Brown Chemical Co. v. Myer

31 F. 453, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2625
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri
DecidedJune 30, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 F. 453 (Brown Chemical Co. v. Myer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown Chemical Co. v. Myer, 31 F. 453, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2625 (circtedmo 1887).

Opinion

Thayer, J.

This case has been elaborately argued. Under the pleadings and proofs, I regard it as, in substance, a proceeding to restrain unfair competition in trade. It is not a case of infringement of a trade-mark, because the testimony does not show that defendant has appropriated any symbol, device, or word, first adopted by complainant, which can be regarded as constituting a trade-mark. Since the year 1879 it appears that complainant has been manufacturing a remedy known and labeled as “Brown’s Iron Bitters,” at Baltimore, Maryland. Defendants, who are wholesale druggists at St. Louis, Missouri, for some time past have purchased of Lincoln & Co., of Little Rock, Arkansas, aud have been selling in the usual course of business, an article known as “Brown’s Iron Tonic.” Brown’s Iron Bitters was originally compounded by a man by the name of Brown, of Baltimore, Maryland, from whom the complainant corporation takes its name and its title to the recipe for the bitters. A man by the name of E. L. Brown, re[454]*454siding at Little Rock, Arkansas, and at the time a member of the firm of Lincoln & Co., devised the formula for “Brown’s Iron Tonic” in the fall of 1881, and gave the medicine his name. Brown’s Iron Tonic does not appear to have entered the market extensively until the spring of 1882, at which time complainant had spent many thousand dollars in advertising Brown’s Iron Bitters, and -the article was in great demand.

Complainant's counsel docs not, in express terms, assert that the words “Brown’s Iron Bitters,” either singly or collectively, constitute a trademark. Such a proposition, if asserted, could not be maintained, as it goes without saying that the words “Iron Bitters” arc merely descriptive of an ingredient and quality of the article, and for that reason cannot be appropriated as a trade-mark. Canal Co. v. Clark, 13 Wall. 323; Amoskeag Manuf'g Co. v. Spear, 2 Sandf. 599; Raggett v. Findlater, L. R. 17 Eq. 29; Manufacturing Co. v. Trainer, 101 U. S. 54.

The name “Brown,” prefixed to “Iron Bitters,” is likewise an ordinary patronymic, (and a very common one withal,) and cannot be exclusively appropriated as a trade-mark by any one person of that name, although a man may be restrained from placing his own name even on articles of his own manufacture, under such circumstances and with such devices as indicate to the public that they are the goods of some other person of that name. In such cases,.however, an injunction issues not because the name of the person is a trade-mark, but because such conduct is fraudulent. Croft v. Day, 7 Beav. 84; Holloway v. Holloway, 13 Beav. 209; Wotherspoon v. Currie, L. R. 5 H. L. 508; McLean v. Fleming, 96 U. S. 251; Levy v. Walker, 10 Ch. Div. 447; Seixo v. Provezende, L. R. 1 Ch. 195; William Rogers Manuf'g Co. v. Rogers & S. Manuf'g Co., 11 Fed. Rep. 499.

It may be furthermore stated in this connection that the proprietors of “Brown’s Iron Tonic” do not offer the article to the public in bottles or wrappers that bear any resemblance to complainant’s bottles and wrappers. On the argument of the case it was conceded that the respective bottles and wrappers were unlike, in form, shape, and color, and that no one acquainted with either remedy, as prepared for sale, would be liable to mistake it for the other; aiid from the specimens exhibited at the hearing so much, at least, was apparent to the court. As there does not appear, then, to have been an iniringement of a trade-mark, and as complainant’s bottles, wrappers, etc., have not been imitated so as to deceive the eye of any one who is casually acquainted with the appearance of “Brown’s Iron Bitters,” as that medicine is put upon the market, it is obvious that complainant’s righ t to relief (if such right exists) rests upon rather narrow grounds. The right must be predicated solely on the assumption that the words “Brown’s Iron Tonic” so nearly resemble the words “Brown’s Iron Bitters” in sound that an ordinary mind would not note the difference; and that the use of the former words by Lincoln & Co., and by the defendants, tends to deceive persons who have become acquainted with the reputation of complainant’s bitters, but are not familiar with the outward appearance of the packages in which they are contained.

[455]*455Without stopping to determine at this point whether it is true, as assumed, that the words “Brown’s Iron Tonic” do deceive persons who are only acquainted with the reputation of complainant’s bitters, and without stopping to determine the extent of such deception, if any, it is proper to inquire, in the first instance, whether a court of equity can lawfully enjoin the use of the words “Brown’s Iron Tonic,” or compel the use of other words in their stead, on the narrow ground above indicated. That is to say, the legal proposition involved is whether one manufacturer of a patent medicine can ho enjoined from using certain words on his wrappers merely because they are similar in sound to words which have previously been appropriated by some other manufacturer, the words themselves in both instances being truly descriptive of an ingredient and quality of the medicine, and of the person who originally compounded the same, and the packages to which they are applied being totally unlike in outward appearance. After a careful analysis of the various decisions ou the subject, the court has reached the conclusion tha1 the foregoing proposition must be decided in the negative. None of the cases, in my judgment, warrant the assumption that a man may he enjoined from giving his own name to a medicine or other article of which he is in good faith the manufacturer, although the result may be to confound the article to some extent in the public mind with a similar article previously manufactured by some other person of the same name, unless the use of his own name is merely colorable, and is accompanied with some artifice calculated to further the deception and mislead the public.

In the case of Wotherspoon v. Carrie, supra, defendant was enjoined from using the word “'Gleniield” on his starch, although the same was manufactured at “ Gleniield.” But it appeared that defendant had located his establishment at that place merely to acquire a colorable rigid to the name “Glenfield,” and that by so doing he deceived the public into the belief that his starch was manufactured by complainants, who had previously manufactured starch at Gleniield, and by that name had built up a great reputation for their goods.

In the case of Lee v. Haley, L. R. 5 Ch. 155, the defendant was enjoined from using the words “Pall Hall Guinea Coal Co.,” although he did business in Pall Mall street, and although there were other guinea coal companies in London. It appeared in that case, however, that defendant had previously been manager for the plaintiffs, who for a series of years carried on the coal trade in Pall Mall under the name of the “Guinea. Coal Co.,” and were frequently called the “Pall Mall Guinea Coal Co.”

The case of Seixo v. Provezende, supra, is of the same character.

Those cases certainly carry the law invoked by the complainant as far as any cases that can be found, but it is manifest that the principle involved in those decisions would not warrant an injunction in the case now under consideration. In the present case the word “Brown.” (which forms the chief subject of contention,) as employed by Lincoln & Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
31 F. 453, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-chemical-co-v-myer-circtedmo-1887.