28 Mo. App. 408 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the court.
The petition states, substantially, that the plaintiff, a corporation, and the defendants, a partnership firm, are both engaged in the business, in St. Louis, of packing and dealing in fish, as wholesalers, and that they both deal and sell in the same markets ; that the plaintiff has for many years done a very large business, and, for some years past, has packed and vended a certain brand of mackerel, put up with care, to which the plaintiff appropriated the name of “Trask’s Selected Shore Mackerel” ; and plaintiff, thereupon, and thereafter, has continuously packed and sold the said brand uuder that name; that the words constituting said name do not indicate the quality of the goods, but are a true and proper trademark indicating the source and origin of said goods; that the plaintiff has duly registered, and caused to be recorded in the proper offices, its said trademark, both in the city of St. Louis, and in the patent-office at Washington City, D. C.; that the plaintiff’s said brand of mackerel, designated by the trademark aforesaid, has become extensively known to the trade as being of uniform and superior quality, and the plaintiff, at great expense of advertising, etc., has built up a large and lucrative trade in the said product; that the plaintiff has for a long time past continuously used
It is further alleged that the defendants, “well knowing the premises, but contriving how to injure the plaintiff, without the consent or allowance of the plaintiff, but in violation of its rights, have caused to-be prepared, packed, and vended, and does still prepare, pack, and vend, a certain mackerel of quality inferior to that of plaintiff, under the name of ‘ Selected Shore Mackerel,’ and have placed the same upon the-market with branding on their pails, barrels, and half-barrels, containing their mackerel, of such close similitude to those employed by the plaintiff, that the same-are not distinguishable by the public, and defendants have packed and are now packing the said mackerel in pails, barrels, and half-barrels, which are marked with said branding, prepared in close imitation of the branding of plaintiff, as heretofore described, with black lettering, and the words, ‘Selected Shore Mackerel,’ the year when packed, and the word, ‘guaranteed,’ in-capital letters, all in close resemblance and palpable imitation of plaintiff’s aforesaid brand and mark.
“Plaintiff further states that said words, marks, and design thus attached to the pails, barrels, and half-barrels of defendants, are each of them of such close-resemblance to those of plaintiffs, that they are calcu
The petition further alleges that the plaintiff has been damaged by the acts complained of in the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, and prays that the defendants, their agents, etc., “may be enjoined and restrained from packing or selling mackerel under the name of ‘Selected Shore Mackerel,’ as aforesaid, and from packing or selling mackerel marked or labeled in imitation of plaintiff’s trademark aforesaid, and that said defendants be required to account for all profits which they have made on their fraudulent piracy of plaintiff’s trademark, and all which plaintiff would have made its own, but for such inequitable and wanton piracy, and for damages, and for such other relief as shall seem meet and proper, and as to equity may appertain.”
The answer, after a general denial, avers that for twenty years a large quantity of mackerel has been caught from the sea along the coast of the New England states; that such mackerel have long been classified, according to the size and quality thereof, in four classes, to-wit: No. 1, No. 2, Selected Shore, and No. 3; that the class of mackerel called Selected Shore is in large demand by the trade, not only in and about St. Louis, but throughout the United States; that the words, '“Selected Shore,” have always been understood and
A good many witnesses were examined on both sides and the testimony tended generally to support the allegations of the pleadings on either side, respectively. The court entered a final decree perpetually enjoining and restraining the defendants, their agents, and servants, etc., “ from selling, or from offering for sale, or putting-on the market, directly or indirectly, any pails, half-barrels, or other trade packages (other than such of plaintiff’s own packages as may have been obtained directly or indirectly from plaintiff in the regular course of business), containing mackerel, and so branded or marked, by burning, or with stencil, or otherwise, as to resemble the brand hereinafter specifically described, now used by plaintiff in selling mackerel to the trade, namely, a brand composed of the words, Trask’s Selected Shore Mackerel,’ accompanied by the word, ‘Gruar
“And other packages than pails, with the name of such package (either barrel or half-barrel) therein, in the place of the word ‘pail.’ ” The decree further restrains the defendants from similarly using or employing “a circular brand or stencil” in form resembling the above described brand of plaintiff’s, and containing the words:
“Such as have heretofore been used by defendants in the sale of such mackerel; and that, as to the other matters of relief prayed in the petition herein and not granted by this decree, the said petition of plaintiff be dismissed; and that plaintiff recover of defendants its costs herein expended, and have execution therefor.”
It would appear, from the record and the argument before us, that the plaintiff’s attention has been chiefly given to its claim of an exclusive trademark in the words, “Selected Shore Mackerel.” But this claim cannot be sustained consistently with fundamental rules in the law of trademarks. A man cannot adopt any set of words that may happen to suit his fancy, without any reference to their purport or meaning, and then, by simply branding or otherwise placing them on every package of a commodity sold by him, acquire an exclusive right to their use as a trademark. No such right can be acquired in words which, by common understanding, are merely descriptive of the article, or of its kind, qualities, or characteristics, as these are generally known or talked about. Thus, if a grocer should brand or label the words, “Best Brown Sugar,” on every parcel of that article sold by him, would it ever be supposed that all other grocers should be thereby precluded from using
The witnesses examined on both sides were generally men of large practical experience in the fish trade, here and elsewhere. They all testified that among dealers the term, “ Shore Mackerel,” was applied to the fish caught along the coast of the New England states, while those taken from the Bay of St. Lawrence, and other bays in that region, were known as “ Bay Mackerel.” This fact, on the principles just stated, settles the inadmissibility of an exclusive trade-mark right in the words, “ Shore Mackerel.” The word, “Selected,” carries with it an unmistakable meaning, indicating that the articles to which it is applied have been picked out from a mass or larger number of similar articles, on account of qualities embodying superiority, in one form or another, over those that are permitted to remain. Thus, all the words in the phrase, “Selected Shore Mackerel,” are purely descriptive, and there can be no rational inhibition against their use by any one who may have occasion to describe for any purpose the articles indicated by them. An attempt was made to evade the effect of these distinctions by showing that where the words, “Shore Mackerel,” were used among eastern dealers, they were always accompanied by other expressions, such as “No. 1,” “No. 2,” “No. 3,” etc.,
The decree of the circuit court, it will be observed, does not allow the sufficiency, in themselves, of the words, “ Selected Shore Mackerel,” as a trademark entitled to protection. The restraining order forbids the use of a brand or stencil mark which shall “resemble the brand hereinafter specifically described,” and the use of certain words and figures, “the whole arranged in circular form, of about six and a half inches in diameter,” etc. The decree copies in fac simile (except as to extent of surface occupied) three separate brands, of which the first is that adopted and used by the plaintiff, and the two others are those of the defendants, before that time appearing on their packages. The details of form, style, and shape, are given in each instance, and the defendants are directed not to imitate them in the brands or marks on any packages which they may thereafter offer for sale. This action of the court was correct throughout. It is not essential to the protection [of a trader against a rival’s fraudulent interference with his business, that he shall have a trademark to be pirated. “The right to a technical
With the concurrence of all the judges, the judgment is affirmed.