287 F. 765 | D.C. Cir. | 1923
This is a trade-mark interference proceeding, in which the decision of the Patent Office was against Daniel B.
Replogle filed his application for registration of a composite mark, consisting of the words “Pneumode” and “Air-Way,” on November IS, 1918, alleging that he had commenced the use of the mark some time prior thereto. Just before the filing of his application Replogle was engaged in manufacturing and selling, under the name of Bright Circle Manufacturing Company, an electric vacuum cleaner and parts thereof invented by him and covered by certain patents to which he applied the mark just mentioned. The Air-Way Company sought registration of the name “Air-Way” on December 26, 1919, having adopted it in the previous April.
In October, 1918, Replogle and another entered into an agreement with one Charles F. Bacon, of Toledo, Ohio, whereby Replogle agreed to deliver, at the request of Bacon, to a corporation to be formed, an exclusive license to manufacture and sell all of the products covered by the patents referred to, and applications for patents, belonging to Replogle, the license to last during the respective terms of the patents. Under this agreement Replogle was to receive a certain percentage of the gross sales as royalties, and $300 per month as a minimum royalty. The corporation was to proceed with reasonable diligence to manufacture at least 1,000 of the cleaners and put the same upon the market as soon as practicable. The contract further provided that Replogle should receive from the corporation an exclusive agency in the states of Oregon, Washington, and California for the sale of the articles manufactured under the license.
The corporation was formed, in accordance with the contract, and took the name of the Air-Way Company. It is this company which applies for registration of the mark “Air-Way.” In due time the license provided for was delivered, at the request of Bacon, to the corporation, and the contract was in all respects carried out by the parties thereto. In addition to securing the license, the Air-Way Company purchased and took over all the business, good will, cleaner parts, tools, jigs, and property of every kind formerly used or employed by Replogle under the name of the Bright Circle Manufacturing Company.
It appears, then, that Replogle transferred the entire business of the Bright Circle Manufacturing Company to the corporation, and with it whatever rights he had to the mark “Air-Way,” and from that time on the Air-Way Company had the right to use the mark on the goods which it manufactured under the license. In view of this it is not necessary to determine whether or not Replogle was the first to adopt and apply the mark to patented goods, for if he was the first he conveyed his right in connection with his business to the Air-Way Company.
We have said that, where the owner of a trade-mark grants the right to another, either by sale or license, to use the mark on the goods with which its use is connected, and abandons its use himself, he cannot afterwards either deprive his assignee of the right to its use or set up
But Replogle insists that the agreement under which he transferred the business and the mark was not a contract, but a simple license, upon condition, inter alia, that the Air-Way Company would comply with its terms. The same defense was made in Macwilliam v. President Suspender Co., supra. In disposing of it the court said that it was unable to perceive any reason for holding that a patentee who gives an exclusive license to another to manufacture and sell a patented article for the life of the patent, and who at the same time transfers the good will of the business to the licensee, retains any right to the trade-mark which he can avail himself of during the life of the patent ordinarily or on its expiration. The right of the plaintiff to the trade-mark must be regarded as exclusive of the defendant, as was the plaintiff’s right to manufacture and sell the patented article.
It is urged by Replogle that the agreement or license has been forfeited so far as the cord reel covered by one of the assigned patents is concerned, and that because of this the Air-Way Company’s right to the mark has ceased. The reel is but part of the cleaner. When this alleged forfeiture took place does not appear. If it took place after the decision by the Commissioner of Patents, we cannot consider it, because our duty' is to review the decision upon the record of the proceedings in the Patent Office. 33 Stat. 727, § 9 (Comp. St. § 9494); Rev. Stat. 4914 (Comp. St. § 9459). The only reference to it in the record appears in a statement made by Replogle — not as a witness under oath, but as counsel — that the Air-Way Company, he believed, had agreed to transfer the cord reel patent back to him. At best it is only a belief on his part. If it was a fact, he could have proven it without difficulty. We cannot give this statement any weight. Moreover, he does not say with whom the agreement was made, but, if made, he must have been one of the parties thereto. If it was the intention of the parties that the trade-mark should be returned to him at the same time the cord reel
At the bar it was admitted that the Air-Way Company had ceased to manufacture the cord reel, but the time when it ceased to do so was not given. Unless, we repeat, it was before the decision of the Commissioner we cannot consider it. Anyhow it was not admitted that the title to the trade-mark was to be returned. In this regard it must be remembered that there is nothing in the license of the patents about the transfer of the Bright Circle Manufacturing Company’s business or the trade-mark. That, so far as the record is concerned, was the result of a separate agreement. The nonperformance of the conditions of the license contract in no way affected the title to the business or trade-mark conveyed to the Air-Way Company. .To say that it did would be to write into the contract something that was not placed there by the parties. This we cannot do.
The decision of the Commissioner is affirmed.