Bourjois, Inc. v. Hermida Laboratories, Inc.

106 F.2d 174, 42 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 402, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2965
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 9, 1939
Docket6950
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 106 F.2d 174 (Bourjois, Inc. v. Hermida Laboratories, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bourjois, Inc. v. Hermida Laboratories, Inc., 106 F.2d 174, 42 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 402, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2965 (3d Cir. 1939).

Opinion

CLARK, Circuit Judge.

, The commercial activities of the present defendant do not leave a very pleasant taste. It is a corporation formed by one Straus, the manager of a 5, 10, and 250 store at Linden, N. J. The purpose of its creation under the confidence inspiring name, Hermida-Laboratories, was the distribution for profit of plaintiff’s feminine face powder. One must feel that the tragic struggle of the human race against its inevitable end is poignantly limned by its pathetic reliance on symbols sounding in cure. Although the purpose here is the alleviation of appearance rather than of disease and caters to vanity rather than fear, the central theme is the same and the offense thereby, greater.

Straus approached the officers of the plaintiff, he says, with the suggestion that their face powder should be sold in smaller and cheaper boxes. He generously offered to carry out his own idea and be the distributor. The plaintiff asserts that this scheme had already been under consideration by them and that anyway they were not “having any” of Hermida Laboratories. They accordingly proceeded with their own plans and arranged with their own agents to pack and sell the smaller packages.

Everyone is agreed that the “law of the case” must be sought in the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Prestonettes, Inc. v. Coty, 264 U.S. 359, 44 S.Ct. 350, 68 L.Ed. 731. There the court reversed the holding of the court below (2nd Circuit Court of Appeals, speaking. through Rogers, J., 285 F. 501). In that case Mr, Justice Holmes lent the prestige of his great name to a doctrine that does not appeal very greatly to the sense of fairness of the ordinary man arid that has been critically analyzed by experts in the field, Handler and Pickett,. Trade-Marks and Trade Names — An Analysis and Synthesis, 30 Columbia Law Review. 168, 173; Derenberg, Sale of Reconditioned Articles as Trade Mark Infringement, 32 Bulletin of United States Trade Mark Association (New Series) 15; cf. Wertheimer, Does the Trade Mark Right End'With-the'Sale of the- Goods?, 17 Bulletin- of United States Trade Mark Association (New Series) 153. The Prestonettes case per7 mitted the descriptive use of a “mark”, already permitted in England, Tallbot. v. Wille, 3 R.P.C. 266, Stone v. Steelace Co., 45 R.P.C. 127, and went further by allowing it to be stamped upon the defendant’s goods. The plaintiff had contended-for and been granted by the Circuit Court of Appeals the naked.-right to prohibit the defendant from -making even a qualified reference to the plaintiff’s mark. Mr. - Justice Holmes permitted the qualification under the condition and the sole condition that it not be accompanied by misrepresentations calculated to have the same effect as a denominative use of the mark, namely, the passing off of defendants’ goods as the plaintiff’s. Messrs. Handler and Pickett, whose article is cited above, sum up their conclusions on this and similar cases in these words:

“Where the plaintiff has adopted a fanciful mark and the defendant makes denominative use of descriptive or generic *175 language which is confusingly similar, the scope of relief should depend upon the commercial necessity for such usage by the defendant, although not all the cases recognize this. 3fí jj{ % # í{*

“Eliminating all false comparisons, the trade-mark and the trade name cases seem to present results which are profoundly alike. The scope of relief depends in both cases upon the defendant’s necessity and not upon the etymological character of the plaintiff’s mark. The question of monopoly is completely beside the point. Justification in plenty seems to exist, therefore, for the statement which has now become a meaningless fetish with so many courts, that trade-mark law is but one branch of the law of unfair competition”. 30 Columbia Law Review 168, 189, 191.

Since the plaintiff, unlike some counsel who have been before us, does not ask to reverse the United States Supreme Court, it behooves us rather to apply their ruling. We must say that we do not find much difficulty in doing so. The label, like the play, being the thing, we set out the respective labels:

Bourjois Prestonettes Inc.

Evening In Paris Not Connected

Face Powder With Coty States

Repacked by Hermida Laboratories That The Contents Are Coty’s L’Origan Independently

Wholly Independent Of Bourjois Rebottled In New York

Defendant’s Label Prestonettes’ Label

This deadly parallel is, we think, fatal to the contention that defendant’s label is within the ruling of the Coty case. Its inscription is hardly a statement of fact: it is rather the printing of plaintiff’s trademarked appellations with a participial appendage. Grammatically the description is of plaintiff’s product, the powder, not defendant’s, the package. “Independently” is supplanted by “independent of” thus changing a reasonably clear characterization of the repacking into an ambiguous reference to corporate structure. The place of repacking and the salient phrase “not connected with” are omitted entirely. “Bourjois” is stressed in the layout, appearing on a single line at the top and bottom of the inscription. In short it is obvious that all the numerous points of difference between defendant’s label and the Prestonettes label tend to obscure the truth — defendant’s unauthorized repacking —and to afford a way of making plaintiff’s marks “stand out”. There can be no question then, but that plaintiff is entitled to insist upon the exact wording of the Prestonettes label as a minimum. He wishes, however, to go further in the direction of explicitness and asks -for an additional sentence. This sentence would make the label read: “Hermida Laboratories, Inc., not connected with Bourjois, Inc., states that the contents are Bourjois’ Evening in Paris Face Powder, independently repacked by Hermida Laboratories, Inc., at Linden, New Jersey, without the authority or consent of Bourjois which assumes no responsibility for the contents,” Record, p. IS, and further asks that it be placed on the bottom of the package and that Hermida Laboratories remain in solitary glory on the top of the package.

We think that the ethics of honorable merchandising support this request. More than that, or should there be a more than that, we conceive that law as laid down by the Supreme Court authorizes it. The high- court refused prohibition and permitted qualification. It approved a particular qualification drafted by a particular United States District Judge (or approved by him after drafting.by the legalists). It did not, and of course could not, say that such must be for all time the standard qualification in this and analogous cases. In fact, we are sure that in their desire for truth in trade it would have welcomed some such suggestion as that which emanates from the learned counsel now before us. It is surely an amplification and arrangement in the -interest of frankness. It surely meets the “commercial necessity for such usage” of the learned authors earlier cited.

We say it meets that commercial necessity unless it be that suspicions so freely expressed both in the paper books and at the argument are well founded. Those suspicions, and for the purposes of this opinion we do not further describe them, recast in our own feeble language, run along these lines. The essence of defendant’s scheme is the economic anomaly of buying dear and selling dearer.

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Bluebook (online)
106 F.2d 174, 42 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 402, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bourjois-inc-v-hermida-laboratories-inc-ca3-1939.