Alden v. Gross

25 Mo. App. 123, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 279
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 25 Mo. App. 123 (Alden v. Gross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alden v. Gross, 25 Mo. App. 123, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 279 (Mo. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Rombauer, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an application for an injunction to restrain the defendants from using the word “fruit,” alone, or in combination with any other words, in branding the vinegar sold by the defendants ; the plaintiffs claiming that they have the exclusive right to the use,' in the above described manner, of this word, whether alone or in combination with other words.

The plaintiffs allege, in substance (omitting formal parts): (1) That they have been engaged for many years in the manufacture of vinegar; (2) that, early in 1878, they conceived the idea of branding their products as “fruit vinegar,” and they were the first to conceive and use the said name; (3) that they have expended two hundred thousand dollars in advertising their wares, and have a large trade all over the United States ; (4) that they manufacture a prime article; (5) that the trade and the public know their producías “ fruit vinegar,” and buy vinegar on the reputation of that name'; (6) that the defendants, attempting to profit by this reputation of the plaintiffs’ article, are selling their own vinegar as “fruit vinegar,” and upon the reputation of the plaintiffs’ vinegar.

Whereupon the plaintiffs ask an injunction against the defendants to prevent the defendants selling any [127]*127vinegar marked “fruit vinegar,” or “from selling any vinegar (not manufactured by the plaintiffs) in such manner as to producé the impression on the public that it is the well known and popular vinegar of the plaintiffs.”

In their answer the defendants set up: (1) That the plaintiffs can have no right to the use of the word “fruit” in connection with the word vinegar, to the exclusion of the defendants ; (2) that, as applied to the plaintiffs’ vinegar, the word “fruit” is false and misleading to the trade and to the public, for that the plaintiffs’ vinegar is not composed, to any appreciable extent, of fruit, or the juices thereof, but is made upon a basis of alcohol, distilled from the small grains ; and, therefore, the plaintiffs have no equity; (3) that the plaintiffs’ vinegar contains poisonous elements, calculated to injure human health, and, therefore, equity will not protect them in its sale; (4) that there has been no colorable imitation, on the part of the defendants, of the plaintiffs’ label so as to deceive any of the plaintiffs’ customers, or any one; (5) deny all bad faith and infringement; and deny that they ever sold or attempted to sell any vinegar upon the representation that it was the vinegar of the plaintiffs.

Issue being joined on these pleadings, the court, after a full hearing, entered a decree in favor of the plaintiffs, the substantial parts of which are as follows : “It is by the court considered, adjudged, and decreed that the defendants, and each and every of them, and . the servants, agents, and workmen of the defendants, and each and every of them, be perpetually enjoined and restrained from affixing, or causing to be affixed,. to any packages, barrels, or cases of any description, sold, or offered for sale, by them, and containing any compound bearing the name of vinegar, or offered for sale as such (and which is not the manufacture of the plaintiffs), the name of “Alden Fruit Yinegar;” and also from affixing, or causing to be affixed, to any letter[128]*128heads, bill-heads, cards, or advertisements, used by the defendants, or any of them (and not concerning the manufacture of the plaintiffs), the name of “Alden’s Fruit Yinegar; ” and also from affixing or applying to any goods manufactured, sold, shipped, or supplied by them, or any of them, or to any advertisements, circulars, bill-heads, or cards used by them, any mark'or marks so contrived and prepared as to lead to the belief that the vinegar sold or manufactured by the defendants, or by any of them, is the manufacture of the said plaintiffs, or so contrived (by colorable imitation or otherwise), to represent the goods manufactured, sold, or offered for sale by the defendants, or any of them, as the “Fruit Yinegar” of the plaintiffs ; or so contrived as to be likely to cause the vinegar of the defendants to be-mistaken by ordinary persons for the vinegar of the plaintiffs ; and that the plaintiffs recover their costs in this behalf expended of the said defendants and have-execution therefor.”

The defendants, appealing, assign a number of errors. Their objections, however, are all comprised in the following: (1) That the plaintiffs, under the pleadings and evidence, have no standing in a court of equity; (2) that the decree is not supported by any substantial evidence of the infringement of the plaintiffs’ label, brand, or trade mark, and is, therefore, unwarranted. Upon the hearing the following facts appeared: The-plaintiffs are, and have been for a • long time, extensive manufacturers of vinegar in this city. In 1878 they appropriated the term “Alden’s Fruit Yinegar” as one-of their many vinegar brands, and branded the best vinegar manufactured by them, with this brand. No copy of their brand was offered in evidence. They spent large sums of money in advertising this particular brand, which became quite popular and well known, and commanded a ready sale. The vinegar thus branded was not manufactured out of fruit, in the plain, ordinary, usual sense of that term, but out of low wines distilled [129]*129from cereals, and fruit enters into its composition only to a very insignificant extent. There was evidence tending to show that the words “Fruit Vinegar” were first used as a vinegar brand by the plaintiffs.

The defendant, Gross, as far as the record shows, went into the vinegar business in the year 1884, in this city, in co-partnership with his co-defendants, whc were former employes of the plaintiffs. The film thus formed did not manufacture any vinegar, but bought the ready made vinegar from other parties, and re-branded it as “Patent Process Fruit Vinegar,” “Baldwin Apple Vinegar,” and “NewProcess Fruit Vinegar.” The vinegar thus bought and re-branded was also a low wine vinegar.

There is no evidence in the record that the defendants ever branded any of their vinegar as Alden’s Fruit Vinegar, or that they ever threatened to do so. There is evidence that, on one occasion, they attempted to sell a small lot of their vinegar as Alden’s Fruit Vinegar, not, however, by the aid of any deceptive or simulated brand, but simply by the aid of the unquestionably false statement, that the defendant thus attempting the sale still represented Alden’s, and not the new firm. There is some evidence, that one of Alden’s agents represented his fruit vinegar as manufactured out of apples, and also that the defendants represented their vinegar as manufactured out of apples,, of cider, and of grapes.

It further appeared in evidence that vinegar is manufactured, both east and west, out of apple cider, the vinegar thus manufactured being, in the ordinary sense of the term, a fruit vinegar, and the only one that can be properly so called, if the word fruit is to be understood as denoting the article out of which the vinegar is made.

It further appeared in evidence, that the defendants, by their cards, letter heads, and circulars, represented themselves as the Niagara County Fruit Vinegar Com[130]*130pany of New York, and St. Louis ; as manufacturers of the Patent Process Fruit Yinegar, having presses and works at Lockport, New York, and a western depot at St. Louis, all of which representations were false.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Mo. App. 123, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alden-v-gross-moctapp-1887.