovery.
Some of the decisions of the courts speak of nominal damages as being something else than actual damages, whereas the nominal damages assessed for the violation of a legal right where there is no showing as to the quantum of damages are actual or compensatory damages. This court has spoken very clearly on that subject in Hoagland v. Amusement Co., 170 Mo. l. c. 345, where it is said: “The jury in finding for plaintiff in effect found that defendants arrested the plaintiff and cursed and abused him without any lawful excuse or reason therefor, and upon that finding he was entitled to have aсtual damages in some amount assessed in his favor. Under such circumstances at the common law he is entitled to pecuniary reparation by way of damages, at least nominal, and as much more, if anything, as the jury may tbink him entitled to under the evidence.”
The consensus of authority is to the effect that punitive damages are not recoverable where no actual damages are allowed. But that is a very different thing from holding that they are not recoverable in connection with nominal actual damages. There are comparatively few cases holding that nominal actual damages will not support exemplary damages.
The cases .cited by appellants from Illinois and Michigan turned on the construction of statutes against the sale of intoxicants to inebriates and have no application here. The Iowa cases, Kuhn v. Railway,
On the other hand, the Supreme Court of New York, in Prince v. Brooklyn Eagle,
In Press Pub. Co. v. Monroe, in the United States Circuit Court of Appeals,
The Supreme Court of Kansas, in Hefley v. Baker,
In Flanagan v. Womack,
The United States Circuit Court for the District of Kansas held in Wilson v. Vaughn,
We come now to a consideration of the decisions in this State on the question. The first in order of time is Favorite v. Cottrill,
To the same effect is Mills v. Taylor, 85 Mo. App., l. c. 115. And it was .said in Brennan v. Maule, 108 Mo. App. l. c. 338: “It is now settled in this State that actual damage in at least a nominal sum must be found as a condition for the recovery of exemplary or punitive damages” It may be interesting in this connection to call attention to Courtney v. Blackwell, 150 Mo. l. c. 277, in which the damages for slander were assessed at a lump sum as punitive damages, there being no finding as to aсtual damages on account of oversight in the form of the verdict given to the jury. This court refused to reverse the case on account of the failure to find actual damages.
Our attention has been called to many. infringement cases in equity in which the courts refused to order an accounting where plaintiff’s damages were nominal or very small. The remedies in equity аnd at law are radically different. Equity gives as damages the profits of the defendant; while the law limits them to the loss suffered by plaintiff. Equity restrains future wrongs by injunction. Law seeks to prevent such future violations by inflicting exemplary damages for past offenses.
We hold that a verdict for nominal actual damages will support a verdict for punitive damages.
III. It is insisted by appellant that еxemplary damages are not recoverable in this case for the alleged reason that there is no showing of malice or oppression. On that proposition we are forced to a different conclusion from that reached by the Court of Appeals.
In Goetz v. Ambs,
“To entitle the plaintiff to recover punitive damages he must show that the act complained of was unlawful, and further that it was a wanton or malicious act. In other words he must show an unlawful act coupled with an intentional wrong.” [State v. Jungling, 116 Mo. l. c. 165.]
“The average layman would believe that malicious means ill-will, spite, holtility towards the other party. This is not the legal meaning. Those feelings may or may not be present in the legal meaning of the term. The legal meaning of the term is the intentional'doing of a wrongful act without just cause or excuse. ’ ’ [McNamara v. St. Louis Transit Co., 182 Mo. l. c. 681.]
The Supreme Court of the United States held in Railroad v. Arms,
IV. We come now to the consideration of the question as to whether cases for the infringement of trade-marks are outside the rule allowing exemplary damages. Appellants claim they are. They call our attention to a long line of patent cases which were held by the courts not to be within the rule as to exemplary damages; and appellants claim that trade-mark cases are governed by the same rule as in patent cases. An examination of those cases, however, will reveal the fact that in 1836 it was provided by act of Congress that the jury should not in patent cases allow vindictive damages, but that the court should have the power to inflict punitive damages within the limits of trebling the actual damages found by the jury. [Seymour v. McCormick,
It will thus be seen that those cases rest solely on the act of Congress and are not authority for appellant’s contention.
The Am. and Eng. Ency. Law, vol. 28, 438, holds that exemрlary damages cannot be recovered, citing Taylor v. Carpenter, 2 Woodb. & M. (U. S.) 1, decided by the United States Circuit Court at Boston, in 1846. In that ease the court (l. c. 22) said: “So in very corrupt or flagitious wrongs, if a criminal prosecution lies for the public offense, I do not see much justification for what are called vindictive damages there, or smart money in the civil suit, as the criminаl one covers them. ’ ’
That reasoning is opposed to the well established law in this State, as this court has uniformly held that the right to exemplary damages is not removed by the fact that the same wrongful act is punishable criminally. [Corwin v. Walton,
Hopkins on Trade-Marks, page 356', says that the better rule is in favor of such allowance and that it is difficult to see how the result stated in Taylor v. Carpenter and Addington v. Cullinane, supra, was reached, adding, “They are wholly without precedent and opposed to the rule of damages which obtained at common law.”
Judge Blodgett in Warner v. Boehr, Fed. Case No. 17189a, a case for the infringement of a trademark, in the Northern District of Illinois, instructed the jury that exemplary damages might he allowed “in eases of this character, where you are satisfied from the proof and from the admissions in the case that the fraud — the intention to defraud — is at the bottom of (he matter.” Paul on Trade-Marks, sec. 324, and Browne on Trade-Marks, secs. 519 and 520, hold in favor of such allowance.
If the jury found all that the evidence tended to prove, they found that the clerk, Taylor, was making a practice of substituting cheap cigars in boxes with рlaintiff’s trade-mark thereon, and also in place of the cigars of other makers, to such an extent that various makers of cigars complained to the revenue officers ; that Taylor was fined in the Federal court for
It must be remembered that this case has been briefed on both sides on the undisputed theory that the acts and intent of the clerk in making said sales bind the drug company as effectually as if done by the president of the company himself.
The judgment is affirmed,
Concurrence Opinion
The foregoing opinion of Roy, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.
