215 F. 349 | 6th Cir. | 1914
The Prest-O-Lite Company, a manufacturer and distributor of acetylene gas for lighting automobiles and other vehicles, brought suit to restrain alleged unfair competition and infringement of trade-mark by defendants, who are dealers in automobile accessories. Complainant stores its gas in portable steel cylinders lined with asbestos, which absorbs a quantity of acetone, which in turn is saturated with acetylene gas introduced under pressure, the outflow for consumption being valve-controlled. The entire package, so filled by complainant with its gas (the gas being trade-marked under the name “Prest-O-Lite”), is furnished the consumer in the first instance. When the gas is consumed the tank is, under complainant’s long-established system, accepted at any one of several thousand agencies or depots throughout the United States, in exchange for a package fully charged by complainant, and on payment of a small fraction of the original price of the filled package. Complainant’s container is copper-plated and bears the words “Presto-O-Lite gas tank,” together with its corporate name as manufacturer,“etched in the metal surface of the cylinder. It also contains a notice licensing its sale and use only when filled with gas and acetone compressed by complainant. This restrictive feature was exploited by complainant, by its advertising matter and otherwise, at least during the life of the Claude & Hess patent (No. 664,383, December 25, 1900), under which the apparatus in question was manufactured. The patent was held by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Seventh circuit to have expired June 30, 1910. Commercial Acetylene Co. v. Searchlight Gas Co., 203 Fed. 276, 121 C. C. A. 474.
The grounds, broadly stated, on which defendants contend that complainant should be denied relief are: (a) That defendants have not been guilty of fraud or unfair trade; (b) that the attempt to limit the use to which complainant’s gas tanks shall be put after their sale by
We think the Singer Case has no application. The rule there announced is that on the expiration of a patent the generic name or description under which the patented article has been made and sold during the term of the monopoly (as distinguished from a name merely indicative of origin of manufacture) passes to the public, and may be used by another, provided unmistakable notice is carried that the article is manufactured by the one actually making it, and not by the proprietors of the expired patent. For a discussion of this rule, see the opinion of Judge Denison, speaking for this court, in Merriam v. Saalfield, 198 Fed. 369, 374, 375, 117 C. C. A. 245.
The case here does not involve merely the right to sell tanks in the form made by complainant and bearing such words as “Prest-O-Lite tank” or eyen “Prest-O-Lite gas tank.” The case goes farther. While the patent is upon a gas-storing apparatus which includes the valve-equipped, closed receptacle containing acetylene gas in solution, the gas is not protected by the patent, either as respects manner of manufacture or specific method of compression. Complainant’s trade-mark is upon its gas in the portable tank, which gas it compresses in its peculiar way, differing from the Searchlight process. It has never sold
The same result has been reached by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Seventh Circuit in an opinion by Judge Baker, rendered since the decision of the instant case below. Searchlight Gas Co. v. PrestO-Lite Co., 215 Fed. 692. •
Complainant appeals because the decree does not forbid sales of Searchlight gas in Prest-O-Tite containers which had originally borne the trade-mark “Presto-O-Tite,” unless the purchaser is given actual notice that the package is not a Prest-O-Tite, and is not exchangeable by the Prest-O-Tite Company when empty. But we think the prohibition against the use of the containers bearing complainant’s mark sufficiently protects its interests.
The decree of the district court is affirmed, with costs of the respective appeals against the appellants therein.
But see Acme, etc., Co. v. Commercial, etc. Co. (C. C. A. 6) 192 Fed. 321, 326, 112 C. C. A. 573.
Judge Ray’s expression in Prest-O-Lite Co. v. Avery Light Co. (C. C.) 161 Fed. at page 650.