37 P. 235 | Cal. | 1894
Action to enjoin the defendants from using a “trade name,” which it is alleged belongs to the plaintiff (a corporation), and for damages. Findings and judgment were against the plaintiff, and this appeal is taken from the judgment and an order denying its motion for a new trial. An outline of the facts, condensed from the findings, may be thus stated: Some time prior to 1865, the defendant D. O. Mills became and still is the owner of a tract of land in San Mateo county, at the railroad station now, and ever since 1865, known as Millbrae station. From 1865 until August, 1883, A. F. Green and defendant Mills were copartners, engaged in the business of raising and keeping cows of superior quality and breed upon said land, and selling the milk therefrom in the city of San Francisco, said business being conducted, at least since 1875, under the trade name of “Millbrae Dairy”; the word “Millbrae” being compounded of the name of the owner of the ranch (omitting the “s”) and the Scotch word “brae.” In August, 1883, F. H. Green purchased a one-third interest in the cows and other personal property and business, and the firm as thus constituted continued the business until September 1, 1886, under the same trade name. At the date last named the copartnership was dissolved by mutual consent and in the settlement A. F. and F. H. Green took the milk routes and business of selling the milk in San Francisco, with the wagons, horses and appurtenances, and defendant Mills, who was at all times the sole owner of the land, took all the dairy implements, supplies, cows and other personal property at the ranch, and on the same day entered into an agreement with said A. F. and F. H. Green whereby he agreed to sell to them and they agreed to buy, not less than two hundred apd seventy nor more than three hundred and ninety gallons of milk per day, at a price therein specified, the milk to be thus furnished by defendant Mills to be exclusively from his own dairy, and this agreement was to continue for at least one year.
It is not necessary to review the cases cited by appellant, for the question involved is no longer an open one. In the case of Joseph v. Macowsky, 96 Cal. 521, 19 L. R. A. 53, 31 Pac. 914, it was said: “A person who comes into a court of equity for an injunction in a case of this kind must come with clean hands. He cannot be granted relief upon a claim to the exclusive use of a trademark which contains a false representation, calculated to deceive the public as to the manufacturer of the article and the place where it is manufactured: Browne on Trademarks, secs. 71, 474; Palmer v. Harris, 60 Pa. 156, 100 Am. Dec. 557; Fetridge v. Wells, 13 How. Pr. (N. Y.) 385; Hobbs v. Francais, 19 How. Pr. (N. Y.) 571; Manhattan Medicine Co. v. Wood, 108 U. S. 218, 27 L. Ed. 706, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 436. In Siegert v. Abbott, 61 Md. 284, 48 Am. Rep. 101, the court said: ‘It is a general rule of law in cases of this kind that courts of equity will not interfere by injunction where there is any lack of truth in the plaintiff’s case; that is, where there is any misrepresentation in his trademark or labels. ’ ” If, at the time the partnership was dissolved, D. O. Mills had sold to his copartners the ranch and dairy, as well as his interest in the business of selling the milk there produced, the property in the trade name and the exclusive right to use it would have passed to the purchasers, and Mills could not have applied the name to another ranch
It is claimed that the second finding is, in effect, that defendant Mills first used and adopted the name “Millbrae” before his partnership with A. F. Green, and that this is not justified by the evidence. Whether this name was adopted before or after is wholly immaterial. It had certainly been used many years before the dissolution, and was well known. It was the name of a locality, and attached thereto, no matter by whom nor when it was originated. Whether Millbrae farm is or is not shown by the evidence to be “peculiarly” fitted and adapted to the purpose of producing milk,'or that it is not shown to produce better milk than other farms or dairies, is also immaterial. The name used to indicate milk produced on that farm had become valuable, and the question here is not one of comparison with other milk or other ranches, but whether defendant Mills shall be deprived of the use of a name that is valuable to him. The finding that “D. 0. Mills never sold nor conveyed to A. F. Green and F. H. Green nor to either of them, the goodwill of the business of selling milk in the city of San Francisco,” is, I think, supported by the evidence. The evidence shows that at the time of the dissolu
It was further alleged in the complaint that defendants Taylor and Mills entered into a scheme which had for its object the going into the business of selling milk in said city, and of obtaining customers by enticing away the customers of the plaintiff; that in pursuance thereof they induced the defendant Cole, who had' been in the employment of the plaintiff and its predecessors for fifteen years, and had full knowledge of their milk routes, to leave the plaintiff and enter into their service, and were thus able to impose upon the customers of the plaintiff and sell them milk while such customers, believed they were purchasing from plaintiff; that defendants ’ wagons closely resembled plaintiff’s, and had painted on them
I think the evidence justifies the findings and that the judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed.
We concur: Temple, C.; Searls, G.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.