Blackwell's Durham Tobacco Co. v. McElwee

5 S.E. 907, 100 N.C. 150
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 5 S.E. 907 (Blackwell's Durham Tobacco Co. v. McElwee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blackwell's Durham Tobacco Co. v. McElwee, 5 S.E. 907, 100 N.C. 150 (N.C. 1888).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The nature and purpose of the present'action, as set forth in the pleadings, are restated and explained in the opinion of the Court, when the case was before us upon a former appeal, 94 N. C., 425, and dispense with a repetition of the facts. Upon the last trial, at September Term, 1887, of Person Superior Court, issues were submitted and answered, as follows:

1. Is the plaintiff, as against the defendant, entitled to the sole and exclusive use of • the device or symbol of a bull in connection with the words smoking tobacco, when attached to packages of smoking tobacco? Answer, ‘'Yes.”

2. Is the plaintiff entitled to the sole and exclusive use of, as against the defendant, the label, sign and trade-mark mentioned in his complaint and set forth in his exhibit? And if not to all of said trade-mark, to what part or parts of it? Ans. “Yes, all.”

3. Has plaintiff been damaged by the defendant unlawfully affixing or annexing to packages of smoking tobacco manufactured or sold by defendant, defendant’s labels containing plaintiff’s trade-mark, or any part of it? Ans. “ No.”

The plaintiff derived its claim to the property in, and the *152 exclusive right to use the trade-mark device and label in dispute, under one J. R. Green, and the defendant introduced evidence to show that, in the fall of 1865, himself and Green, who were partners and manufacturers of smoking tobacco, originated and adopted the same trade-mark, and used it upon their goods manufactured at Durham. In the progress of the trial bfore the jury, the plaintiff offered in evidence a certified copy of a copyright issued to Green, which, after objection from the defendant, was admitted, and it was after-wards ruled out, and the jury directed to disregard it.

The defendant’s counsel proposed to ask him, what interest, if any, he, the witness, had in the trade-mark at the time when he was manufacturing tobacco at Rowan Mills? This inquiry was not allowed, for the same reason, that the interest, as the witness had already stated, was acquired in association with Green, and grew out of a transaction between them.

A similar question, when was the trade-mark originated?” was, upon the same grounds, not permitted to be answered by the witness.

These rulings form the subject of the three exceptions mentioned, and, we think, come clearly within the inhibitions of the statute, and the evidence was properly excluded, as coming from a party to the transaction with one under whom the plaintiff claims.

5. The next exception was to the introduction, by the plaintiff, of a certified copy of the defendant’s application for registration of his claimed trade-mark, admitted to be in due form, and resisted on the ground that the law under which it had been filed was unconstitutional. It was permitted to be read as a declaration of the defendant. The defendant said, in his further examination, that he applied for such registration, and that the paper referred to, and handed the witness, was his said application; but he did not remember that he claimed an exclusive right in the trade-mark. The *153 plaintiff then inquired, was there not a proceeding or declaration interfering after you filed the application? Upon objection made and overruled, the witness answered, “Yes.”

It is to be observed that the objection is not to the character or quality of the evidence, as secondary, and not admissible under section 4940, of the Revised Statutes of the United States, but because the Constitution allows no such exclusive right to the use of a trade-mark to be thus secured to the inventor. Regarding the copy as if the_ original had been produced, and to this, and for the reason that it was not primary evidence, objection to'be available should then have been made; Bridgers v. Bridgers, 69 N. C., 451; Gidney v. Moore, 86 N. C., 485; State v. Kemp, 87 N. C., 538, and put upon proper ground.

The answer to the last question was sought, to show that there had not been a quiet acquiescence in the validity of the defendant’s claim to ownership of the trade-mark, and a submission to it. Offered for such purpose, we find no just ground for exception to its reception.

7. The objection to an inquiry of the defendant, whether he had ever sued any one for an infringement of his alleged right to the trade-mark. This was followed by an answer that he had sued no one but Blackwell & Carr, and the answer was received as tending to qualify and explain his previous testimony as to his use of it, and the time and place, when and where it had been so used, and for this object was competent.

8. The inquiry put to S. A. Sharpe, a witness for defendant, as to the character of the witness Geo. F. Shepherd, whose deposition had been read, and if there were not, in his community, many hard reports in regard to his reputation, if liable to objection, is freed from it by the answer — “ I have heard of none.” Bost v. Bost, 87 N. C., 477.

The next exceptions are to instructions asked and refused, and to the instructions given to the jury.

*154 The defendant’s counsel asked the Court to charge the jury:

1. That if they find from the testimony, that the defendant was, at any time, in the open, public, and continuous use of the trade-mark in question, by placing it on packages of smoking tobacco, and placing such packages upon the market, in North Carolina and elsewhere, for the space of three years, with the knowledge of plaintiff, or of those under whom it claims before .plaintiff became their assignee, and neither plaintiff or those under whom it claims took any legal proceedings to stop or restrain defendant in the use of said trade-mark, there being during these three years no legal proceedings by defendant against plaintiff, or those under whom it claims, involving defendant’s right to so use said trade-mark, then the jury ought to find, that, as against defendant, plaintiff is not entitled to the exclusive use of said trade-mark.

2. I ask the above instructions in the same words as above, only substituting the words two years for the words three years, in the two places where they occur in No. 1, as asked above.

3. I ask the same instructions as are asked in No. 1 above, substituting the words one year for the words three years, in the two places where they occur in No. 1, as above.

4. If Nos. 1, 2 and 3, as asked above, are all refused by the Court, then I ask the instruction as asked in No. 1, substituting seven years for three years, in the two places where they occur in No. 1, as above.

5. I ask his Plonor to tell the jury, 'that if they believe the witness J. S. Carr, then he had notice in the year 1872, that defendant was using the said trade-mark on packages of smoking tobacco; said Carr was then a partner with W. T. Blackwell, under whom plaintiff claims, in the use of said trade-mark.

*155 6.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 S.E. 907, 100 N.C. 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackwells-durham-tobacco-co-v-mcelwee-nc-1888.