American Furniture Co. v. American Furniture Co.

261 P.2d 163, 128 Colo. 160, 1953 Colo. LEXIS 251
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedAugust 17, 1953
Docket16941
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 261 P.2d 163 (American Furniture Co. v. American Furniture Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Furniture Co. v. American Furniture Co., 261 P.2d 163, 128 Colo. 160, 1953 Colo. LEXIS 251 (Colo. 1953).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Knauss

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff in error, American Furniture Company, a corporation, was defendant below, and defendants in error, a partnership composed of a father and four sons, members of the Slosky family, and doing business as <frFhe American Furniture Company” in Colorado Springs, Colorado, were plaintiffs below. We will hereinafter refer to them as plaintiffs and defendant as they appeared in the trial court. Plaintiffs were awarded an injunction restraining defendant from using the name “American Furniture Company” or “American Furniture Company of Denver” in connection with its business in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The latter is here by writ of error to review the judgment and decree granting the injunction.

The complaint alleged that plaintiffs and their predecessors in interest have carried on a retail furniture business in the City of Colorado Springs under the name “American Furniture Company” continuously for more than twenty-five years with the exception of a period of five years between 1941 and 1946 when the business was conducted under the name of the American- *162 Standard Furniture Company; that plaintiffs have advertised their business under said trade name and have developed a substantial good-will in the City of Colorado Springs under said trade name; that they have adopted and advertised in the community the trade motto, “Shop at the American,” which has come to be understood by the people of the community as referring to plaintiffs; that in June, 1948 the defendant corporation, whose principal office and place of business is Denver, Colorado, established a branch retail store in Colorado Springs and has been and is now using the plaintiffs’ identical name of “American Furniture Company”; that the establishment of said store in Colorado Springs by the defendant has resulted in confusion and mistakes; that the plaintiffs, by the long use of the trade name “American Furniture Company” in Colorado Springs and their extensive advertising under such name, have acquired a proprietary interest in said name in the City of Colorado Springs, and the use of the name by the defendant inflicts a continued and repeated injury and damage upon plaintiffs.

The defendant by answer denied the material allegations of the complaint except that it admitted that prior to June, 1948 defendant had not maintained a store or place of business in the City of Colorado Springs or its environs and would continue to use the trade name, American Furniture Company, in Colorado Springs unless enjoined.

From -the record it appears that in November, 1924, J. Slosky and another, established a retail new and second-hand furniture business in Colorado Springs under the name “The American Furniture Company.” On the same date individuals filed a partnership affidavit in El Paso County under the name “The Peoples Furniture Company.” In January, 1935 J. Slosky and I. Slosky filed an affidavit as partners under the name “American Furniture Co.” On the same day the same parties filed a partnership affidavit under the name “Standard Furni *163 ture Co.” for the sale of new and used furniture. Later in October, 1935 the same parties with the addition of Sam Slosky filed a partnership affidavit under the name “American Furniture Company” stating the purpose to be the retail sale of new and used furniture. In February, 1941 Jake Slosky, Sam Slosky and Israel Slosky filed a partnership affidavit under the name “American Standard Furniture Company.” At or about that time both “Standard Furniture Company” and “American Furniture Company,” which the parties had operated in separate establishments on South Tejón Street in Colorado Springs, were consolidated at 302 South Tejón Street, this address being the location at which the parties had conducted their business as “Standard Furniture Company.” In March, 1942 Jake Slosky, together with his four sons, filed a partnership affidavit under the name of “American and Standard Furniture Co.” The business continued to be conducted under that name or as “American Standard Furniture Co.” until April, 1946 when the business was moved to 115 South Tejón Street and thereafter was conducted as “American Furniture Company.”

The defendant is a Colorado corporation organized in 1900 under the corporate name of “American Furniture Company” with its principal office and place of business in the City and County of Denver, and from that time until the present has conducted its business in Denver and elsewhere as “American Furniture Company.” When the corporation in the instant case complied with the corporation laws of Colorado, it became entitled to do business within this state and in the entire state. The fact that it selected Denver, Colorado, as its main office did not confine its business to that city, nor circumscribe its powers. In June of 1948, after negotiations which continued for over a year, the defendant corporation opened a branch retail store in Colorado Springs under the name “American Furniture Co. of Denver,” and has so operated from that time. The record discloses that for *164 many years prior to 1948 defendant corporation did an extensive business in Colorado Springs and sold furniture from its Denver store to people resident in the Colorado Springs trade area, making deliveries thereof from its Denver store.without additional charge to the customer.

The record discloses that during these years the corporation carried large display advertisements in the Denver Post, the Rocky Mountain News and other papers having wide circulation in the Colorado Springs area and used full page advertisements to advise the public of its trade name and business. The plaintiffs, with rare exceptions, confined their advertising to classified or small ads, using therein the several trade names they from time to time adopted.

The record further discloses that after the establishment of defendant company’s branch store that some confusion resulted from the similarity of names, such as plaintiffs receiving mail, telephone calls belonging to defendant, and defendant receiving mail and telephone calls intended for plaintiffs, and which appears from the testimony of witnesses to have been due chiefly to mail and other articles intended for delivery to one or the other of the parties being improperly addressed or directed.

It is shown that when the president of defendant corporation had his attention called to the fact that there was another furniture establishment in Colorado Springs operating under the name “American Furniture Co.” and after consulting counsel, he caused the words “of Denver” to be added to the correct corporate title “American Furniture Company”; and thereafter in all activities of the defendant in the conduct of its business in Colorado Springs, such as stationery, forms, letters, self-addressed envelopes and advertising, the name of the company was distinguished by the words “of Denver” in equal prominence with the corporate name. A large neon sign was erected on the front of the building *165 bearing the title “American Furniture Company of Denver,” and a horizontal sign erected across the front of the building bore the same identification.

It is further shown by the record that for many years the defendant carried on a substantial business in and about Colorado Springs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 P.2d 163, 128 Colo. 160, 1953 Colo. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-furniture-co-v-american-furniture-co-colo-1953.