11 F. 495 | D. Mass. | 1882
The plaintiffs allege that one William Rogers, of Hartford, had been a skilful manufacturer of silver-plated ware long before 1865, and had acquired a high and valuable reputation; and in that year a copartnership was formed between one Birch and one Pierce, who agreed with William Rogers that the firm should be called the William Rogers Manufacturing Company, and agreed with him and his son, William Rogers, Jr., that they might adopt and use as trade-marks, Wm. Rogers & Son,” and “1865, Wra. Rogers Mfg. Co.,” and that they were so used until 1872, when the present corporation was formed, and bought all the stock, good-will, etc., of the firm; that the two companies, successively, have used these trade-marks, from 1865 to the time of filing the bill, by stamping them upon their goods, and have taken great pains with the manufacture of the plated spoons, forks, and knives which they have put upon the market, and thus their goods have become favorably and extensively known as the “Rogers” and “Rogers & Son” goods, and
The prayer of the bill is for an account; an injunction against the use of the trade-marks set out in the bill, or any other stamp having the word “Rogers” or “Rogers & Son” as the whole or part thereof upon silver-plated forks, knives, and spoons; and for general relief.
The answer denies all the allegations of the bill as to the plaintiffs’ title, and charges that the complainants deceived the public by pictures, advertisements, etc., representing their wares to be the veritable manufacture of William Rogers and William Rogers, Jr.; admits the use of the trade-mark Rogers & Son, (with an arrow,) but denies that it can deceive the public.
The evidence on both sides proves that there were three brothers Rogers in Connecticut, who were honest and skilful silver-platers,— among the first, if not the first, in this country to adopt the electrotyping process; that they failed in business and afterwards severally gave the use of their name, for value, to two or three different companies in Connecticut, and assisted them in the manufacture for a longer or shorter time. These companies are now friendly, as I understand, and have long used trade-marks, three of which still survive, viz., “Rogers Bros.,” “Rogers & Bro.,” and “Wm. Rogers & Son,” with an anchor, which are used by these several manufacturers respectively; the last by the plaintiffs only. The title of the Meriden Company to use one of them was established in Meriden Britannia Co. v. Parker, 39 Conn. 450.
All those companies wdiose trade-marks ivere originally derived from the brothers Rogers have maintained a remarkably good standard of merit in their manufactures, so that all plated spoons, etc., marked “Rogers,” or known as “Rogers” goods, command a superior price. The plaintiffs’ goods are not known as “anchor,” but as “Rogers” and “Rogers & Son” goods.
There is no donbt that George W. Spurr, a silver plater of Greenfield, intended to obtain some of the value of the Rogers name, and that with this object he paid a royalty of five cents a dozen to D. 0. Rogers & Son for the use of their trade-mark from August, 1880, to January, 1881; then he organized the defendant company, who agreed to payD. C. Rogers and E. G. Rogers at the rate of four cents a dozen for 25,000 dozen, for the use of the trade-mark, but would make no final agreement until this suit should be decided. The history of this trade-mark is that D. C. Rogers and George E. Rogers applied in February, 1879, to the patent-office to register under the act of congress a trade-mark consisting of the words “Rogers & Son,” with an arrow. In the sworn application or “statement and declaration” required by law they represented themselves as doing business at Greenfield, Massachusetts, under the firm name of Rogers & Son, and declared that they intended to use the trade-mark upon table cutlery, knives, forks, etc. Mr. Grinnell, of Greenfield, whom D. C. Rogers consulted upon the subject, asked him, the pertinent ques
The name of the defendant company was undoubtedly adopted by its originator and chief stockholder, George W. Spurr, with the same purpose. His letters make this clear. If it had been his own business and reputation alone which he intended to preserve and foster, the name-would have been Spurr without the Bogers, or Spurr first and Bogers afterwards. Speaking for myself only, I should be much inclined to say that the use of such a corporate name might well be enjoined at the suit of those who had given the Bogers name its value, as in Holmes v. Holmes, Booth & Atwood Manuf’g Co. 37 Conn. 278, for reasons which I shall give presently; but Gray, C. J., in Gil-man v. Hunnewell, 122 Mass. 139, 152, has thrown some doubt upon the decision in .that case; and in Massam v. Thorley, L. R. 14 Ch. D. 748, 763, the lords justices, in a case very like the present, refused to enjoin the use of the name entirely, if it could be so used as not to injure the plaintiff.
