180 A.D. 549 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
The plaintiff has brought this action to restrain the defendants from using the name “ The Strand,” or any simulation or imitation thereof, as the name, or part of the name, of any theatre, or in any connection with any advertisement or
The defendants resist interference with their continued use of the name upon the ground that theirs is practically a neighborhood theatre to which admission may be obtained by the payment of five, ten or fifteen cents, while the plaintiff’s theatre charges from twenty-five to fifty cents; that the pictures shown at the plaintiff’s theatre are first-run pictures and do not reach the Harlem Strand until perhaps months afterwards; that plaintiff’s theatre appeals to a wealthier class than does the defendants’; that plaintiff’s theatre features high-class musical numbers in addition to its moving picture show, while the defendants only feature, in addition to the pictures, a large pipe organ. But every fact which appears upon this record demonstrates that the sole purpose of the adoption of the name “ Harlem Strand ” was to confuse the theatre-going public as to the connection of defendants’ theatre with that of the plaintiff. It appears that it is not unusual for motion picture managers to have Harlem theatres, as well as those maintained by them in the
None of the decisions upholding the right of a person to use his own name in business is applicable here, for this is a case of an assumption of an arbitrary name and the courts have often called attention to the different rule in the two cases. As was said in Material Men’s Mercantile Assn, v. New York Material Men’s Mercantile Assn., Inc. (169 App. Div. 847): “ It was not necessary for the defendant so nearly to copy the plaintiff’s corporate name, annual book and forms. The business it intended to conduct could have been described equally well by another'name which would have distinguished the two corporations and would have prevented confusion. The use of so similar a name in the circumstances fairly warrants the inference that it was selected by those who incorporated the defendant for the purpose of obtaining some benefit or advantage from the good will of the plaintiff’s long-established and successful' business; ” and (at p. 848): “ The courts have often had occasion to decide in cases of infringement and unfair competition whether the addition of a prefix or suffix is sufficient to distinguish one name from another and prevent deception, and it has usually been held that it is not and that prior adoption and use entitles a corporation to protection against the use by a rival of a name so similar that it is calculated to mislead the public.” Nor is this prevention of the misappropriation of established corporate names limited to business corporations, but it has been extended to charitable, patriotic and fraternal societies.
No excuse is given for the selection by defendants of the name in question. The record satisfactorily establishes
As the defendants have absolutely failed to justify or explain their adoption of a name so closely resembling that of the plaintiff, and as the obvious effect of their use of such name is to create the impression that it is conducting a branch of the plaintiff’s theatre, or is in some way connected therewith, and as their unlawful assumption of the name in question was had with full knowledge of plaintiff’s claims and rights, we think a case was made out for the issuance of an injunction during the pendency of the action.
The order appealed from will, therefore, be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion for a temporary injunction granted, with ten dollars costs.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Scott and Shearn, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs. Order to be settled on notice.