27 Neb. 507 | Neb. | 1889
This action was instituted in the district court of Lancaster county by the plaintiff, a corporation duly incorporated under the laws of this state and doing business in the city of Hastings as the “Nebraska Loan and Trust Company,” against the defendants, who it is alleged were proceeding to organize a company for the transaction of business similar to that transacted by plaintiff and to be known by the same corporate name. It was alleged in the petition that plaintiff was incorporated in the year 1882 under the name of the “Nebraska Loan and Trust Company,” and that it had continued' in business up to the time of the commencement of the action, increasing its capital until it amounted to the sum of $500,000, all of which was paid in, and its business to about $1,000,000 annually; that its business was that of loaning money secured by first mortgages, dealing in municipal bonds, etc., and that such business had increased until, at the time .of the commencement of the action, it
A trial was had to the district court, which resulted in a dissolution of the temporary injunction and a general finding and decree in favor of defendant. From this decree plaintiff appeals.
The evidence introduced upon the trial, in so far as it explained the purposes of the organization of plaintiff and the extent to which its business has been carried, the amount thereof transacted by it, and the capital invested, fully sustained the allegations of the petition; while that with reference to the business capacity and capital of defendants leaves some doubt in the mind as to their real purpose in the organization of the company or corporation by them. But, as we understand the case before us, there is but one question involved, and that is, whether or not the name assumed by plaintiff, to-wit, “Nebraska Loan and Trust Company,” is one which they can appropriate to themselves to the exclusion of all other persons within the state and thereby render it unlawful for such .person to enter into any business engagements of the kind under that name.
The words “loan and trust” are simply indicative of the character of the business which they propose to carry on, and so far as they are concerned there can be no question but that there can be no special property or right in them. So the real and only question involved is, whether or not a loan and trust company organized in any part of the state can appropriate the name of the state to its own exclusive
Suppose a bank should be organized in the state as “The State Bank of Nebraska,” and as such should extend its business until it became ever so strong a factor in the finances of the state, yet it could scarcely claim the right to thus appropriate the name of the state to the exclusion of all other banks therein. As a general rule geographical names are not the subject of property as a trade name. It is true there are exceptions, among which is Newby v. Oregon Central Railroad Company, Deady’s U. S. C. C., 609. In that case, while the name assumed by the original Oregon Central Railroad Company contains the name of the state, yet by the addition of the word “ Central ” the location of the road was thereby indicated and the geographical character of the name was avoided. It would seem also that the argument in favor of the right would apply with much greater force in the case of a railroad company than in the ordinary
In Congress and Empire Spring Company v. High Rock Spring Company, 45 N. Y., 291, an injunction was granted against the defendant from, bottling and placing upon the market a water with a name similar to that of the water bottled and sold by the plaintiff. The plaintiff was the owner of what was denominated the “ Congress Spring” property in Saratoga, and for a number of years it had been engaged in bottling and selling “Congress Water.” The defendant was organized as “The High
The decree of the district court is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.