Rosenberg Bros. & Co., a corporation engaged in the manufacture of men’s clothing, having long used the trade-mark “Fashion Park,” registered it in three ways: “Fashion Park,” “Fashion Park Clothes,” and “Tailored at Fashion Park.” Discovering that John F. Elliott, a storekeeper in the village of Shenandoah, Pennsylvania, had on sale hats and eaps marked “Fashion Park,” Rosenberg Bros. & Co. brought this suit, charging him with infringement of its trade-mark and with unfair competition. Elliott, by his answer, traversed these allegations and for further defense said that men’s clothing and men’s hats and caps are in separate and distinct classes; that he had used the mark “Fashion Park” only on hats and caps, and, therefore, he had not infringed the complainant’s trademark; and that men’s hats and caps are not sold in competition with men’s clothing, therefore in selling hats and caps with the mark “Fashion Park” ho had not engaged in unfair competition.
The learned trial court did not discuss the issue of unfair competition, but, limiting its opinion to the issue of trade-mark infringement, it found that men’s clothing and men’s hats and eaps constitute distinct and separate classes of merchandise and that, in consequence, the respondent’s use of the mark was not in the line of trade related to that of the complainant within the principle of the Aunt Jemima Case and kindred cases, but its use was in a wholly different line of trade and therefore it was not an infringing use. From the decree dismissing the bill the complainant took this appeal, bringing here for review the same two questions that were tried in the District Court,
Although the law of trade-marks and the law of unfair competition are closely related — -the law governing trade-marks being a branch of the broader law regulating trade competition, Barton v. Rex-Oil Co. (C. C. A.) 2 F. (2d) 402, 404; Hanover Star Milling Co. v. Metcalf,
As the complainant in this ease has not charged the respondent with unfair appropriation of its trade-name, but has charged him with infringement of its trademark and with unfair competition by unfair advertising practices, the law of Akron-Overland Tire Co. v. Willys-Overland Co. and Howard Wall v. Rolls-Royce of America, Inc., is not in terms applicable to either issue of the case under review. The ease at bar, however, directly raises for the first time in this circuit the question which it has frequently been thought this court decided in those two cases. In order to avoid confusion in our decisions we shall treat the precise question here raised as one of first impression.
In discussing the issue of trade-mark infringement, we first go to the statutes for the law. Act Feb. 20, 1905, § 5 (33 Stat. 725 [Comp. Stat. § 9490]), tells when a mark may be registered, but provides in consonance with the principle of common-law trade-marks that:
“Trade-marks whieh are identical with a registered or known trade-mark owned and in use by another and appropriated to. merchandise of the same descriptive properties * * * shall not be registered.”
In order to carry out this theory of registration the same Act, while in terms disclaiming registration as a test of trade-mark validity or as a condition of trade-mark protection .(section 23 [Comp. St. § 9508]), provides that the applicant shall specify the class of merchandise and give a description of goods comprised in the class fc which his trademark is appropriated. In furtherance of the idea of similarity of descriptive properties and classification of the ■ merchandise to whieh the trade-mark is appropriated, the' Act requires that the Commissioner of Patents shall establish classes of merchandise for the purpose of trade-mark registration and that on a single application a trademark may be registered at the option of the applicant for any or all goods comprised in a single class upon whieh the mark has been used. In respect .to classification of merchandise, such as food, wearing apparel, etc., the courts have generally held, notably in the Eighth Circuit, that “the general rule of law upon this subject is that the owner must have used his trade-mark on the same class but not necessarily on the same species of goods as the alleged infringer in order to entitle him to its protection against infringement,” Layton Pure Food Co. v. Church
&
Dwight Co.,
This brings us to the question — the central question of fact in the ease — whether hats and caps are so closely related to men’s clothing, both being wearing apparel, as to be within the same class and of the same description. ^
The Commissioner of Patents has answered this question, at least for himself, when in complying with the statute he established in the Patent Office classes of merchandise for trade-mark registration and in Class 39, under the head of “Clothing,” he included men’s coats, vests, pants, overcoats and hats and caps.
