197 Mo. App. 618 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1917

ALLEN, J.

This is a suit in equity wherein plaintiffs seek injunctive relief against the defendant corporation, together with an accounting and damages, because of certain alleged wrongful acts of defendant charged to constitute unfair competition with plaintiffs in their business. Upon an order to show cause the court issued a temporary restraining order which remained in force until a full hearing -was had upon the merits. The latter -trial resulted in a decree for plaintiffs, to be hereafter noticed, from which defendant prosecutes the appeal before us.

The petition alleges that plaintiffs Augustino Lo Buono, Antonio Lo Buono and Salvatore Lo Buono, of the city of St. Louis, and Guiseppi Lo Buono,-of the town' *621.of Termini, Imerese, in Sicily, Italy, are copartners, doing business as August Lo Buono & Co., and engaged in business in tbe city of St. Louis as importers and wholesale dealers in “Italian produce” such as macaroni, olive oil, etc., and in Termini, Imerese, in the manufacture and exportation of olive oil; that defendant is a corporation with its principal place of business in the city of St. Louis, and there engaged in business of importing and selling Italian Produce, including olive oil.

And it is alleged that plaintiffs have been engaged in the business aforesaid for about fourteen years, have established a large business and a good reputation for their wares, and that the firm is the sole distributor in the United States of their olive oil, which is manufactured at Termini, Imerese, under the supervision of plaintiff G-uiseppi Lo Buono, is “of the highest grade superfine olive oil,” and the only olive oil produced in Termini which is imported into the city of St. Louis.

The petition further alleges that plaintiffs shipped their olive oil from Italy — “to the shipping address, S. Lo Buono, which was the name of plaintiff’s father, who preceded them in the business in St. Louis, as it is also the name of one of the plaintiffs” — in tin cans of a special style, having thereon certain described labels, pictures and devices, with the name of the said place of production, and bearing the name of Guiseppi Lo Buono; which cans were manufactured specially for plaintiffs by a factory in Palermo, Sicily.

And it is alleged that defendant, for some time prior to the institution of the suit, with the intention of unfairly competing with plaintiffs and injuring them in their good name and business, fraudulently arranged with the manufacturer of an inferior grade of olive oil in Trabia, Sicily, to procure and did procure, cans identical with those of plaintiffs with the exception of the name “Guiseppi Lo Buono” appearing upon plaintiffs’ cans; that in lieu of said name defendant directed the manufacturer to place upon the cans the name of “ S. Lo Buono;” that in fact the manufacturer put defendant’s name upon the cans, but upon their arrival in the city *622of St. Louis defendant fraudulently caused its own name to be painted over and that of S. Lo Buono to be inserted in lieu thereof.

The petition in part is devoted to the alleged fraudulent conduct of defendant in importing inferior olive oil from Trabia and other places in Italy, other than Termini, and selling the same in cans falsely labeled “Termini, Imerese,” as the place of production. But these allegations are inconsequential.

And it is averred that defendant sold large quantities of. the alleged “misbranded and inferior” oil to plaintiffs ’ customers, and has large quantities thereof on hand; and that defendant, by its alleged wrongful acts, has caused many of plaintiff’s customers to cease dealings with plaintiffs and to deal with defendant, and has thereby seriously injured plaintiffs in their business and reputation and deprived them of profits, etc.

The prayer is that defendant be enjoined “from offering for sale and from selling the cans of olive oil above described bearing the name of S. Lo Buono, and from the sale of the olive oil put up by the defendant and branded as the produce of Termini, Imerese,” for an accounting, and for $5,000 damages.

The answer admits the corporate existence of defendant but denies generally the other allegations of the petition.

Further answering, the defendant says that' in August, 1913, it purchased from the firm of S. Sunseri & Bros., doing business in Sicily and in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, ninety-five cases of olive oil which was to be produced in the Termini district in Sicily and packed in cans bearing the name of S. Lo Buono; that the name of S. Lo Buono was the name of the grandfather of S. Sunseri & Bros., and during his lifetime was engaged in packing and exporting olive oil and created a certain good will for his merchandise packed under his name; that upon the death of said S. Lo Buono, S. Sunseri & Bros., under the laws of Sicily, became entitled to all his property rights, including the fight to use his name; and that upon the sale of said cases of oil by S. Sunseri *623& Bros, to defendant, the former had the right to label the package with the name of S. Lo Buono, and that plaintiffs “had no exclusive right to use their said name in connection with olive oil packed in tins.”

