138 N.Y.S. 265 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
This is a suit in equity to enjoin the use of a trade mark or trade name and trade label alleged to belong to the plaintiff, and to enjoin unfair competition. The plaintiff and defendant are domestic corporations. On the 1st day of January, 1906, plaintiff entered into an agreement in writing with the E. J. Winslow Company, an Illinois corporation, which had an .established business in Chicago and elsewhere, described in the contract as “ consisting of waterproofing and damp-proofing of concrete or masonry walls, foundations, basements, tunnels,
This agreement was modified by another agreement in writing on the 11th day of February, 1907, by eliminating the provision authorizing the licensee to terminate the agreement on six months’ notice, after the expiration of the first year, and by providing that the licensor should furnish at cost price “ dry hydrolithic powder,” and permit the licensee to use the same in the manufacture of hydrolithic coating with' the privilege of purchasing the other materials elsewhere, and by further providing that the licensee should not have the right to advertise and represent itself as the manufacturer of hydrolithic coating, or hydrolithic cement, or that it has or operates a factory therefor,- or that it has hydrolithic coating or cement for sale, and by prohibiting the licensee from selling or parting with hydrolithic powder, otherwise than as united and mixed with other materials in accordance with the formula to he furnished by the licensor, and by providing that the licensee should endeavor to prevent its agents or others from discovering a knowledge of the chemical composition of the hydrolithic powder, and that the licensee should use only the trade mark of the licensor on the packages and sacks employed in the transportation of any hydrolithic products.
The parties entered upon the performance of the agreement licensing the plaintiff and of the agreement modifying the same, and continued to perform them in all respects, excepting as will be presently pointed out, until' the. 16th of April, 1908, when a petition in bankruptcy was filed against the Winslow Company, and a receiver in bankruptcy was appointed for it. It was thereafter, and on the twenty-seventh day of the same month, duly adjudged a bankrupt, and the receiver was appointed trustee. About three months prior to said 16th day of April, 1908, the plaintiff, in violation of its agreement, caused the hydrolithic powder, supplied to it by the licensor, to be chemically analyzed, whereby it became acquainted with, the ingredients thereof. It attempts to justify this upon the ground that it had been notified that it was infringing another patent and it claims to have been convinced of this on making the analysis. Upon the appointment of the receiver in bankruptcy the licensor discontinued the manufacturé and sale of waterproofing cement, and coatings, and discontinued the use
The trial court also found that Winslow had, prior to that time, adopted as a trade .label a picture of a desert scene with three pyramids surrounded by two concentric circles, in which appeared at the top the words, “Dry as the Desert,” and at the.bottom the words, “Permanent as the Pyramids,” and outside the circles at the top appeared the words, “The Hydrolithic System,” and at the bottom the words, “E. J. Winslow Company. ” ■ There is a conflict in the evidence on this point. It is contended in behalf of the plaintiff that it invented and exclusively used this desert scene label. It is uncontroverted, however, that it was taken from a similar emblem on the letter heads of the licensor, and it was used exclusively in connection with its products and by the licensee while acting under the license, and there is beyond this, evidence that it was designed as a trade mark or trade label by the licensor, the idea having been suggested by a picture on a pamphlet issued by plaintiff in advertising this cement. In these circumstances the plaintiff could acquire no right to this desert scene label, thus used in connection with the Winslow Company’s goods. Upon the appointment of the receiver in bankruptcy the plaintiff caused to be made for it, pursuant to the formula which it had obtained by said analysis, waterproofing material identical with the material formerly supplied to it by the Winslow Company, and has ever since carried on the business of sup- ■ plying said material, "and applying the same to structures to be waterproofed; and it has used the term “ Hydrolithic ” as its ’ own trade mark, and in stamping its goods has substituted its own name for the name of the Winslow Company, and has used the desert scene label as its own on tags attached to the packages and sacks. It has also solicited and transacted this business in its own. name, and it has paid no royalties under the contract since the Winslow Company ceased furnishing material pursuant to the contract and it has had the word “ Hydro