Opposed to this official classification the learned trial court found as a fact that men’s clothes (to which the complainant’s trademark applies) and men’s hats and caps, both outerwear as distinguished from underwear, do not come within one class and cannot be considered as related in the sense of the Act whieh prohibits trade-mark registration for “merchandise of the same descriptive properties” and whieh, by the same test, implies non-infringement where goods are not of the same descriptive properties. Though persuasive, we cannot follow the reasoning of the learned trial court. Specifically there is a difference between coats, vests, pants, overcoats and hats and caps. There is no doubt about that. But on a charge of infringement courts, advancing a step from the old law, are to-day less concerned with the species than with the class of goods on which a trademark has' been used. When it has been used by the owner and by another on goods of the same class, though different in species, the question whether they are so closely related —so near akin — as to be regarded as having the “same descriptive properties” arises. The leading ease involving this question perhaps is the now familiar case of Aunt Je
*965
mima Mills Co. v. Rigney & Co.,
“It is plain that in denying the right of property in a trade-mark it was intended only to deny such property right except as appurtenant to an established business or trade in connection with which the mark is used. * * * In short, the trade-mark is treated as merely a protection for the good will, and not the subject of property except in connection with an existing business.”
The trade-mark of the complainant in this case was, and is, used in connection with its existing business. Its value may consist in the old idea of identifying the origin and ownership of the goods to which it is affixed, but more likely it consists in being known to the public as the name of clothing which, in stylo and quality, has met with favor. Thus the mark is the owner’s “symbol of bis good will,” a trade asset of very real value; it is his “commercial signature;” it “sells his goods.” Knowing this, traders frequently expend large sums in establishing a mark in the public mind — in this ease the complainant spent $3,000,000 in five years in advertising its marked products. Where the goods of a trader have become popular not only because of their intrinsic worth, but also by reason of the ingenious and persistent manner in which they have been advertised, the good will acquired in this way takes on still another aspect and is entitled to protection. Money expended in advertising is money invested in business and no one should be permitted to step in and appropriate the advantages of such an investment. Hilson Co. v. Foster (C. C.)
Moreover, when a trade-mark has gained a place in the public mind in association with a given product, Pflugh v. Eagle White Lead Co.,
Returning to the facts of the ease it appears that the complainant and its predecessors had been manufacturing and selling men’s clothing for more than 50 years in what it terms “a custom tailoring business on a wholesale scale,” which it explains to be a business of making clothes on the orders of retail dealers as to styles and materials. When so made, each suit bears a label with the words “Tailored at Fashion Park,” followed by .the name of the dealer, as Jacob Reed & Sons, Philadelphia. Clothes sold to small dealers bear labels with the words “Fashion Park.”
It is common knowledge that men’s elothing and men’s hats and caps are worn together. According to the evidence in this ease, they are ordinarily sold together. They flow through the same channels of trade. Dealers in this country who sell men’s suits and overcoats almost universally sell men’s hats and caps. And they, are advertised together. Moreover, caps are not infrequently made, by tailoring establishments to match suits and they are frequently made by hatters out of remnants from tailoring establishments. We think these articles of wearing apparel, falling within the same classification officially made by the Patent Office for the registration of trade-marks, though different in species, are so related as to constitute “merchandise of the same descriptive properties,” Collins Co. v. Oliver Ames Co. (C. C.)
The issue of unfair competition is, in our judgment, fraught with less difficulty than that of trade-mark infringement. . Sueh an issue frequently arises where one who has no valid trade-mark nevertheless complains of another who attempts to pass off his own goods as the goods of his rival. Fraud is the basis of his complaint. When fraud is found, a court will frame its action to promote honest and fair dealing, thereby to protect the honest trader, punish the dishonest trader, and protect the public from deception. Goldwyn Pictures Corporation v. Goldwyn (C. C. A.)
We are constrained to reverse the decree of the District Court and direct that tho bill be reinstated and the case proceed to final decree in harmony with this opinion. We do not find, however, any satisfactory basK for an accounting against tho respondent retailer for damages a.nd profits. The manufacturing wholesalers, the real parties in interest, are not parties to the suit, and, of course, a decree for an accounting would not run against them. The ease is peculiarly one where such damage as has occurred is incapable of computation. We see no reasonable probability that a.ny substantial, damages could be proved and reduced to dollars with that degree of accuracy which is essential. Nor does the decision on tho issue of trade-mark infringement make it necessary to hold that the complainant is entitled to profits. Those cases in which the complainant has been awarded all the profits which the respondent received from the salo of the article wrongfully trade-marked have been cases in which, by the theory of the law, tho complainant had lost sales. There is no evidence of lost sales in this ease. The complainant’s relief, therefore, will be confined to an injunction and recovery of taxable costs in both courts. Vogue Co. v. Thompson-Hudson Co. (C. C. A.)
Notes
Preceded and followed in varying measure by Van Zile v. Norub Mfg. Co. (D. C.)
