Ball v. . Broadway Bazaar

87 N.E. 674, 194 N.Y. 429, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1298
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 87 N.E. 674 (Ball v. . Broadway Bazaar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ball v. . Broadway Bazaar, 87 N.E. 674, 194 N.Y. 429, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1298 (N.Y. 1909).

Opinion

Werner, J.

At the Special Term a judgment was entered restraining the defendant from using certain designations in advertising and describing its business, which were held to be an infringement of a trade name to which the plaintiff had established an exclusive proprietary right. Upon appeal to. the Appellate Division that judgment was reversed and a new trial granted. From the order of reversal the plaintiff appeals to this court, giving the usual stipulation for judgment absolute in the event of affirmance. Since the order of reversal is silent as to the grounds upon which it is based, we must take the facts as found by the trial court and examine the case upon the assumption that the Appellate Division predicated its reversal solely upon questions of law. (Code Civ. Pro. sec. 1338.) It is necessary, therefore, to look to the findings of the trial court to ascertain what facts were deemed to have been established by the evidence.

At the time of the trial the plaintiff was, and for many years prior thereto had been, engaged in the manufacture and sale of infants’, children’s and youth’s garments, clothing and supplies, under the trade name of Best & Co. Lilliputian Bazaar,” at Nos. 60-62 West 23rd street in the borough of Manhattan in the city of New York. More than eighteen years before the trial a partnership had been formed by one Best and another for the conduct of that business. The plaintiff subsequently beeame a member of that firm and later its sole survivor. Throughout all these changes in proprietorship the business was conducted under the same trade name. At the inception of the business, and as a means of advertising it, the proprietors adopted a device consisting of a large hand and small human figures accompanied by the words “ Lilliputian Bazaar.” The building in which the business has been carried on bears a sign containing the legend, “ Best & Co., Lilliputian Bazaar.” This designation has been *433 extensively advertised in catalogues, magazines, newspapers and other descriptive literature at great expense, until it has become identified in the minds of the public with the plaintiff’s business and the merchandise in which he trades. By these means the plaintiff has established, under that trade name and designation, a large and valuable business throughout the United States.

The defendant, a domestic corporation, is also engaged in the sale of children’s clothing and supplies at 1185 Broadway in the borough of Brooklyn, in the city of Uew York, and in various ways advertises itself as the Broadway Bazaar, Brooklyn’s Best Lilliputian Store.” This designation is coupled with a characteristic sign representing a large flying stork bestridden by a nude infant. This business, thus advertised, had been carried on by the defendant for a number of months prior to the commencement of this action, and when the plaintiff acquired knowledge of the fact he notified the defendant that it was infringing his trade name and requested that it desist, but without result.

In addition to the foregoing facts, which we have epitomized from the decision, the trial court specifically found “ That defendant’s use of the said name, ‘ Broadway Bazaar, Brooklyn’s Best Lilliputian Store,’ is calculated to deceive the public and induce the belief among customers that the defendant’s business is connected with plaintiff’s, and that tlie goods sold by the defendant are goods manufactured by the plaintiff, or sold in connection with the plaintiff’s business.” That defendant in adopting and maintaining and using said name of Broadway Bazaar, Brooklyn’s Best Lilliputian Store,’ did so with intent to deceive the public in the manner indicated in the eighth (preceding) finding of fact, and for the purpose of competing unfairly with the plaintiff in the business hereinbefore formed.” “ That the plaintiff has established and acquired an exclusive proprietary right as a trade name and as a trade mark in the words ‘ Best & Co., Lilliputian Bazaar.’ ” Upon these findings of fact the learned trial court based the legal conclusion that the plaintiff was entitled to a *434 permanent injunction restraining the defendant from the continuance of the infringement. That conclusion seems to be clearly authorized by the facts, unless there is merit in' the point upon which the learned Appellate Division reversed the judgment. The learned justice who wrote for that court remarked that “ this is not a trade mark case, but a trade name case,” and from that postulate he proceeded to the conclusion that the plaintiff was entitled to no relief. If the order of reversal, which was entered pursuant to that conclusion, had set aside the judgment upon the facts as well as the law, we would be powerless to disturb it; and, conversely, as the reversal is purely upon questions of law', we cannot sustain it unless the legal conclusion adopted by the learned trial justice is without support in the facts found. In considering the case from that point of view, we think it is immaterial whether this case is regarded as involving the defendant’s unjustifiable use of the plaintiff’s trade name or trade mark, or both. The distinction between a trade name and a trade mark, which is' emphasized in the opinion of the learned Appellate Division, is one that is clearly recognized by the text writers and in the decisions, but that is not sufficient to dispose of the case at bar. Although the complaint was framed and the case w7as tried upon the theory that both the plaintiff’s trade name and trade mark had been infringed by the defendant, the evidence and the findings establish the defendant’s infringement simply of the plaintiff’s trade name as distinguished from his alleged trade mark; and that infringement is all that the judgment is designed to prevent.

For the purpose of getting a correct view of the question upon which the order of reversal seems to be based, it may be well to state as concisely as possible the distinction between a technical trade mark and a trade name. A trade mark may be tersely defined to be any sign, mark, symbol, word or words, which indicate the origin or ownership of an article as distinguished from its quality, and which others have not the equal right to employ for the same purpose. In its strictest sense id is applicable only to a vendible article of merchandise *435 to which it is affixed. A trade name relates to a business and its good will rather than a vendible commodity. (Brown on Trade Marks, sec. 91; Sebastian’s Law of Trade Marks, p. 16.) There are doubtless many instances in which the same signs, marks, symbols, etc., may serve both as trade marks and trade names. It may be that the designations used by the plaintiff fall within this class, for it appears that some of his merchandise is labeled with his distinguishing marks. As this record stands, that feature is not of controlling importance because there is no finding that the defendant labels or marks its goods, and, indeed, there is uncontradicted evidence to the contrary. The case is one, therefore, involving the defendant’s infringement of plaintiff’s trade name as distinguished from his trade mark, and, considering it in that aspect, the ultimate question is whether the findings of fact entitle the plaintiff to the judgment, which the trial court rendered, or to any judgment whatever.

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Bluebook (online)
87 N.E. 674, 194 N.Y. 429, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-broadway-bazaar-ny-1909.