199 N.Y. 247 | NY | 1910
The action is to restrain unfair competition in trade, for damages and for an accounting of profits. The appellant is a manufacturer of drill chucks in Oneida, Madison county, of a design and character formerly protected by certain patents. At the expiration of the patents the defendant purchased some of these chucks and entered upon the manufacture of tools exactly the same in character and style and of the same size as those made by the plaintiff, and, as found by the trial court, "advertised its said chucks in such language and manner as to convey to the trade and to intending purchasers that defendant's chucks so advertised were plaintiff's said two styles of chucks; that these acts and things *250 were done by defendant with the intent and for the purpose of deceiving dealers and users of chucks into the belief that the defendant's chucks so advertised were the plaintiff's chucks, and to thus enable the defendant to make sales of chucks and of parts of chucks which it could not otherwise make, and that defendant offered said duplicated chucks at prices lower than those which plaintiff was receiving for its chucks." It is also found that in advertising its product the defendant duplicated many of the cuts in plaintiff's advertisements and also its printed matter. The trial court held that the defendant had the right to manufacture and sell drill chucks which were duplicates of those manufactured by the plaintiff, known as "Little Giant Improved" and as "Little Giant Double Grip," but it had not the right to place on its chucks, or to use in advertising the sale thereof the size number numerals or the names adopted by the plaintiff, and awarded a permanent injunction restraining the defendant from such use. It refused to award the plaintiff damages on the ground that no damage to its business had been proved. From this judgment an appeal was taken to the Appellate Division, where the judgment was affirmed by a divided court.
The appellant's first contention is that the injunction awarded was not sufficiently broad. It is contended that the defendant should not have been allowed to make chucks precisely similar to its own. We cannot say that the trial court erred in this respect. The patents having expired, the right to make the patented article passed to the public. (Singer Mfg. Co. v.June Mfg. Co.,
We think, however, that the trial court erred in failing to award the plaintiff damages. The court doubtless felt controlled in this respect by the decision of the Appellate Division, made on an appeal from a previous trial of the case (
The judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed and that of the Special Term modified, so as to award the plaintiff the sum of $4,300, as of the 11th of December, 1908, and as modified affirmed, with costs to the appellant in the Appellate Division and in this court.
GRAY, HAIGHT, VANN, WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur.
Judgment accordingly.