Opinion
Defendants Santa Ana Community Hospital Association, a corporation, and Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital, a corporation, have appealed from a judgment enjoining them from using the name “Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital” for their hospital in the City of Santa Ana. The essential basis of the judgment is the finding that that name is confusingly similar to “Tustin Community Hospital,” the name of plaintiff’s nearby hospital which is located in the adjacent City of Tustin. Plaintiff has cross-appealed from that portion of the judgment which refuses to enjoin defendants from using any other confusingly similar name.
From 1902 until 1941, defendants’ predecessors operated hospitals in the City of Santa Ana, using the names Santa Ana Hospital, Santa Ana Valley Hospital and Santa Ana Community Hospital. Defendant Santa Ana Community Hospital Association was incorporated in 1941, and from that year until April 19, 1975, it operated a general, acute care hospital at 600 East Washington Avenue in the City of Santa Ana, using the name Santa Ana Community Hospital. Defendant Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital was incorporated March 15, 1972, and on April 19, 1975, it commenced operating a general, acute care hospital at 1001 North Tustin Avenue in the City of Santa Ana, using the name Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital. On April 19, 1975, the officers and directors of the two defendant corporations were the same, and the patients and employees of Santa Ana Community Hospital Association at the Washington Avenue hospital were transferred to the new hospital on Tustin Avenue, where they became the patients and employees of Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital. Most of the supplies and equipment at the older hospital were also transferred.
In the complaint, filed June 11, 1974, plaintiff alleged that the defendants were then constructing the new hospital on Tustin Avenue, about one and one-half miles from plaintiff’s hospital; that upon completion of construction, defendants planned to conduct business there under the name Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital; that defendants were already engaged in advertising and publicity involving the new name; and that use of the new name would cause public confusion, with resultant irreparable injury to plaintiff. In their answer, defendants denied that the services they provided were similar to plaintiff’s; admitted that they planned to complete construction of the new hospital and then operate it under the name Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital; and denied that any public confusion would result from the use of that name. At the commencement of the trial, defendants were permitted to file an amendment to their answer setting up special defenses which alleged that plaintiff had failed to act with due diligence, that plaintiff was guilty of laches and that plaintiff failed to exhaust administrative remedies. Plaintiff’s motion prior to trial to file a supplemental complaint seeking damages was granted, but later the request was withdrawn; the only relief ultimately requested, therefore, was an injunction.
A preliminary injunction was denied June 26, 1975.
Plaintiff’s request for a jury trial was denied, and the case was tried without a jury in November and December of 1976.
At the conclusion of the trial, the court found that the name of defendants’ new hospital is confusingly similar to the name of plaintiff’s hospital, that this confusion persists, and that it will not abate with passage of time. The court concluded that irreparable damage to plaintiff and to the public has resulted, and that defendants’ use of the trade name Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital constitutes unfair competition with plaintiff. In connection with the special defenses of the amendment to the answer, the court concluded that laches is not a proper defense to this action and ordered all evidence on that topic stricken; the court further concluded that plaintiff had lacked any effective administrative remedy.
Findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment were filed March 3, 1977.
In a contempt proceeding initiated by plaintiff, following defendants’ continued use of the name Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital, the trial court ruled on April 14, 1977, that the judgment was stayed pending appeal. Plaintiff’s petition for writ of review to reverse that determination was denied by this court on September 14, 1977. (Tustin Community Hospital, Inc. v. Superior Court, No. 4 Civ. 19324.)
In requesting reversal, defendants contend: (1) that plaintiff’s action is barred by laches; (2) that no “secondary meaning” of plaintiff’s name was established; (3) that the cause of the claimed confusion was not established; and (4) that the appropriate solution is a public educational program rather than a change of defendants’ name.
I
We agree with defendants that laches can be a defense to an injunction case based on unfair competition 1 and that the trial court should not have stricken the evidence on that subject. For this reason, the judgment must be reversed.
Lawyers and judges today so generally regard laches as including both tardiness and a resulting prejudice that it is well to remember that the word comes from the Latin “laxus” meaning loose, and that it is related to the word slack. Intrinsically, therefore, laches suggests no more than a
The word estoppel, which is also important in reviewing the conflicting authorities on the present question, is likewise ambiguous. All five of the general dictionaries just referred to again agree that the word is obsolete, or at least rare, in ordinary speech, and that it does have a current meaning in law. Four of them further agree that the essence of the legal use of the word is to deny to a party the right to take a position inconsistent with his former representations. The Oxford English Dictionary, on the other hand, suggests a more fundamental meaning of estoppel, that is, stopping, barring, hindering or precluding. This dictionary then adds: “Chiefly ... to be precluded by one’s own previous act or declaration from doing or alleging something.” (Italics added.) We know from such legal concepts as estoppel by judgment and collateral estoppel that the Oxford definition is the more accurate. Perhaps the most helpful treatment of all is in Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, where three different types of estoppel are discussed at some length: estoppel by deed, estoppel by record and estoppel in pais. Significantly, the last classification in Bouvier includes reference to a number of cases involving estoppel by silence—cases in which a party’s failure to speak or to take action is held to constitute a bar.
