Art Metal Works, Inc. v. Cunningham Products Corp.

137 Misc. 429, 242 N.Y.S. 294, 1930 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1304
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 137 Misc. 429 (Art Metal Works, Inc. v. Cunningham Products Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Art Metal Works, Inc. v. Cunningham Products Corp., 137 Misc. 429, 242 N.Y.S. 294, 1930 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1304 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

Kresel,

Referee. For about thirty years the plaintiff, Art Metal Works, Inc., and its predecessors have been in the business of manufacturing and selling metal novelties and metal ware. The [430]*430business has been on a very extensive scale, comprising the manufacture and sale of thousands of different kinds of articles. The gross annual sales have been about $5,000,000 a year.

The defendant Cunningham Products Corporation was organized in 1927. It succeeded to the business of the defendant Irving Florman, who conducted that business individually and under the trade name of Irving Florman Company for approximately eight years. Florman is the president of Cunningham Products Corporation, and owns nearly all. of its stock. The defendants’ business has been comparatively small. The gross sales of Cunningham Products Corporation have been approximately $300,000 a year.

Both parties manufacture cigar lighters and perfume atomizers in the shape of cigar fighters, both articles being produced in pocket and table sizes.

The plaintiff’s sales of fighters and atomizers amount to over $3,000,000 annually, while the defendants’ sales of those articles are approximately $60,000 a year. The plaintiff has spent very large sums in advertising its products both directly to the public as well as to the trade. The defendants’ advertising has been insignificant in comparison.

1 Plaintiff charges that the defendants are guilty of unfair competition in the conduct of their business, in that they simulate plaintiff’s products to such an extent as to mislead the public into buying the defendants’ products in the belief that they are buying those of the plaintiff. The plaintiff also charges that the defendants have adopted names for their products so similar to those under which plaintiff’s products are known as further to enable the defendants to palm off their products for those of the plaintiff, to the damage of the plaintiff and the detriment of the public.

The evidence discloses a great divergence of claims as to priority of invention and priority in advertising and marketing of the products of the parties. While these considerations are important, they are by no means determinative of the charge of unfair competition. Even a junior in the field may be entitled to protection against the unfair competition of the one who first occupied the field.

As to Cigar Lighters.

Neither of the parties was a pioneer in the field of manufacturing and marketing cigar fighters. The plaintiff claims, however, to have been the first to manufacture and market what is described as the one-finger-one-motion cigar fighter. This is a mechanical device which, upon pressure with one finger on a lever, lifts the cap covering the wick and automatically ignites it, and then, upon releasing the [431]*431finger, the cap automatically extinguishes the flame. Prior thereto there had been on the market what are known as thumb-wheel lighters, that is, fighters requiring the turning of a wheel, usually with the thumb, in order to fight them, and then a second and independent motion in order to extinguish the flame and close the fid of the fighter. Dunhill and other well-known manufacturers, as well as the defendants, had theretofore manufactured thumb-wheel fighters. The plaintiff’s Ronson ” fighter (the name “ Ronson ” being derived from the surname of the plaintiff’s president, Aron-son) came on the market in November, 1926. It embodied the mechanical device of the one-finger-one-motion fighter.

The original model of the plaintiff’s Ronson ” lighter was in form pear shaped and somewhat larger than the present models manufactured and marketed by the plaintiff under the names of Ronson-De-fight ” and Princess.” The original model was discontinued in July, 1927, when the Ronson-De-fight ” was marketed. In October, 1928, the plaintiff marketed a new model of its fighter called the Princess.” Both of these models are one-finger-one-motion lighters.

The defendant Cunningham Products Corporation put on the market in October, 1928, a cigar fighter which it called the “ Westminster.” This was a one-finger-one-motion fighter. The Westminster ” succeeded a thumb-wheel fighter which the defendant Florman had produced some time prior thereto. Cunningham Products Corporation claims that in February, 1929, it discontinued marketing its Westminster,” and that it then invented a modification of its “ Westminster ” fighter, calling the new one the “ New Yorker.” The defendant, however, did not put its New Yorker ” on the market until November, 1929.

Although the Westminster ” concededly was not on the market prior to October, 1928, the defendant Florman claims that he had models of the “ Westminster ” as early as January, 1927, and that he exhibited such models at the automobile show in New York that month. He claims they were stolen from him at the show. He also claims that he made sketches of fighters, such as the “ Westminster,” as early as August, 1926. In substantiation of this claim Florman produced a sketch of such a fighter claimed to have been made by him in August, 1926, and to have been sent to himself by registered mail in September of that year. I am not much impressed with this proof. If Florman had invented a one-finger-one-motion fighter and had models thereof in January, 1927, it is strange that, when plaintiff applied for a design patent on its “ Ronson-De-fight,” and obtained one in January, 1928, he made no move to question the plaintiff’s right to the patent, nor did he sue the plaintiff for [432]*432infringing bis invention. Even more significant is the fact that when, on the contrary, the plaintiff sued Florman for infringement of plaintiff’s patents, obtained as aforesaid, Florman did not in his answer claim that he had himself invented the one-finger-one-motion lighter. I think, therefore, that bis present claim is an afterthought.

If the issue here involved were simply that of priority as between plaintiff’s Ronson ” and “ Ronson-De-light,” on the one hand, and the defendants’ “ Westminster,” on the other hand, I should be inclined to hold that the plaintiff, and not the defendants, first invented the one-finger-one-motion lighter, particularly in view of the fact that the plaintiff produced and marketed its fighter in November, 1926, whereas the defendants’ “Westminster” did not appear on. the market until October, 1928. But the issue here is not merely one of priority. It is a question of unfair competition. Even though I were satisfied that Florman’s sketch and mudéis antedated the marketing of the plaintiff’s fighter, nevertheless, if more than two years after the plaintiff had produced and marketed its one-finger-one-motion fighter and by extensive advertising had established a reputation and good will for its product, the defendants produced a similar fighter in imitation of the plaintiff’s product, a case of unfair competition by the defendants would still be made out. I find that the plaintiff has proved priority both in invention and marketing of the one-finger-one-motion fighter.

A large number of fighters manufactured by others than the plaintiff or the defendants were produced before me on the theory of proving the prior art. Most of them did not embody the principle of the one-finger-one-motion fighter; and as to the one or two that come near embodying that principle, like the Kaschie No. 9 and Kaschie No.

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Bluebook (online)
137 Misc. 429, 242 N.Y.S. 294, 1930 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/art-metal-works-inc-v-cunningham-products-corp-nysupct-1930.