The reply is a general denial of the new matter of the answer.

The evidence shows that for about fifteen years prior to the trial below plaintiffs had been engaged in selling olive oil in the city of St. Louis, produced by plaintiff Guiseppi Lo Buono, at Termini, Imerese, and had established a trade and good will in this business. The firm was not, however, the only distributor in said city of oil produced in Termini, Imerese, which, .it appears, was reputed to be of excellent quality. Plaintiffs’ business in the city of St. Louis was formerly conducted, in whole or in part, by plaintiffs’ father, Salvatore Lo Buono, who died in 1906. Their oil was sold in cans manufactured and labeled at Palermo, Sicily, upon which, in addition to other things, appeared the name of the town, “Termini, Imerese,” as being the place of production, and the name “Gppe. Lo Buono.”. But apart from the use of the name Guiseppi Lo Buono thereon, the cans thus used by plaintiffs, with the' various designs and wording thereon, were of a’“stock variety” commonly sold by the manufacturer to producers and packers of ‘ ‘ Termini Oil. ”

Defendant corporation, which has likewise been in business in the city of St. Louis for many years, is engaged, among other things, in selling imported olive oil. In August, 1913, defendant contracted with the firm of S. Sunseri & Bros., of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, whereby the latter agreed to sell and deliver to defendant “100 cases olive oil, Lo Buono imitation brand; label on cans bearing S. Lo Buono’s name.” Only ninety-five cases were shipped, however. When the shipment arrived in the city of St. Louis the cans containing the oil — being .otherwise cans of the sai$ “stock.variety,” made and labeled by the manufacturer at Palermo, mentioned above — bore the name “V. Viviano, & Bros,.”, and not “S. Lo Buono” as provided in die contract. De*624fendant thereupon proceeded to have the labels changed by obliterating its name and putting “S. Lo Buono” upon the cans. It appears that this change was made upon about one-half of the cans; and that of these defendant actually sold but fourteen cases, of twelve gallons each.

It appears that S. Sunseri & Bros, of Pittsburg, have a “branch” in Trabia, Sicily, and that the oil comprising this shipment was exported from the latter place packed in the cans procured from Palermo. It is said to have been produced in Termini, but by the error of a broker was delivered for export as having been produced at Trabia where it was shipped.

Evidence in defendant’s behalf goes to show that upon discovering that the cans, comprising the shipment mentioned, bore defendant’s name instead of “S. Lo Buono,” defendant, for this reason, refused to receive the shipment and so notified S. Sunseri & Bros.; and that the latter firm thereupon, authorized defendant to have the name upon the cans changed to “S. Lo Buono.” According to defendant’s evidence, one Salvatore Lo Buono, of Trabia, the grandfather of the Sunseri brothers, was a producer of and dealer in olive oil. It is said that he packed Termini oil, or oil “grown in the Termini territory,” ánd established a favorable reputation for his product; and that he died in 1904, leaving as his only heirs the Sunseri brothers, the sons of a deceased daughter, who thus inherited his property rights under the laws of Sicily, including the right to use his name as-a “brand” of olive oil. And there is testimony that this name had been thus used by S. Sunseri & Bros., when they so desired, in selling olive oil in this country. And defendant’s evidence is that the oil produced in Trabia, a smaller municipality adjoining the town of Termini, Imerese, is of the same quality as that produced in Termini.

In plaintiffs’ behalf there is evidence tending to show that the Salvatore? Lo Buono last mentioned, the grandfather of the Sunseri brothers, was not in his lifetime engaged in the business of producing or selling *625olive oil, but was a miller in Trabia, and later engaged in the manufacture of macaroni. And for plaintiffs there is testimony to the effect that the olive oil produced at Trabia is inferior to that of Termini.

Such further reference to the evidence as may appear necessary will be made in the course of the opinion.

