113 F. 468 | 8th Cir. | 1901
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action to restrain the alleged infringement of a specific trade-mark. No claim is made that defendant's goods are so put upon the market as to induce or tend to induce purchasers to buy them as and for the goods of complainant. In fact the packages containing them are so dissimilar in character, size, dressing, and display from the complainant’s packages that it is impossible that any person could he deceived with respect to them, or that defendant could palm off its goods as and for those of complainant; and no claim is made that defendant adopted the word “Antiphlogisline” as its trade-mark with any knowledge that complainant or its predecessor had ever either adopted or used the same for any purpose whatsoever. No question, therefore, of fraudulent purpose or intent on the part of the defendant to circumvent the complainant or deceive the public is raised by this record.
Defendant concedes that it has made use of the word as its trademark continuously and extensively from and after 1893 to the present time, and claims that it has a legal right to continue so doing. It contends that complainant never acquired the exclusive right to the use of the word at all, and if it did that it was limited to use upon that particular class of merchandise known as “liquid dentifrice,” with which alone it was associated.
The right to a trade-mark at common law, independent of the registration statute, is not created by invention or priority of adoption alone. A word, symbol, or device, to be a valid trade-mark constituting a right of property, must have been used by the owner in connection with the sale of his goods for such length of time, and under such circumstances, as indicates to the trade that the goods in connection with which it appears are his goods, as distinguished from those of other manufacturers or dealers. The mere adoption of such word, symbol, or device, unaccompanied by such
“Where, therefore, a party has been in the habit of stamping his goods with a particular mark or brand, so that the purchasers of his goods, bearing that mark or brand, know them to be of his manufacture, no other manufacturer has a right to adopt the same stamp.”
In the Trade-Mark Cases, 100 U. S. 82, 94, 25 L. Ed. 550, 552, Mr. Justice Miller, speaking for the court, says:
“The ordinary trade-mark has no necessary relation to invention or discovery. The trade-mark recognized by the common law is generally the growth of a considerable period of use, rather than a. sudden invention. * * * At common law the exclusive right to it grows out of its use, and not its mere adoption.”
In the case of Levy v. Waitt (decided by the circuit court of appeals for the First circuit) 10 C. C. A. 227, 61 Fed. 1008, 1011, 25 L. R. A. 190, in a case somewhat analogous to that now before us, it is said:
“It seems to have been assumed in the discussions of this case that the common-law right to a trade-mark comes more from selection or discovery than from actual occupation of the market. * * * But this is not the law. The right to a trade-mark at common law must not he confused, as it too frequently is, with the prima facie right existing under registration statutes. It arises to such a limited extent from the mere matter of selection or discovery of the name or symbol used that this may be of trivial consequence.”
The court then adopts the language employed by Vice Chancellor Sir W. Page Wood in Collins Co. v. Brown, 3 Kay & J. 423, as a good compendium of t,he common law of trade-mark, as follows:
“The simple question in these cases is, has the plaintiff, by the appropriation of a particular mark, fixed in the market where his goods are sold a conviction that the goods so marked were manufactured by him?"
In the case of McAndrew v. Bassett, 4 De Gex, J. & S. 380, 386, Lord Westbury states that property in words stamped upon a vendible article exists when “the article goes into the market so stamped, and there obtains acceptance and reputation, whereby the stamp gets currency as an indication of superior quality, or some other circumstance which renders the article so stamped acceptable to the public.” To the same effect are the following cases: George v. Smith (C. C.) 52 Fed. 830; Tetlow v. Tappan (C. C.) 85 Fed. 774; Hygeia Distilled Water Co. v. Hygeia Ice Co., 70 Conn. 516, 533, 40 Atl. 534.
