11 N.Y.S. 663 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
The parties to this action are manufacturers and dealers in matches. They have been put up and sold in boxes accompanied with labels, designated to be “trade-marks.” The label of the plaintiff is alleged to have been unlawfully imitated by that of the defendants, which is stated to have been devised and used to divert and obtain their trade, and to injure it in its,
To maintain this, or"any other action, for the use of the trade-mark of another, the law does not exact a perfect or complete simulation oir resemblance. But what has been made necessary is that there shall be such an imitation of the plaintiff’s trade-mark, by the defendants, as is calculated to, and probably will, deceive purchasers into the belief that, in buying the defendants’ articles, they are really obtaining those manufactured, or dealt in, by the plaintiff, and, in that manner, induce them to purchase the defendants’ productions, for those of the plaintiff. The law to that extent intends to afford the plaintiff protection against the artful and ingenious wrongs of rival dealers. This was so clearly stated in Colman v. Crump, 70 N. Y. 573, as to justify a repetition of what was there said by Judge Allen, for it is specially applicable to and states the principle governing this case. It was then •said that “a party may have a property in—that is, an exclusive right to use—
When the evidence is such as to present the question whether the resemblance of the one symbol, or trade-mark, to the other is such as will probably deceive purchasers, then it is not necessary that further proof should be added that purchasers have in fact been deceived, by the defendants’ simulation. The facts required to maintain an action to enjoin the infringement of a trademark, were fully examined and discussed in Manufacturing Co. v. Trainer, 101 U. S. 51, and among the points accepted by the court, is the conclusion that it “is not necessary to show that any one has in fact been deceived, if the imitation is such as to prove that it is calculated to deceive ordinary purchasers using ordinary caution.” Id. 63. But the defendants had precluded themselves from resting upon the objection that proof had not been given that persons had been deceived into the belief that their label was that of the plaintiff, for its agent was asked, “After that "match was placed upon the market by the defendants, what effect, if any, did it have upon your trade of the Vulcan match?” and, “Did the placing upon the market of the Vulture match have any effect upon the sales of the Vulcan match through you?” These questions were not correct in point of form, but that deficiency in them could well have been removed, if they had been objected to on that ground. But they were not. The objections were made in the most general form. They were each only “objected to by defendants’ counsel.” And this objection was sustained, and the evidence excluded, and the plaintiff excepted. These exceptions were well taken, for the plaintiff was at liberty to prove, if that could be done, that its sales had been reduced by placing the defendants’ matches, in this manner, upon the market. And these general objections did not warrant the exclusion of the evidence expected to be obtained by these questions, (Bergmann v. Jones, 94 N. Y. 51;) but as it had been so excluded, the defendants could not make the absence of this proof a ground for dismissing the complaint. A very decided effort has been made to sustain this dismissal, on the ground that the differences between the labels were such as to