188 F. 63 | 2d Cir. | 1911
No question of unfair trading or of infringement of a common-law trade-mark is presented by this appeal;' The parties are all residents of the state of New York, and the federal courts have no jurisdiction of any such controversy.
On April 8, 1907, complainants, alleged tó be the successors of H. Kottler & Co., filed a statement and declaration under the provisions of the trade-mark act of February 20, 1905 (33 Stat. 724, c. 592 [U. S. Comp. St. Supp. 1909, p. 1275]), and certificate of registration was duly issued under date of October 22, 1907. By the terms of the statute (section T6) such certificate is made prima facie proof of ownership of the trade-mark; but such prima facie proof may be overcome, if it be made to appear that the applicant was not entitled to the particular trade-mark which he sought to appropriate. The testimony shows an extensive use of the word “Princess” in connection with shirt waists, going back for several years — indeed, prior to the date named in the application (January 1, 1901), and prior to the earliest date to which complainants have been able to show their own use of it, by persuasive testimony. Many different persons used it, in many different places. It is not necessary to find that any one of these has used the word as a trade-mark so long and so continuously that he, rather than complainants, is entitled to exclusive, ownership. It is quite sufficient to dispose of this appeal to find, as we do and as the Circuit Court found, that in and prior to 1901 the word “Princess” was being used by so many different persons in connection with the sale of shirt waists and similar garments, and had been so used for so long a time, that complainants could not, by adopting it as a mark for their own goods, acquire any exclusive right to its use as such mark.
The decree is affirmed, with costs.