The point of all of this is that a careful analysis of the more troublesome cases on the subject reveals that many of those which hold that laches is not a bar to an injunction are referring only to “mere” laches, to laches “without more,” that is, to mere laxness or delay or passage of time, without considering whether there has been any resulting inequitable prejudice to the other side. In this same sense, a statute of limitations is a bar or a defense by reason of the mere passage of time. Statements to the effect that mere delay without more does not constitute a bar to an injunction are easily reconciled with the general rule that laches which does result in inequitable prejudice to another party is a bar to such relief. A real collision of authority occurs only in those infringement decisions which hold that a type or degree of laches which has inequitably prejudiced the other side is nevertheless not a bar to an injunction. Our research indicates that such decisions are rare.
A frequently cited decision of the United States Supreme Court, and one which is heavily relied on by plaintiff here, is
McLean
v.
Fleming,
Even if this analysis of
McLean
v.
Fleming
is correct, however, it merely moves the subject forward 10 years to
Menendez
v.
Holt,
It is easy to understand why the Menendez opinion emphasizes the differences between laches as a defense to a prayer for damages and laches as a defense to a prayer for an injunction. Proving damages in infringement cases is notoriously difficult, and delay in bringing the question to court can increase those difficulties substantially. The Restatement of Torts has commented upon the frequent impossibility of satisfactorily measuring the plaintiff’s harm or the defendant’s profits in such a case, or of tracing the causal connection between them and the defendant’s conduct; the conclusion reached is that it may be unjust or inexpedient to compel the defendant to pay damages or to account for his profits, even though an injunction is allowed. (3 Rest., Torts, pp. 540-541, Introductory Note to ch. 35; see Annot. 14 A.L.R.Fed. 342.)
In addition to these cases exemplifying the “rare” exception mentioned in the
Menendez
opinion, there have been cases recognizing other exceptions and qualifications. One of the most frequently noted limitations has been the rule that laches may be a defense against an injunction after all if the defendant’s infringement has been innocent.
(Saxlehner
v.
Eisner & Mendelson, Co., 119 U.S.
19, 38-39 [
Another limitation has related to the degree of competition involved; injunctions have been denied for laches where the defendant’s product does not directly compete with the plaintiff’s. (See
Dwinell Wright Co.
v.
Whitehouse Milk Co., supra,
Some cases have recognized territorial limitations; a defendant may be I enjoined as to one location even though not as to another.
(Thomas J.
I
Carroll & Son Co.
v.
M’lvaine & Baldwin
(2d Cir.)
Even the circumstance that only a preliminary injunction is at issue has [influenced a decision in favor of permitting the laches defense.
(Le Cordon Bleu
v.
BPC Publishing Limited
(S.D.N.Y.)
One of the most difficult exceptions to pin down is laches “amounting to” or “approaching” acquiescence or consent. Mere delay on the part of the plaintiff does not necessarily indicate an actual willingness that the ¡defendant may continue his invasion of the plaintiff’s rights, but some of the cases have viewed the plaintiff’s long-continued silence or inaction as amounting to acquiescence and on that theory have sanctioned laches as a bar to an injunction. (See
Ambrosia Chocolate Co.
v.
Ambrosia Cake Bakery
(4th Cir.)
Finally, in at least one case the defense of laches was recognized, and an injunction refused, conditionally; the injunction was denied provided the defendant used the word “artificial” in advertising its product..
(City of Carlsbad v. Schultz
(C.C.S.D.N.Y.)
Despite all these qualifications and exceptions, however, the
McLean
and
Menendez
cases have been viewed in some decisions as establishing a general rule against the defense of laches in infringement cases involving injunctive relief. We note that in some of these decisions the language has been no more than dictum, either because injunctive relief was not involved
(Gillons
v.
Shell Co. of California
(9th Cir.)
In the face of this divergence of authority, plaintiff has placed special reliance upon two decisions rendered by federal courts in California.
In the first of these,
Brooks Bros.
v.
