16 Mo. App. 322 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff is a dentist, practicing his profession in the city of St. Louis. His petition states that, for about twelve years past, he has kept over the entrance to his place of business a sign bearing the words “New York Dental Rooms,” and adds other particulars of fact which are suf
As to the supposed lack of resemblance between the names or titles used by the parties, respectively, there is nothing material to be considered. The resemblance is closer than what has appeared in many cases where the phrases employed were held to involve unlawful infringements. Edelston v. Edelston, 1 De G. J. & S. 185; Dixon v. Crucible Co. v. Guggenheim, 2 Brews. 321; Potter v. McPherson, 21 Hun., 559; Electro S. Co. v. Levy, 59 How. Pr. 469 ; Roberts v. Sheldon, 8 Biss. (U. S. C. C.) 398.
The grounds of objection chiefly relied on seem to be, that the words “ New York,” being a mere geographical designation, and the word “ Dental ” only a generic term of description applying to a business or occupation, there •can be no proprietary right in either, and no infringement in any use of them by a person other than the plaiutiff.
To say that a geographical name can never be used in proprietary right as a trade-mark, states the rule far too broadly. When such a name is employed in connection with the place of manufacture or production, no person manufacturing or producing at that place can monopolize it against other persons manufacturing or producing at the same place. Thus, in Brooklyn W. L. Co . v. Masury, (25 Barb. 416), the plaintiff had for many'years marked its merchandise with its corporate name, when the defendant, who also manufactured in Brooklyn, adopted the mark “ Brooklyn White Lead & Zinc Company.” The defendant was restrained from using the word “Company,” since he had no company, and his use of the word was a fraud on the rights of the plaintiff. But it was held that either party had a right to use the words “ Brooklyn White Lead,” because the manufactures of each originated in Brooklyn. But in Newman v. Alvord (49 Barb. 588), the controversy was about the word “ Akron,” which was the name of the village in New York, where the plaintiffs manufactured a cement, or water lime, under the name of “ Newman’s Ak
Not so, however, with the word “ dental.” That is a generic term, descriptive of a kind of business, and is properly open to all who may choose to engage in such a pursuit. As well might one claim an exclusive property in the term “dry goods,” or “groceries,” or “ tailor’s shop.” The defendant had a clear right to the use of any apt generic expression which would indicate the nature of his occupation, while he might not encroach upon another’s selection of a mere arbitrary symbol having no such descriptive office, but being employed to distinguish an individual among a community of operators in the same line. Chovnski v. Cohen, 39 Cal. 501. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.