Artiste Permanent Wave Co. v. Hulsman

113 S.W.2d 55, 271 Ky. 695, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 49
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 28, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 113 S.W.2d 55 (Artiste Permanent Wave Co. v. Hulsman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Artiste Permanent Wave Co. v. Hulsman, 113 S.W.2d 55, 271 Ky. 695, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 49 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Ratliff

— Reversing.

Appellant, a corporation, and appellees, a partner *696 ship, are competitors engaged in the operation of their respective beauty shops located in the Starks building in Louisville, Ky. We will refer to appellant as plaintiff and to' appellees as defendants according to their respective positions in the lower court.

Plaintiff established its beauty shop and commenced business in the year 1932 on the fourth floor of the Starks building in room 402, and operated there approximately one year or until some time in 1933, when it moved its shop to the second floor of the same building in room No. 288. When it began its business, it had its corporate name, “Artiste Permanent Wave Company, ’ ’ placed on the door of the room in which the business was conducted and operated for a while under that name. But later it chose or selected the name “Artiste Beauty Shoppe” as its trade-name, which name was published and carried in the telephone directory of the city of Louisville from the beginning of its business to the present time, and also had the same name or words placed on the windows of the building fronting’ the streets and also by an electric sign placed in the window over the door and on its customers’ cards, and in the newspapers for a while after it commenced business, but since about January, 1937, it advertised in the newspapers the abbreviated name “Artiste Shoppe,” leaving out the word “beauty,”' but made no changes in its other signs or advertisements.

For four years previous to April, 1937, the defendant Miss Hulsman, was in the employ of plaintiff and acted as manager of its shop, and for two years the other defendant Miss Kamber was assistant manager of plaintiff. However, in April, 1937, defendants resigned their positions with the plaintiff and in June of the same year they established a beauty shop business of their own in the same. Starks building and in room No. 402, previously occupied by plaintiff during its first year in business, and selected the name “Art Beauty Shoppe?’ and are operating their shop in that name. Plaintiff objected to defendants’ use of the name “Art Beauty Shoppe” because of its similarity to plaintiff’s trade-name, viz., “Artiste Beauty Shoppe,” which it had used for four years, with the exception that its corporate name was on the door of' its room where its business is conducted. It appears that plaintiff and de *697 fendants held various conferences — plaintiff endeavoring to persuade defendants to select some other name for their shop because the similarity of the names “Artiste Beauty Shoppe” and “Art Beauty Shoppe” might be confusing to the public. But defendants refused to select any other name and advertised and are now operating their shop under the name “Art Beauty Shoppe.”

Soon thereafter plaintiff brought this action in the Jefferson circuit court seeking to enjoin defendants from using the name “Art Beauty Shoppe.” Plaintiff set out in its original petition the history and facts of the establishment of its business in substance as we have indicated above and alleged that defendants selected their trade-name “Art Beauty Shoppe” and located same in the Starks building and in the same room or location formerly occupied by plaintiff for the purpose and intent of defrauding and deceiving the public into believing that defendants’ business and beauty parlor is the plaintiff’s business and beauty parlor or the same organization, so as to draw away from plaintiff its clientage and promote the business of defendants to plaintiff’s detriment and damage.

Later by amended petition plaintiff alleged that soon after it commenced the operation of its shop in the year 1932, it realized that the public might not appreciate the fact that it was engaged in all kinds of beauty treatment operations generally sold and served by beauty culture establishments because of its corporate name, “Artiste Permanent Wave Company,” and that the public might think it was engaged only in the business and service of giving permanent wave hair treatment only, whereas in truth and in fact at all times it has and does, in addition to permanent wave hair treatments, give all the other services and treatments generally rendered by such businesses, and in order to properly designate its services and products, it had the name “Artiste Beauty Shoppe” painted in large letters on the six windows facing Walnut street and on the six windows facing the Fourth street side and always had this name in large letters on the windows of its former location on the fourth floor where this name is easily seen by the public from the streets, but that it had always had its corporate name, “Artiste Permanent'Wave *698 Company,” on the door of the entrance to its place of business; that at all times mentioned tbe name “Artiste Beauty Sboppe” has been listed in tbe telephone directory designating its place of business in tbe Starks building, and it bad always advertised often and extensively in tbe newspapers using its corporate name as well as its trade-name and trade-mark of “Artiste Beauty Sboppe,” and bad always bad tbe name “Artiste Beauty Sboppe” on its. cards or customers’ slips; that since tbe year 1932 up to tbe present time its services and products bave been known to tbe public as tbe “Artiste Beauty Sboppe” as well as tbe “Artiste Permanent- Wave Company,” but more popularly known to tbe public and its customers as tbe “Artiste Beauty Sboppe,” and that it bad sold its services, wares, and products under tbe trade-name and trademark of “Artiste Beauty Sboppe,” all of which bad become known to tbe public, and plaintiff thereby acquired certain rights to tbe trade-name and trade-mark “Artiste Beauty Sboppe,” for tbe sale of its services and products.

Defendants filed their answer traversing tbe allegations of-the petition,and pleaded affirmatively that the two words “Beauty shop” are words in general use by hundreds of shop operators in Louisville and throughout tbe United States generally and that, tbe use thereof is so general that any one bas tbe right to and does apply tbe use thereof to a shop or place of business where beauty work is done, and, further, that defendants by advertisement and newspaper articles published notice to tbe public that their shop is locally owned and bas no connection with plaintiff’s shop.

Only a small amount of evidence was taken but on tbe whole there is no material conflict in tbe evidence. It does not materially differ from tbe pleadings and tbe facts as we bave indicated.

Tbe evidence of Miss Margaret Ames and Mae Waltber was taken in behalf of plaintiff. It would serve no good purpose to enter into a detailed recitation of tbe evidence of plaintiff. Suffice it to say that its evidence tended to support all material facts alleged in tbe petition. However, Miss Ames, witness for plaintiff, testified that since January 1, 1937, she bad advertised *699 the name of the shop in the newspapers as “Artiste Shoppe,” thus dropping the word “beauty,” but no changes were made in the telephone directory, on the windows, their electric sign, or customers’ cards.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.W.2d 55, 271 Ky. 695, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/artiste-permanent-wave-co-v-hulsman-kyctapphigh-1938.