Philadelphia Novelty Manuf'g Co. v. Blakesley Novelty Co.

40 F. 588 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut | 1889

Shipman, J.

This is a bill in equity to prevent the alleged infringement of a trade-mark, and has now been heard upon final proofs. A motion for preliminary injunction had been previous!)' hoard and denied. 37 Fed. Rep. 366. The finding of facts upon that motion was correct, except that I was mistaken in saying that“ the crimpers are ordinarily sold by the box, or are shown to the purchaser in the box.” They are sold to the consumer by the small package, from an uncovered red box. What is styled in the bill “the distinctive trade-mark,” i. e., the printed matter upon the label, and the picture of the head of a woman with hair curled, or, in other words, the label itself, is not infringed by the defendant’s label, for the reasons stated in my former opinion. The complainant’s label, with its words, symbols, and distinctive appearance, not having been simulated, and the defendant’s box, with its label, not being adapted to deceive or mislead the purchaser, is the use of the same or similar colors of wrappers and of boxes to be enjoined as infringing the rights of the complainant? The answer must be in the negative, unless the complainant’s trade-mark proper has been imitated to .some extent, or unless there is a colorable resemblance between the two marks. The case of the complainant against Rouss (39 Fed. Rep. 273) was recently heard in the circuit court for the southern district of New York upon the same record which was used in this case, and nothing-need be added to the statement of the law by Judge Coxe in regard to the rights of a manufacturer to the exclusive use of a particular color, when no mark or symbol has been simulated. The bill should be dismissed.