The defendants insist that the plaintiffs have made false and fraudulent statements to the public, to the effect that they are still manufacturing under the direction and management of William Bogers and William Bogers, Jr. Both parties have fallen into the mistake of supposing that it was important to have a Bogers and his son to authorize them to use the trade-mark-Bogers & Son. The law is not so. Any one might use that trade-mark for the first time that it was used, and if there was no Bogers in the same business no Bogers could complain. Levy v. Walker, L. R. 10 Ch. D. 436; Massam v. Thurley Co. L. R. 14 Ch. D. 748. It was unnecessary for the plaintiffs to send round pictures of William Bogers and his son, as they have done. Such a method of advertising is more appropriate
A great deal was said in argument about the natural right of a man to use his own name in any business that he chooses to adopt. This, however, as I have said, is the case of a defendant corporation which has adopted a name to suit its business; and of persons, having the name, who have adopted a trade-mark to let out for hire to other people.
Even if we grant all that has been said about the freedom to use names, (and I grant upon that subject much more than has been argued, for I set no limits to that freedom, excepting interference with acquired rights,) the books are full of cases in which defendants have been restrained from using their own names in a way to appropriate the good-will of a business already established by others of that name. Croft v. Day, 7 Beav. 84; Metzler v. Wood, L. R. 8 Ch. D. 606; Fallwood v. Fallwood, L. R. 9 Ch. D. 376; Levy v. Walker, L. R. 10 Ch. D. 436; Massam v. Thorley, L. R. 14 Ch. D. 748; McLean v. Fleming, 96 U. S. 245; Devlin v. Devlin, 69 N. Y. 212; Filkins v. Blackman, 13 Blatchf. 440; Stonebraker v. Stonebraker, 33 Md. 252; Shaver v. Shaver, 54 Iowa, 208; [S. C. 6 N. W. Rep. 188;] Churton v. Douglas, Johns. (Eng.) 174. See 25 Albany Law J. 203.
. All these cases in equity depend upon an appropriation by one person of the reputation of another, sometimes actually fraudulent, and sometimes only constructively so.
“ It should never be forgotten in these cases that tlie sole right to restrain anybody from using any name that he likes in the course of any business that he chooses to carry on is a right in the nature of a trade-mark,- - that is to say, a man has a right to say, ‘ Ybu must not use a name, whether fictitious or real; you must not uso a description, whether true or not, which Is intended to represent, or calculated to represent, to the world that your business is my business, and so, by fraudulent misstatement, deprive me of the profits of the business which would otherwise come to me.’” Per James, L. J., Levy v. Walker, L. R. 10 Ch. D. 447-8.
The reason why artificial trade-marks are absolutely protected, without inquiry into motives, etc., is that the defendant has no nat
But the defendants say, again, “Bogers” has become a mere designation of a particular kind of ware, like Thompsonian medicines, or Singer sewing-machines. Thompson v. Winchester, 19 Pick. 214; Singer Co. v. Larsen, Cox, Dig. No. 659. But the evidence does not support this defence. The Bogers name does not express a certain sort of goods, but serves as a warranty of good workmanship, because all those persons who have used it have followed faithfully the excellent example of the original Bogerses, who insisted on honest work.
It is further argued that the Bogerses are so many that the court cannot find an intent to appropriate the reputation of one of them more than another; and that, if any suit will lie, it must be by all those who use any trade-mark whose distinctive feature is the name Bogers. I believe it to be true that the Greenfield Bogerses did - not inquire, nor did the defendants care, whose reputation they were making available; but I am of opinion that any one of those who rightly uses the name may enjoin its interfering use by others.
Profits stand on a different footing. As at present advised, I should say that the profits made from the name Bogers belong to all those who rightly use it. It is possible, however, that the plaintiffs may be able to prove facts which will give them special profits. They are entitled to, at least, an injunction, costs, and nominal damages, and, if they choose to take the burden of going to a master, I am bound to permit them.
Interlocutory decree for the complainants.