According to the rule hereinbefore announced, the present case must be decided by answering the following question: Did the complainant make such use of the word “Antiphlogistine” in connection with its medicinal preparation as to cause it to be known and recognized in the market by that word? For a period of over 20 years, beginning in 1867, the preparation in question had been sold and known (if at all) by the name “Saturated” or “Concentrated Tincture of Aconite and Iodine, Prepared * * * by T. J. Macmahan.” Afterwards, at about the time óf the formation of the complainant corporation in 1890, the word “Antiphlogistine” first appeared on the label, but it then, and continuously thereafter,
The question was much argued' by counsel whether the liquid dentifrice of complainant prepared and offered for sale in small bottles is of the same class of merchandise as the plastic compound of defendant, prepared and offered for sale in tin cans. It is true both of them are intended, in a general sense, to reduce inflammation, but complainant’s is practically a dental remedy, employed almost exclusively in connection with the teeth, while the defendant’s is a general remedy, inapplicable to the use of dentists, but intended for and solely applicable to external use as a substitute for ordinary poultices, blisters, and counterirritants. It is conceded that if these were different classes of merchandise, within the accepted meaning of those words, in their relation to trade-mark, then each party might, adopt and use -the same trade-mark, as there would be no danger of confusion resulting therefrom. We, however, do not deem it necessary for the disposition of this case to pass upon the main question so argued. We feel, however, constrained to say this much, that, in our opinion, the complainant, by undertaking to sell the right to use the word in question to Dr. Campbell for his use in handling plastic compounds, evinced an intention to abandon its claim to the trade-mark, except in connection with its liquid preparation, and cannot claim in a court of equity that it does- not belong to a separate class of plastic compounds, or that it will be damaged by defendant’s use of the same word in connection with its plastic compound. In fact the complainant is making no such claim. This suit is prosecuted by Dr. Campbell, not for complainant’s benefit, but for his own. He was a prominent executive officer, and largely interested in defendant corporation, liad participated in the early and continued struggles of the company to secure a trade for its compound, had necessarily known and approved of the large outlays of money for advertising it as “Antiphlogistine,” and had on behalf of his company investigated complainant’s claim, and pronounced it invalid. For reasons unexplained, he afterwards sold his stock, resigned his position as an officer of the defendant company, made the contract referred to with complainant, and caused this suit to be instituted. The main purpose of the contract was to transfer from complainant company to Dr. Campbell the' right to use the word “Antiphlogistine” as a trade-mark for his preparation, which, by agreement, was not to be in “liquid form.” There was no transfer to him of complainant’s business, or any part of it, and no license to operate at complainant’s place of business. The sole purpose was to separate what complainant called its trade-mark, reserving to itself the right to use it on its preparation in liquid form, and transferring it to Dr. Campbell for his use on preparation not in liquid form. This contract betrays a false conception of the character of trade-mark property. A trade-mark cannot be assigned,
“If one affixes to goods of life own manufacture signs or marks which indicate that they are the manufacture of others, he is deceiving the public and attempting to pass upon them goods as possessing a quality and merit which another’s skill has given lo similar articles, and which Ms own manufacture does not possess, in the estimation of purchasers. 0 S! " Those who come into a court of equity, socking equity, must come with pure hands and a pure conscience. If they claim relief against the frauds of others, they must themselves lie free from the Imputation. If the salon made by the plaintiff and hir. firm are effected, or sought to be, by misrepresentation and falsehood, they cannot be listened to when they complain that by the fraudulent rivalry of others, their ov/11 fraudulent profits are djininjEod An exclusive privilege for deceiving the public is assuredly not one that a court of equity can be required to aid or sanction. To d® so would be to forfeit its name and character.”
The foregoing quotations are alone applicable on the fundamental theory of the complainant in this case, namely, that it had made such use-of the word “Antiplilogistine” as its trade-mark that the public, recognized it, when found on any packages either of liquid or plastic medicinal preparations, as convincing evidence 1 hat they were put up
We are of opinion, for the reasons hereinbefore stated, that complainant never acquired any right of property in the word “Antiphlogistine” as a trade-mark, and, if it had, that the business arrangement made with Dr. Campbell forfeited all right to the equitable relief prayed for in this action.
Other interesting questions arising in this case were argued at the bar, but in the view we have taken of the propositions already discussed it becomes unnecessary to express our views concerning them.
The decree of the circuit court dismissing the bill was undoubtedly correct, and is accordingly affirmed.