28 A.D. 111 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The plaintiff is an English corporation and a manufacturer of . bluing, whose goods have been on sale in the niarkets of the United States for a period of nearly twenty years. Since the year 1878 the plaintiff has put up what is known as block blue fbr sale in this country. This article was put up in packages called one-cube and two-cube packages, and the plaintiff had adojited certain labels and wrappers which had come to be recognized as distinctively used for its goods. The goods thus sold had acquired a well-known reputation in the market for superior excellence for the purposes for which they were intended to be used. The wrapper in which they were inclosed was peculiar in its color and markings and one which would naturally attract the attention of buyers.
The plaintiff complains that the defendant, who is also a dealer .in bluing, has placed upon the market bluing in packages which resemble the packages of the plaintiff in size, shape, labels and general appearance, and that the resemblance is, calculated to deceive and does deceive the public, and it asks in this action for an injunction restraining the defendant from putting up its article in packages which so closely resemble the packages heretofore put up by the plaintiff as to deceive unwary purchasers and to enable dealers to sell the packages of the defendant for those of the plaintiff. Upon the trial the plaintiff made proof tending, as it insisted, to establish its allegatio¿is, but at the close of the plaintiff’s case the complaint was dismissed. The learned justice at Special Term held that there was no such similarity between the packages used by the plaintiff and the defendant respectively as would be likely to mislead persons who desired to purchase the ¡ilaintiff’s goods into taking those • of the defendant; and, because he thought that there was no prob
The case is clearly one within the rules laid down in Fischer v. Flank (supra), and the facts establish the right of the plaintiff,to be pirotected against the colorable imitation of his goods made by the : defendant. Indeed, all this is hardly disputed by the defendant himself, buthe bases his defense upon a claim that the plaintiff itself has no special orpeculiar right to use packages of the form and color and . manner of marking in which it has -been accustomed to put up its goods. The defendant claims that before the plaintiff' undertook the sale of these goods, other dealers were in the habit of selling the same kind of goods in the same sort of packages, put up in paper of the same color and with markings resembling those used by the plaintiff, and upon the argument he based his right to uphold the judgment which he obtained largely upon the existence of these facts. The trouble with the defendant’s position is that these facts were not made to appear. It is not necessary to consider what would have been the rights of the plaintiff if it had been shown that some other person had been in the habit of putting up Ms goods in packages to which' those of the plaintiff bore a close resemblance, because no such facts appear, and for that reason the defense failed in that particular. A careful consideration of the evidence leads to the conclusion that the defendant’s manner of- business was likely to deceive persons who had been in the habit of buying the plaintiff’s goods, and to-mislead them into taking the defendant’s goods instead,, and that it,
Van Brunt; P. J., Barrett, O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.