By the decree entered below (as amended by the court of its own motion during the term) the court found that plaintiffs had built up and established a lucrative-trade and business in olive oil “under and by use of the trade names of S. Lo Buono and Guiseppi Lo Buono,” and found that the importation by defendant of the olive oil aforesaid and its sale in cans labeled as mentioned, was “unfair competition against these plaintiffs” and constituted “á fraud upon their rights in the trade name, in the olive oil business, ‘S. Lo Buono and Guiseppi Lo Buono.’ ” And it was adjudged and decreed that defendant be perpetually enjoined “from manufacturing, importing, selling or disposing of, in the city of St. Louis, and State of Missouri, olive oil under the trade name of ‘S. Lo Buono,’ without the consent of these plaintiffs;” and that plaintiffs have and recover of the defendant the sum of $70 as damages.

I. Error is assigned to failure of the court to rule upon an objection made by defendant to certain testimony of a witness for plaintiff given by deposition. The objection was to but a part of the answer of the witness, brought out on cross-examination, and pertained to the quality of Trabia oil as compared to that of Termini. It is unnecessary to dwell upon the matter, for under the circumstances it is manifest that the court’s failure to rule upon the objection could not have been prejudicial error.

IE. It was conceded below that, aside from the use of the name “S. Lo Buono” thereon, plaintiffs could not complain of the use by defendant of the cans involved herein. As said, they were, with their devices and labels, “stock” cans, to which plaintiffs had no exclu*626sive right. Neither is it contended that plaintiffs had any exclusive right to sell in the city of St. Louis olive oil from Termini, or so branded. And the quality of the olive oil sold by defendant (not shown to be inferior) is not a factor here in the case. We are concerned only with the question whether defendant should be enjoined from using the name ‘ S. Lo Buono, ” as it was attempting to do.

It is earnestly contended by learned counsel for appellant that the evidence wholly fails to establish a right on the part of plaintiffs to any relief, and that the bill should have been dismissed. The argument advanced is predicated upon the theory that through Sunseri brothers defendant lawfully acquired the right to use the name “S. Lo Buono” in importing and selling olive oil. And it is urged that “a personal name cannot be exclusively appropriated as a trade mark so as to deprive another person of the same name or a sim-ilar name from using his own name in connection with his business or goods,” citing: Donnell v. Herring Hall Marvin Safe Co., 208 U. S. 267; Hygeia Distilled Water Co. v. Hygeia Ice Co., 72 Conn. 646; Wm. Rogers Mfg. Co. v. Simpson, 54 Conn. 527; Frazer v. Frazer Lubricator Co., 121 Ill. 147, and other cases. A discussion of these cases would here serve no useful purpose. It may be conceded that the general rule is that a personal name ■ — an ordinary family surname — cannot be exclusively appropriated by any one as against others having a right to use it. The rule proceeds upon the broad principle that every man has a right to use his name reasonably and honestly in any business calling. [See Howe Scale Co. v. Wyckoff, Seamans & Benedict, 198 U. S. 118.] What, in brief, we understand to be true doctrine upon the subject, approved by the Supreme Court of the United States in Singer Mfg. Co. v. June Mfg. Co., 163 U. S. 169, l. c. 187, is stated as follows:

“Every one has the absolute right to use his own name honestly in his own business, even though he may thereby incidentally interfere with and injure the business of another having the same name. In such' case *627the inconvenience or loss to which those having a common right are subjected is damnum absque injuria. But although he may thus use his name, he cannot resort to any artifice or do any act calculated to mislead the public as to the identity of the business firm or establishment, or of the article produced by them, and thus produce injury to the other beyond that which results from the similarity of name.”

In the instant case the acts of defendant complained of do not arise from the use by it of its own name, or of the family name of those interested in the corporation or business. Defendant claims to have acquired through Sunseri & Bros, the right to use the name ‘ S. Lo Buono ’ ’ in importing and selling olive oil. But in no event could such transmitted right, if any, justify defendant in making use of this name, in a locality where plaintiffs •and the defendant were competitors, with the object and purpose of deceiving intending purchasers and inducing them to believe that they are buying the goods of plaintiffs, if defendant did so. Injury thereby resulting to plaintiffs would not he produced merely by an unfortunate similarity of names, but by a device or artifice constituting unfair competition. “Any conduct, the natural and probable tendency and effect of which is to deceive the public so as to pass off the goods aor business of one person as and for that of apother, constitutes actionable unfair competition.” [38 Cyc., 756.] “The essence of the wrong consists in the sale of the goods of one manufacturer or vendor for those of another.” [Elgin Watch Co. v. Illinois Watch Case Co., 179 U. S. 665.]

