177 Mass. 226 | Mass. | 1900
This case comes before us on the plaintiffs’ appeal from a decree sustaining the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiffs’ bill. The only question is whether, if the plaintiffs prove all their averments, the court can give them relief in equity.
They say that for many years they have been engaged in the business of selling ready made clothing, men’s furnishing goods, shoes, mackintoshes, and rubber goods, under the name and style of the u Manufacturers’ Outlet Company,” and have widely advertised this business in the State of Rhode Island and especially in the southeastern part of Massachusetts, and by such advertising and by their methods of carrying on business have established a large and well known trade and earned a wide reputation. They also say that they have caused this name to be copyrighted under the laws of the United States as a trademark, to be used on goods to be sold by them. They allege that the defendant, fraudulently seeking to deceive and mislead the public to his own advantage, has established in Taunton, in a neighborhood from which a considerable part of the plaintiff’s trade is drawn, a shop for the sale of goods similar to those sold by the plaintiffs, and has advertised his business under the name “ Taunton Outlet Company,” and is thereby deceiving the public and diverting trade from the plaintiffs. If all that is stated in the bill is true, the defendant is wilfully and wrongfully trying to avail himself of that which does not belong to him, but which belongs to the plaintiffs and is valuable. In establishing a new business the defendant had no occasion to adopt a name which would be likely to mislead the public and induce them to believe that the business which he was establishing was conducted by the plaintiffs. It was easy to choose a satisfactory name unlike the plaintiffs’, and to conduct the business in such a way as to leave the plaintiffs the whole benefit of such reputation as they had gained in the- community. Although the resemblance between the names under which the respective parties do business is not such as to make it certain without evidence that the public is misled in regard to the identity of either of the parties, it is such that the facts averred seem not
Decree reversed ; demurrer overruled.