80 F. 105 | 7th Cir. | 1897
(after stating the facts as above). We entertain no doubt that the term “No-To-Bac” is an arbitrary term which may be appropriated as a trade-mark and that it has been so appropriated by the appellant here. Nor do we doubt that the term “Baco-Curo” is also an arbitrary term, which may be, and has been, appropriated by the defendant. We do not think that these terms are idem sonans, or that the one infringes the other. The test is whether the supposed infringing article is so dressed that it is likely to deceive persons of ordinary intelligence, in the exercise of the slight care ordinarily bestowed, purchasing an article, to mistake one man’s good for the goods of another. It is elementary that one may not exclusively appropriate the size and shape of a package. The ordinary form of a tobacco box in common use in many portions of the country was appropriately adopted by complainant for a supposed remedy for the tobacco habit, but the complainant has no right to its exclusive use. The fact of such use by another in me manufacture and sale of a similar compound for the like purpose may be a circumstance which enters into the question of unfair trade, which we are not now considering. The labels here are prominently dissimilar in color, and are not likely to be mistaken by one who has been accustomed to the use of the remedy. The same is true with respect to the tablets or lozenges. They are in marked contrast in color, size, thickness, weight, odor, and lettering. Indeed, there is no evidence in this record, nor is it .seriously contended, that any one who had used the one compound had ever been misled, or is likely to be misled, to purchase the other. This is met on the part of the appellant by the suggestion that the article is a guarantied cure for a particular purpose, and, once employed, it will never be employed again, whether it cures or not; that its use as a remedy, if it be all that is claimed for it, does not conduce to repeated sales to the same person; and that from its nature the public loses the opportunity to familiarize itself with, the appearance of the package. This may be true, and yet the fact could not alter the law of trade-marks, in which light we are now considering the case. The distinctions here are so glaring that we are unable to say that a proposing purchaser exercising only the slight care which is required would be likely to select one article for the other. Nor does the evidence establish that a purchaser has been so mistaken.
In Pillsbury v. Mills Co., 24 U. S. App. 395, 12 C. C. A. 432, and 64 Fed. 841, we had occasion to consider at length the subject of unfair competition in trade, and to declare the principle upon which the doctrine rests. We there said that no man had a right to dress himself in the colors adopted by another for the purpose of palming off his goods as the goods of that other. It only remains to determine whether the evidence here brings this case within the principle declared.
Decree affirmed.