On or about the 1st day of December, 1908, the trustee in bankrupcy, pursuant to an order of the court, made a settlement with the plaintiff in full and complete satisfaction of all claims and demands of the bankrupt company against the plaintiff “upon open account or arising out of or under the contracts of January 1, 1906, and February 11, 1907.” On the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, E. J. Winslow resumed the manufacture and sale of this cement, and used said trade mark, trade name and label in connection therewith, and occupied the offices occupied by the bankrupt" company until its failure. It appears by the testimony of the vice-president of the plaintiff that the contracts were canceled but no date is given. It was not shown that the plaintiff gave any notice of its election to cancel the contract on account of the licensor’s inability to perform; but the contract must be deemed to have been canceled by said settlement agreement, if not before. •
The plaintiff has brought this action upon the theory that it owns the trade mark, or trade name and label. It has, however, produced no evidence of title or even license. The only theory upon which it claims title is that they were abandoned by the trustee in bankruptcy, by his failure to continue to use them, or to sell them when he sold other. personal property of. the bankrupt company. It appears that on the 25th day of' June, 1908, pursuant to an order of the Federal court, the trustee sold to one Reithel all his right, title and interest, as trustee, in and to the personal property of the bankrupt company, set forth, enumerated and described in his inventory then on file, and in and to the patented process and apparatus for making cement compounds, to which reference has been made as having been issued'to the bankrupt company, together with other letters patent, not material to the questions presented for decision. It is contended, in behalf of the plaintiff, that inasmuch as the trade mark or trade name and label, and good will of the business were not sold with the other personal property, they were abandoned, and that the plaintiff was at liberty to appropriate them, as it did. That proposition is not tenable. If Winslow merely licensed the company to use “Hydrolithio”
We are of opinion, therefore, that the learned trial court was right in dismissing the complaint; but the counterclaim should not have been wholly dismissed. Since the purchaser of the other personal property, including the patents for the cement compounds, but not the patent subsequently acquired by Winslow individually for the hydrolithic powder, is not before the court, and Winslow individually is not a party, we refrain from expressing an opinion on the question as to whether their property rights have been invaded by the acts of the plaintiff in the premises, and we express no opinion with respect to the value or ownership of the good will, or whether the value of the trade mark or trade name and trade label is affected, or to what extent it is affected, by the fact that the ownership of the patents with respect to whiph they were used is outstanding in another. (See Matter of Jaysee Construction Co., Bankrupt, U. S. Dist. Ct. S. Dist. of N. Y., Nov. 9, 1911, and Mayer Fertilizer & Junk Co. v. Va. Chemical Co., 156 Official Gazette of U. S. Patent Office, 589.) It appears by the testimony of the witness that the trade mark and label, distinct from the business, are exceedingly valuable. The trial court might have required that said Pronger and Winslow be brought in as parties to an accounting by the plaintiff under the defendant’s counterclaim; but, since they were hot brought in, I am of opinion that we should refrain from ordering an accounting, leaving the question with respect to damages, if it should be important, to be determined in another action, to which they may be parties, for it is evident that questions may arise with respect to whether the good will survived the transfer of the other property, particularly the patents and with respect to its value, in view of such former sale, if it did pass to the defendant, and whether Winslow still has any interest.
I think, however, that the court should have ordered judgment for the defendant on the counterclaim to the extent of enjoining the plaintiff from using the trade device or name or mark and desert scene label, and advertising itself as the successor
It follows that the 6th finding of fact contained in the decision, in so far as it finds that the E. J. Winslow Company owned the trade name or trade mark “Hydrolithic,” should be reversed, and the 45th finding, contained in the decision, and the 3d finding of fact, made at plaintiff’s, request, relating to defendant’s counterclaim, should be' reversed in toto, and the judgment dismissing the. counterclaim should be modified . by granting judgment with costs in favor of the defendant on its counterclaim, to the extent of enjoining the plaintiff from in any manner using said trade name or trade mark and label, and from advertising or otherwise holding itself out as the successor in business to the said Winslow Company, and as thus modified affirmed, without costs of this appeal.
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Clarice and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Judgment modified as directed in opinion,.and as modified affirmed, without costs. Order to be settled on notice.