Brooks Clothing of California
(S.D. Cal.)
The other federal case emphasized by plaintiff,
Stork Restaurant
v.
Sahati
(9th Cir.)
The
Stork Restaurant
case purports to find and follow a “California view” on the subject (
The
Stork Restaurant
opinion also cites
Schmidt
v.
Brieg, supra,
Our own research has failed to reveal a California rule. In
Tomsky
v.
Clark, supra,
As it happens, we have found one direct holding on this issue by a California court, and it appears to be contrary to plaintiff’s version of the
McLean-Menendez
rule. In
Jewish Publications, Inc.
v.
Gordon,
We have concluded that in the
McLean
and
Menendez
decisions the United States Supreme Court did not intend to establish a rule for injunctive relief in infringement cases which is contrary to the equity principles traditionally governing the laches defense. It appears rather that the court sought to articulate the result of the application of those principles to the special facts there under consideration.
4
The many exceptions, qualifications and subtleties of interpretation which have appeared in later cases convince us that, with changes in the facts, the balance of equities moves toward one party or the other, and there are inevitable changes in the results. Unfortunately, a number of courts and legal writers have stated that an injunction in infringement cases will not “ordinarily” be denied on account of laches, and in a few decisions these loose generalizations have led to an erroneous refusal to consider the laches defense at all, even where the plaintiff’s delay has resulted in prejudice to the defendant. We are satisfied that the better view is that in all such cases the court should weigh the competing equities which bear on the issue of delay and should then grant or deny injunctive relief depending on the overall balance of those equities.
(Jewish Publications, Inc.
v.
Gordon, supra,
“§ 751. Unreasonable Delay.
“One who knows or should know of the conduct of another which subjects the other to liability under the rules stated in §§ 711-743, and thereafter unreasonably delays the bringing of an action is barred, wholly or partially, from relief to which he would otherwise be entitled.”
It will be noted that the Restatement rule on the subject is not based on delay alone, but rather on unreasonable delay. Moreover, comment d. to this section (“Extent of disability”) observes that the criterion is not simply the amount of time that has elapsed but whether, in the situation which has resulted as a consequence of the unreasonable delay “it would be inequitable to grant the relief sought. The delay may, in some cases, result in such an accommodation of public understanding and such an identification of the defendant’s product and trade-mark, that it would be wholly inequitable to interfere at all with the defendant’s use of his mark.” (Rest., Torts, § 751, p. 667.)
A subsidiary question relates to delay during the litigation, as claimed by defendants. We agree with them that the authorities cited by plaintiff
(McCord Co.
v.
Plotnick,
Since the trial court ordered the laches evidence stricken, the judgment must be reversed. Defendants conceded at the argument, however, that all evidence on the subject had been introduced before that order was made, and it will therefore not be necessary to have a new trial. In considering that evidence, for the purpose of determining whether plaintiff has been guilty of inappropriate delay and, if so, whether it has so prejudiced defendants as to make it inequitable to grant injunctive relief, the trial court must weigh a number of factors. These will include the length of any such delay, excuses for delay, defendant’s knowledge, in advance, that plaintiff was using its trade name, any actual fraud in defendants’ conduct, plaintiff’s acquiescence or consent, or the appearance thereof, the extent of competition between plaintiff and defendants, any prejudice to, or reliance by, defendants, possible changes in conditions during delay, the effect of delay upon the availability of evidence, alternative solutions, the effect of a granting of injunctive relief upon defendants, the effect of a denial upon plaintiff, and the impact of the parties’ conduct, and of the ultimate judgment to be rendered, upon the public interest. (See McCarthy, Trademarks and Unfair Competition, pp. 386-388; 27 Am.Jur.2d, Equity, § 162, p. 701; 30 Cal.Jur.3d, Equity, §§ 41-48, pp. 485-501; cf. Annot. 14 A.L.R.Fed. 342, 355-389.)
The effect upon the public may be an especially important consideration. In the ordinary infringement case, the public interest is typically affected where, in spite of the plaintiff’s delay, an injunction is nevertheless appropriate because the public would otherwise purchase the defendant’s product believing it is the product of the plaintiff.
6
The court of customs and patent appeals has observed that protection of the public from confusion can be “the dominant consideration.”
(Swank, Inc.
v.
Ravel Perfume Corp.
(C.C.P.A.)
II
Defendants’ argument that there is no evidence that a secondary meaning has attached to plaintiff’s name is based principally on the claim that no “fanciful” meaning of the name was shown, as required by certain cases involving unfair competition in the use of geographical names. It is true that the word fanciful is used in
Beverly Hills Hotel
v.
