The question in this case is whether the words “gold medal,” used on the wrapper of an article of saleratus manufactured by the plaintiff, constitutes a trade mark, to which he has an exclusive right of use as against the defendants. The words in question were used upon a wrapper or label placed upon the packages of saleratus, in two forms: “ Herrick Allen’s Gold Medal Saleratus,” and “ J. Monroe Taylor’s Gold Medal Saleratus.” The wrapper contained no representation of a medal of any sort. The wrappers used by the defendants did contain, besides the words “ Gillies’ Gold Medal Saleratus,” an engraved representation of a medal. The learned judge before whom the case was tried without a jury has found that the defendants’ labels were not a fae simile, nor an imitation, colorable or otherwise, of the plaintiff’s labels; that they were not designed or calculated to deceive purchasers, nor to lead them to believe that they were buying the plaintiff’s saleratus, when they were, in truth, buying the defendants’.
He also found that the universally accepted and ordinary meaning of the term “ gold medal ” is to indicate a degree of merit or quality, and that “ no new attribute or office is impressed on said term ” by the use of it on plaintiff’s labels; that such term does not, when used in connection with articles of merchandise, indicate either ownership or origin, and that the plaintiff has no right or property in the use of those words, so as to entitle him to the exclusive use of them on labels for saleratus manufactured by him, as a trade mark.
Whether the decision of the judge as to the meaning of the term gold medal in this connection is or is not to be deemed to be made on a question of fact, we deem it to be clearly correct. The phrase imports an affirmation, as of matter of fact, that plaintiff’s saleratus had been awarded a gold medal, in some competitive exhibition, for its excellence. The use and meaning of such distinctions has become so common that the court may, 'from- its own knowledge, supply any thing which might be indefinite in the proof or the finding. Gold medal is equivalent to
5The cases sustain the views stated. In Batty v. Hill (Am. Trade Mark Cases, 669; 8 Law Times [H. S.], 791), an exclusive right in the words “ Prize Medal, 1862,” as a mark upon pickles, was denied. It was thought impossible that the words in question could indicate a particular manufacturer. A trade mark to be valid as such, must be a distinguishing mark of the goods to which it is attached-; distinguishing them as to origin and not as to kind or quality. (Am. Trade Mark Cas., 736.) And on the same principle the attempt to secure as a trade mark the phrase “ gold medal clothing,” under the statute of the United States on that subject, was rejected by the patent office. (Browne on Trade Marks, 89, § 133.) Such a mark, if allowed and protected, would secure to the first gold medalist, the right thus to distinguish his wares to the exclusion of all future successful competitors. It falls within the scope of the reasoning of Judge Duer in respect to the use, as a trade mark, of the appropriate name of a manufactured, article. He says, a right to such a use could only exist in those who have an exclusive right to produce the article itself. (Fetridge v. Wells, 4 Abb. Pr., 144, as cited in Phalon v. Wright, 5 Phila., 464; Am. Trade Mark Cas., 309.) So in this case, to sustain an exclusive right to the statement as of fact and by way of trade mark, that the plaintiff’s saleratus is gold medal
The case, in our'opinion, falls within the principle stated in Stokes v. Landgraff, “ in respect to words, marks or devices which do not denote the goods or property, or particular place of business of a person, but only the nature, kind or quality of the articles in which he deals, a different rule prevails ; no property in such words, marks or devices, can be acquired. (17 Barb., 608.) And to the same effect, in Caswell v. Davis (MS. Ct. of App., 1874),
It can scarcely need to be added that if the law does not allow one to whom a gold medal has been awarded for the excellence of his product, to use that phrase as a trade mark, it much more will not protect the exclusive use of the phrase where the foundation of fact is wanting. To allow an exclusive right to its use in such a case, would be equivalent to protecting that which, if it operate at all, savors of imposition upon the public and partakes of the character of a false representation. (Flavell v. Harrison, 19 Eng. Law and Eq., 15; Perry v. Truefitt, 6 Beav., 66.)
The findings distinctly negative any fraudulent use in the way of imitation or otherwise, of labels like those of the plaintiff, and of course the effect of any such element is excluded from consideration. The case stands upon the want of legal right in the plaintiff to the exclusive use of the phrase “ gold medal ” as a trade mark of his saleratus.
All concur, Allen, J., in result; Andrews, J., not sitting. Judgment affirmed.
58 N. Y., 223.
