60 Pa. 156 | Pa. | 1869
The opinion of the court was delivered, by
— The plaintiff, according to the statements of his bill, is the manufacturer of a cigar, known as the “ Golden Crown,” and he has devised a trade-mark, which he uses in its sale. He charges that the defendant, who is a printer by trade, has counterfeited this mark, and sells copies of it to persons engaged in the manufacture and sale of cigars, by whom they are used to his damage. The answer of the defendant admits these allegations; but sets up as a ground for the non-interference' of the court, that the articles thus sold by the plaintiff were manufactured in the city of New York, and that the trade-mark in question contains upon it the declaration that they are the product of a “ factory of cigars from the best plantations de la Vuelta Abajo, Calle del Agua, Habana.” The case having been heard on bill and answer, the bill was dismissed with costs.
The maxim which is generally expressed, “ He who .comes into equity must come with clean hands,” Snell’s Principles 33, but sometimes, in stronger language, “He that hath committed iniquity shall not have equity,” Francis’s Maxims 5, has been often applied to bills to restrain by injunction the counterfeiting of trade-marks. The ground on which the jurisdiction of equity in such cases is rested, is the promotion of honesty and fair dealing, because no one has a right to sell his own goods as the goods of another: Croft v. Day, 7 Beav. 84. “It is perfectly manifest,” said Lord Langdale, “ that to do this is a fraud, and a very gross fraud.” It is plain that there is no class of cases to which the
Decree affirmed and appeal dismissed at the costs of the appellant.