Strause v. Weil

191 F. 527 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1911

LACOMBE, Circuit Judge.

In denying this motion when firs! made, I was under the impression that, subsequent to the decision of appeal from preliminary injunction in Rushmore v. Manhattan Screw Works, 163 Fed. 939, 90 C. C. A. 299, 19 L. R. A. (N. S.) 269, the same case had been brought up on review from final hearing and injunction refused. It seems that in this I was in error, and that this court is not constrained by ruling’s of the Court of Appeals from granting an injunction against copying the details of structure of a noilpatented article, if the court is satisfied that the imitation has gone beyond such resemblance as would be brought about by producing an article fitted to perform the functions of the one copied. It seems to me that in the case at bar there has been such unnecessary imitation, in general get-up, in style of lettering, in location and size of holes, etc., and I am not satisfied that the mere use of defendants’ designation in the lettering sufficiently differentiates the two articles.

Injunction will be granted against the sale of irons which, like those already sold, are, except for the name, identical reproductions of complainant’s irons. The injunction, however, will be suspended for 30 days from entry of the order, and if by that time defendant shall have appealed, and perfected his record of appeal, so that the cause may be moved on the calendar of the Court of Appeals and preference claimed, this order will operate further to stay operation of the injunction until decision of that tribunal.

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