Hilton Hotels,
Defendants also contend that the evidence does not show that this secondary meaning attached before defendants began use of their new name. Taken as a whole, we believe that the extensive evidence on the confusion of names sufficiently establishes a chronology in which plaintiff was the first to become associated in the public mind with the name Tustin Community Hospital, and that this was at a time when defendants were identified in the public mind with their former hospital facilities under the name Santa Ana Community Hospital.
Contrary to the contention of defendants, finding 9 adequately covers the subject of secondary meaning. It reads: “During the period of its operation, Tustin Community Hospital has become known, respected
III
Defendants contend that neither the evidence nor the findings support a conclusion that the similarity of names is the cause of the confusion between the two hospitals.
So far as the evidence is concerned, we have reviewed the testimony presented in plaintiff’s brief as well as other portions of the record and we are satisfied that there is substantial evidence concerning the cause of the confusion.
Regarding the findings, defendants rely on the wording of finding 10 that witnesses “attributed” their error in identification to the confusion between the two names. Apparently defendants are suggesting that, for a correct finding, the wording should have been that the court itself attributed the error to that confusion in the names. The language of the finding cannot be so narrowly read; we are satisfied that the court meant that it had accepted this testimony concerning causation. In addition, finding 13 states that this confusion will continue “so long as the defendants designate their hospital by the name Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital”; the only possible meaning of this language is that said name designation is the cause of the confusion.
As plaintiff suggests, this is a case like
Academy of Motion Picture, etc.
v.
Benson, supra,
IV
Defendants’ final argument is that there is no evidence that a name change would cure the problem. Plaintiff, however, has pointed to
Defendants’ reliance upon
North Country Community Hospital
v.
North Shore Hosp.,
V
On its cross-appeal, plaintiff urges that the injunction should not only prohibit use of the name Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital but also use of any other confusingly similar name. As earlier noted, plaintiff did not pray for this additional relief in its complaint, but it did request it in the proposed judgment which it submitted to the trial court.
The only case cited in support of the cross-appeal is
People
ex rel.
Mosk
v.
National Research Co. of Cal., supra,
Moreover, plaintiff has failed to show any real advantage to be gained from the additional prohibition. The law of unfair competition admonishes defendants not to adopt another confusingly similar name, and if they should nevertheless do so, plaintiff could file another action. It is not clear that proving a violation of the injunctive provision now sought would be any easier.
The judgment is reversed, with directions to the trial court to vacate its order striking the evidence relating to laches, to make findings of fact and conclusions of law on that issue, and to make such modification of the judgment, if any, as is indicated by those findings and conclusions. Otherwise it is affirmed.
Tamura, Acting P. J., and Kaufman, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 27, 1979, and the petition of the defendants and appellants for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied April 26, 1979.
Notes
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
There is no reason in this case to go beyond the common view of unfair competition as an infringement of another’s trade name, although, in a broader sense, the words unfair competition might well be used to include a number of other unlawful business practices. (See Chaffee, Unfair Competition, 53 Harv.L.Rev. 1289, 1296; 1 Callman, The Law of Unfair Competition, Trademarks and Monopolies (3d ed. 1967) § 4.1, pp. 108-128.) Nor does it appear that it is necessary in the present discussion to distinguish between trademark infringement cases and unfair competition cases. (Cf. Chaffee, op.cit., 1296-1298; fns. 4 and 5, post', see 87 C.J.S., Trade-marks, Trade-names, and Unfair Competition, § 19, pp. 254-256.)
See Calimafde, Trademarks and Unfair Competition (1970) sections 15.01-15.04, pages 678-692, especially footnote 14; Nims, Unfair Competition and Trademarks (1947) section 409, page 1278; Vandenburgh, Trademark Law and Procedure (2d ed. 1968) § 11.40(11), pages 495-497, especially footnote 52.
It was assumed, without deciding, that the rules relating to the use of trademarks and trade names were applicable. (
An explanation for the language of the
McLean
and
Menendez
opinions was offered by Judge Learned Hand in
Emerson Electric Mfg. Co.
v.
Emerson Radio & Phonograph Corp., supra,
Earlier (fn. 1,
ante),
we observed that there is no need in this opinion to pursue the difference between trademarks and unfair competition. In one respect, however, the effect
Of course, in a given case, the public may come to identify a name as describing the product of the defendant rather than the product of the plaintiff. (See, for example,
Old Lexington Club D. Co.
v.
Kentucky D. Co., supra,
