Summary
In Falk v. American West Indies Trading Co., 180 N.Y. 445, 73 N.E. 239, 240, 1 L.R.A., N.S., 704, it is states: 'A trade-make is not a piece of property that passes from hand to hand by assignment separate from the business of the owner of the trade-mark, or of the article which it may serve to distinguish.
Summary of this case from Carson v. HarrisOpinion
Argued January 20, 1905
Decided February 21, 1905
Antonio Knauth and Isaac M. Aron for appellant. S.K. Lichtenstein and Morris S. Wise for respondents.
The plaintiffs have recovered a judgment against the defendant, enjoining it from the use of a trade mark claimed to be their property, and for damages in the sum of ten thousand dollars for infringement and the wrongful use by the defendant of the trade mark in question.
It appears from the pleadings and findings of the trial court that about the year 1871 a partnership firm known as Lichtenstein Brothers Co., engaged in the manufacture and sale of cigars, adopted and made use of the words "El Falcon" as a trade mark to designate a particular brand of cigars. This firm afterwards, and about the year 1886, was merged in a corporation of the same name, which took over the assets of the firm and succeeded to the good will of the business. The corporation continued in the business of manufacturing and selling cigars and in the use of the trade mark until the 31st of October, 1898, when it went out of business. On that day it executed and delivered to the plaintiffs an instrument in writing which purported to assign and set over to them the trade mark in question, with the labels and devices that had been used with the same. The plaintiffs thereupon assuming to have succeeded to all the rights of their assignor continued the use of the trade mark at its manufactory at Key West in Florida.
The defendant is a New Jersey corporation, but engaged in the manufacture and sale of cigars at Caguas, Porto Rico, with an office in New York. It appears that the manager of the corporation at that place, whose name is Gregorio Lopez y Falco, adopted his own name as a trade mark for a brand of cigars that are now known in the trade as the "El Falco." There is no similarity at all between the labels on the two trade marks, but there is a similarity in the names. No fraud, however, is alleged or claimed, and no fraud or intent to deceive the public was found by the learned trial court. The judgment in this case is to the effect that the trade mark so adopted by the defendant is an infringement upon the rights of the plaintiffs, and, hence, the injunction and award of damages.
The controlling question in this case is with respect to the plaintiffs' title, or exclusive right to the use of the trade mark for an infringement of which they procured the injunction and recovered the damages. It does not appear, and is not claimed, that anything was assigned to the plaintiffs except the naked right to use the trade marks and labels. No business or good will was transferred to the plaintiffs by the instrument, and they did not succeed, by operation of law or otherwise, to the business in which the trade mark had been used and to which it was attached. They were simply authorized to use the trade mark in their own business established at another place. The use of the trade mark by the plaintiffs denoted to the public that they were making and selling the Lichtenstein cigar, and that it was not applied to a cigar manufactured by other parties at any other place. The question is whether, under these circumstances, the plaintiffs had any right to maintain this action. A trade mark is not a piece of property that passes from hand to hand by assignment separate from the business of the owner of the trade mark or of the article which it may serve to distinguish. Generally, it passes only with the business and good will of which it is an inseparable part. The rule in this respect is well stated in a recent work of great merit on that branch of the law with which we are now concerned.
"As a mere abstract right, having no reference to any particular person or property, a trade mark cannot pass by assignment or descend to a man's legal representatives. The reason for this is that, as an abstract right, apart from the business in which it is used, a trade mark has no existence. To permit a trade mark to be transferred apart from the business in which it is used would be productive of fraud upon the public. * * * The mere sale of a trade mark apart from the article to which it is affixed confers no right of ownership, because no one can claim the right to sell his goods as goods manufactured by another." (Paul on Trade Marks, §§ 116, 117, 144.) The learned author, in the notes to the three sections referred to, has collected the leading cases on the subject and it will be seen upon an examination of those authorities that they amply support the propositions contained in the text. Some of the cases thus referred to and in which the principle was discussed are the following: Kidd v. Johnson ( 100 U.S. 617); Macmahan Pharmacal Co. v. Denver Chem. Mfg. Co. ([C.C.A.] 113 Fed. Rep. 468); Leather Cloth Co. v. Am. Leather Cloth Co. (11 H.L. Cases, 523, 534, 544); Williams v. Farrand ( 88 Mich. 473, 480); Dixon Crucible Co. v. Guggenheim (2 Brewster [Pa.], 321, 339); Witthaus v. Mattfeldt Co. ( 44 Md. 303); Skinner v. Oakes ( 10 Mo. App. 45, 59); Weener v. Brayton ( 152 Mass. 101, 103); The Fair v. Jose Morales Co. ( 82 Ill. App. 499) ; Messer v. The Fadettes ( 168 Mass. 140); Weston v. Ketcham (51 How. Pr. 455); Cotton v. Gillard (44 L.J. Chan. 90); Wood v. Lambert (L.R. [32 Chan. Div.] 247).
There is no allegation, proof or finding in this case that the plaintiffs, upon the execution of the writing referred to or at any other time, succeeded in any way to the business of the assignor or any part of it, or to the good will to which up to that time the trade mark had been attached. It was, as already suggested, simply a written transfer of the naked trade mark and labels detached from the business in which it had been theretofore used, and when used by the plaintiffs no longer denoted or distinguished the article or business to which it had been attached. We do not say that the principle above suggested would apply to an assignment of all trade marks made in a similar way. There are, doubtless, some trade marks that consist of words that identify an article produced by some secret process and without the use of which the article could not be described. In other words, the name used may be inherent in the article itself and is not used as in this case to distinguish one cigar from another. The celebrated cordial, which is in use the world over, known as "Chartreuse" is a sample of a trade mark, the bare assignment of which might confer upon the assignee the right to manufacture and sell that article. Other examples might be cited that would not come within the rule above suggested, but in the case at bar the trade mark was originally adopted by the Lichtensteins to distinguish a cigar manufactured by themselves. The trade mark in their hands represented their own article, their own skill and business experience. When used by the plaintiffs in their business it does not truly denote anything of the kind and the plaintiffs' claim really is that they have acquired the right to sell their own goods as the goods of some one else.
We do not, upon this appeal, assume to deal with any of the proceedings which appear at great length in the record and resulted in the ascertainment of damages as upon an accounting. The proofs on that branch of the case were taken before a referee upon whose report the court finally acted. The only question with which we are concerned upon this appeal is the question which was raised upon the trial of the issues made by the pleadings before the court. That trial resulted in a decision which contains findings of fact and conclusions of law in the short form. The conclusion of law which was to the effect that the plaintiffs were entitled to judgment, was excepted to by the defendant's counsel. This exception raises the question in this court whether the conclusion of law upon which the judgment is based is sustained by the findings of fact; and since it does not appear from the findings that there was a transfer to the plaintiffs of anything but the naked trade mark these facts do not sustain the judgment. The complaint does not state that anything was transferred to the plaintiffs except the naked trade mark. The findings are no broader than the complaint, and the proofs in the case, including the written assignment, are entirely silent on that point. Hence, although this was a short decision unanimously affirmed we cannot presume that any fact was found not embraced within the scope of the pleadings, the findings as they appear in the record and the proofs upon which the decision was made. So, the general exception raises the question of law with respect to the plaintiffs' right to maintain the action.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
GRAY, HAIGHT and VANN, JJ., concur; CULLEN, Ch. J., BARTLETT and WERNER, JJ., dissent.
Judgment reversed, etc.