This аppeal involves only the question of the substantive jurisdiction of the district court. The complaint on its face appears to have been framed under the Trade-Mark Act of 1905 alone; it alleged that the plaintiff was the owner of a number of registered trade-marks which contained the word, “Pure,” or its first three lettеrs, “Pur,” and that the defendant, which operated a “service station” in Hartford, Connecticut, had infringed these marks by selling oil and gasoline under the name, “Pure,” in interstatе commerce. Upon the trial it appeared that the plaintiff did a large interstate business in the sale of gasoline and oil (originally including the supply of filling stаtions in Connecticut which it had, however, abandoned before action brought), and that it sold its products under a number of names, registered as trade-marks, all containing the letters, “Pur,” which had acquired a proprietary secondary meaning. The defendant operates a “service station” in Hartford where it sells gasoline and oil under the name, “Pure” and “Puritan,” by dispensing these substances to all automobiles which come along; 95% of these are “recurrent” customers. It importеd into Connecticut from Indiana some translucent “globes” which it has placed upon the pumps by which it dispenses its gasoline and which contain the word “Pure,” and it disрlays the word, “Puritan,” at the station. The judge held that the plaintiff had not shown that the defendant had used the registered mark in interstate commerce, or that the valuе of the “amount in controversy” was $3,000; he also held that the “cause of action” set up under the Trade-Mark Act was not “substantial” enough to confer an incidеntal or pendent jurisdiction under the doctrine of Hurn v. Oursler,
We start with the fact that the only wrong fоrbidden by § 96 of Title 15 U.S.C. A. is a “use” of the mark in interstate commerce (United States Printing and Lithograph Company v. Griggs, Cooper & Co.,
The defendant insists, however, that we may not stop at the complaint since the jurisdictional allegations are in issue; on the contrary, that the plaintiff has the burden of showing that the case was “really and substantially” within the court’s jurisdiction. § 80 of Title 28 U.S.C.A.; McNutt v. General Motors Acceptance Corp.,
The use of the word, “Pure,” to sell gasoline and of the sign, “Puritan,” at the station, comes much closer to compliance with § 96. Cars come to the “service station” from outside Connecticut to be filled; they carry away what they get and certainly some part of it crosses the border in their tanks. It is true that this is a small pai*t of the defendant’s total sales — apparently only about five per
cent
— bat
the
amount does not matter if pro tanto the business violates the act. Omitting irrelеvant words, the section reads as follows: “Any person who shall * * * imitate any * * * trademark and affix the same to merchandise * * * or to labels, signs, prints, packages, wrаppers or receptacles intended to be used * * * in connection with the sale of merchandise * * * and shall use * * *■ such * * * imitation in commerce among the several States.” The defendant does affix an “imitation” of the mark to “receptacles intended to be used * * * in connection with the sale” of gasolinе in interstate commerce, and it does not strain the sense to say that in so attracting customers it “uses” the “imitation” in that commerce. Faced with the strict neсessity of deciding, we should perhaps not say that that was the kind of “use” intended; rather it would seem from the context that the “receptacles” or “signs” which beаr the mark must themselves move in interstate commerce. If they need not, the section would cover any use of a registered trade-mark which facilitated an interstate sale; a doubtful interpretation at best, which arguendo we reject. Nevertheless, it does not appear to us so untenable an interpretation as to make an assertion of jurisdiction based upon it “plainly unsubstantial.” On the contrary, we think it a not implausible theory that so to use a mark is to “use” it “in commerce.” There can be no doubt that Congress might have so declared had it been minded; the Trade-Mark Cases,
The plaintiff asks us in the event of a reversal to give judgment on this record, as it has abandoned any claim for damages and asks only for an injunction. On the whole we think that, since the merits have never been really considered, although most of the ultimate facts were found, the cause should go back for another trial.
Judgment reversed; cause remanded.
