delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a bill in equity brought by the respondent, Coty, a citizen of France, against Prestonettes, a New York corporation, having its principal place of business in the Southern District of New York. It seeks to restrain alleged unlawful uses of the plaintiff’s registered trade marks, “ Coty ” and “ L’Origan ” upon toilet powders and perfumes. The defendant purchases the genuine powdеr, subjects it to pressure, adds a binder to give it coherence and sells the compact in a metal case. It buys
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thе genuine perfume in bottles and sells it in smaller bottles. We need not mention what labels it used before this suit as the defendant is сontent to abide by the decree of the District Court. That decree allowed the defendant to put upon the rebottled perfume “Preston-ettes, Inc., not connected with Coty, states that the contents are Coty’s — (giving the name of thе article) independently rebottled in New York,” every word to be in letters of the same size, color, type and general distinctiveness. It allowed the defendant to make compacts from the genuine loose powder of the plaintiff and to sell them with this label on the container:
“
Pres-tonettes, Inc., not connected with Coty, states that the compact of face powder herein was independently compounded by it from Coty’s — (giving the name) loose powder and its own binder. Loose powder — per cent, Binder — per cent,” every word to be in letters of the same size, cоlor, type and general distinctiveness. The Circuit Court of Appeals, considering the very delicate and volatile nature of the perfume, its easy deterioration, and the opportunities for adulteration, issued an absolute prеliminary injunction against the use of the above marks except on the original packages as marked and sold by thе plaintiff, thinking that the defendant could not put upon the plaintiff the burden of keeping a constant watch.
The bill does nоt charge the defendant with adulterating or otherwise deteriorating the plaintiff’s product except that it intimates rаther than alleges metal containers to be bad, and the Circuit Court of Appeals stated that there were no controverted questions of fact but that the issue was simply one of law. It seemingly assumed that the defendant handled the plаintiff’s product without in any way injuring its qualities and made its decree upon that assumption. The decree seems to us to havе gone too far.
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The defendant of course by virtue of its ownership had a right to compound or change what it bought, to divide either the original or the modified product, and to sell it so divided. The plaintiff could not prevent or complаin of its stating the nature of the component parts and the source from which they were derived if it did not use the trade mаrk in doing so. For instance, the defendant could state that a certain percentage of its compound was made at a.certain place in Paris, however well known as the plaintiff’s factory that place might be. If the compound was worse than the constituent, it might be a misfortune to the plaintiff, but the plaintiff would have no cause of actiоn, as the defendant was exercising the rights of ownership and only telling the truth. The existence of a trade mark would have no bearing on the question. Then what new rights does the trade mark confer? It does not confer a right to prohibit the use of thе word or words. It is not a copyright. The argument drawn from the language of the Trade Mark Act does not seem to us to need discussion. A trade mark only gives the right to prohibit the use of it so far as to protect the owner’s good will against the salе of another’s product as his.
United Drug Co.
v.
Theodore Rectanus Co.,
If the name of Coty were allowed to be printed in different letters from the rest of the inscription dictated by the District Court a casual purchaser might look no *369 further and might be deceived. But when it in no way-stands out from the statement of facts that unquestionably the defendant has a right to communicate in some form, we see no reason why it should not be used collaterally, not to indicate the goods, but. to say that the trade-markеd product is a constituent in the article now offered as new and changed. As a general proposition there can be no doubt that the word might be so used. If a man bought a barrel of a certain flour, or a demijohn of Old Crow whiskey, he сertainly could sell the flour in smaller packages or in former days could have sold the whiskey in bottles, and tell what it was, if he stated that he did the dividing up or the bottling. And this would not be because of a license implied from the special facts but on the general ground that we have stated. It seems to us that no new right can be evoked from the fact that the perfume or powder is delicate and likely to be spoiled, or from the omnipresent possibility of fraud. If the defendant’s rebottling the plaintiff’s perfume deteriorates it and the public is adequately informed who does the rebottling, the public, with or without the plaintiff’s assistance, is likely to find it out. And so of the powder in its new form.
This is not a suit for unfair competition. It stands upon the рlaintiff’s rights as owner of a trade-mark registered under the act of Congress. The question therefore is not how far the court would go in aid of a plaintiff who showed ground for suspecting the defendant of making a dishonest use of his opportunities, but is whether the plaintiff has the naked right alleged to prohibit the defendant from making even a collateral reference to the plaintiff’s mark. We are of opinion that the decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals must be reversed and that that of the District Court must stand.
Decree reversed.