In this view a court of equity will scrutinize the object and purpose which it may appear that defendant had in thus contracting with Sunseri & Bros, and putting the name “S, Lo Buono” upon these cans. Defendant’s president and Salvatore Sunseri, defendant’s witness, undertook to explain the use of the-term, “Lo Buono’s Imitation Brand,” in the contract between defendant and S. Sunseri & Bros. It is said, in substance, that the use of the word “imitation” was through the *628lack of accurate knowledge of the English language. In this connection Sunseri said: “Mr. Viviano asked me to have a brand which was not exactly like the one I was handling, but different, so that he could push it and have the exclusive sale of that brand.” Defendant’s president said: “I wanted the name “S. LoBouno, but Í wanted the oan different, as everybody had a package like that and I wanted a can by myself.” In fact the cans shipped, except for the name S. Lo Buono, were identical with those in common use. These explanations do not satisfactorily serve the purpose for which they were intended, but we pass the matter.

Defendant’s president testified at the trial that he knew that plaintiffs had been in business for some four years; that he had never bought olive oil from S. Sunseri & Bros, prior to the occasion in question, though' he had bought other things from them. When asked on cross-examination how. he knew of the “S. Lo Buono brand,” which he contracted for, not having previously bought oil from Sunseri & Bros., he said: “I saw it in Pittsburg.” When asked who first spoke about putting this name on the cans he said that he did. A deposition of this witness, admitted in evidence, shows that he previously testified as follows: “We asked him (Salvatore Sunseri) if he had any Termini oil for sale and he said yes, and he says: ‘I am going to label with the name of my grandfather, S. Lo Buono.’ ” In giving his deposition he was asked: “Why did you want the cans marked in the name of S. Lo Buono?” He answered: “That’s himself. That’s what he sold to us.” Again he was asked: “Who is S. Lo Buono in Termini, Imerese?” He replied that he did not know; that he had never heard of S. Lo Buono.

Under the circumstances we think that a court of equity may with propriety find that the use of the name “S. Lo Buono” by defendant was with an ulterior purpose and object in view, calculated to injure plaintiffs in their trade and business, and constituted unfair competition with them within the meaning of the principles stated above. ' Some deference may be justly accorded *629to the findings of the chancellor below, who had the witnesses before him; bnt apart from this we see no reason to disturb the judgment as to the injunctive feature of the case.

It is true that plaintiffs used upon their cans the name Guiseppi Lo Buono, or “Gppe. Lo Buono,” and not “S. Lo Buono.” But the suit does not proceed as for the protection of a technical trade mark, but on the broader theory of unfair competition. And under all of th'e circumstances a court of equity is warranted, we think, in concluding that the aforesaid use of the name “S. Lo Buono”.by defendant was a violation of plaintiff’s rights.

III. It was not shown that prior to the institution of the suit ¿plaintiffs suffered any loss by reason of the acts of defendant in question; nor is there any evidence as to the profits, if any, made by defendant upon the fourteen cases of oil sold by it. There is testimony that plaintiffs’ profits on like goods averaged from four to five dollars per ease, and upon this testimony, evidently, the court awarded the $70 as damages; but this evidence, we think, furnished no basis for such recovery. As to the rule regarding the extent of recovery in cases of this character generally — which need not be here stated — see 38 Cyc., 909, 913. In this connection see, also, Addington v. Cullinane, 28 Mo. App. 238; Peltz v. Echiele, 62 Mo. 171; Lampert v. Drug Co., 119 Mo. App. 693, 100 S. W. 659, 238 Mo. 409, 141 S. W. 1095. In any event, in the absence of proof of either loss by plaintiffs or profits made by defendant, only nominal damages are recoverable.

If plaintiffs therefore will remit all of the amount allowed below as damages excepting the sum of one dollar, (i. e. $69) the judgment will be affirmed; otherwise it will be reversed and the cause remanded.

Reynolds, P.J., and Becker, Jconcur.
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