Campana Corporation v. Glanzberg

10 F. Supp. 876, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1809
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 8, 1935
Docket7877
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 F. Supp. 876 (Campana Corporation v. Glanzberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campana Corporation v. Glanzberg, 10 F. Supp. 876, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1809 (E.D. Pa. 1935).

Opinion

KIRKPATRICK, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity to restrain trademark infringement.

The trade-mark claimed was registered November 1, 1927, and consists of the words “Italian Balm.” The plaintiff’s second and third registrations are unimportant in this suit. The defendant originally used a label sufficiently like the plaintiff’s to be objectionable- as constituting unfair competition, but has discontinued it, and that phase of the case need not be considered. The defendant sells its product under the name of “Madame Duval’s Italian Balm,” and there is no evidence, apart from the use of the words “Italian Balm,” that the defendant is now trying to sell its goods as the plaintiff’s.

At the hearing, the defendant offered no evidence, and the case therefore turns entirely upon the extent of the plaintiff’s rights. ■

Some time prior to the year 1885 a druggist in Toronto, Canada, began to manufacture and áell a hand lotion which he called Campana’s Italian Balm. Some sales were made in the United States. The lotion continued to be sold under that name by him and his successors in a comparatively small way until 1926, when the plaintiff acquired the formula and all rights to the trade-mark, trade-name, or goodwill, and began to manufacture the product at- Batavia, 111., at *877 which place the business has been carried on to the present time.

The plaintiff has spent an enormous amount of money in advertising its product, and induced the public to buy in great quantities at high prices. The plaintiffs advertising has been carried on through newspapers, magazines, and trade journals, displays by stores and distributors and radio programs. The printed matter uses the name “Campana’s” in connection with the trade-mark. The radio program, which is probably the most important part, does so only in part.

As a result of the plaintiffs advertising and safes, the words “Italian Balm” have acquired a secondary meaning, and are now arid have been for some time past widely associated in the mind of the public with the plaintiff’s product.

When the plaintiff registered its trademark in 1927, it had been in actual and exclusive use by the plaintiffs predecessors for more than ten years preceding February 20, 1905. It was properly registered under the ten-year clause of the Trade-Mark Act of 1905, as amended, 15 USCA § 85, and is entitled to the protection of the act and, unless the mark is invalid because deceptive, the rights acquired by the plaintiff upon its registration are broad enough to support an injunction against the defendant in this case.

In Thaddeus Davids Co. v. Davids Manufacturing Co., 233 U. S. 461, 34 S. Ct. 648, 652, 58 L. Ed. 1046, Ann. Cas. 1915B, 322, the Supreme Court very fully and carefully outlined exactly what rights the registrant of a trade-mark under the ten-year clause of the Act of 1905 acquires. That clause removed, in certain cases, the obstacle which had theretofore existed in the case of geographical names, but marks of that class did not by registration acquire the status of a technical trade-mark and carry full and exclusive rights with them. They still depended for their validity and scope upon the secondary meaning doctrine, although, in some particulars, these rights were somewhat broadened. Speaking of stich marks, the court said: “Their exclusive use as trademarks for the stated period was deemed, in the judgment of Congress, a sufficient assurance that they had acquired a secondary meaning as the designation of the origin or ownership of the merchandise to which they were affixed. And it was manifestly in this limited character only that they received statutory recognition, and, on registration, became entitled to protection under the act.” Amplifying, the court pointed out that geographical names though registered did not carry a monopoly or exclusive right. For example, they might be still used by persons whose goods actually were made at the place which was the origin of the name. So, in the present case, it seems clear that the plaintiff would not be entitled to restrain the use of the word as applied to lotions manufactured in Italy or, possibly, of Italian ingredients or by Italian methods.

On the other hand, the court said: “This is not to say that, in this view, the case becomes one simply of unfair competition * * * for, * * * still the right to be protected against an unwarranted use of the registered mark has been made a statutory right, and the courts of the United States have been vested with jurisdiction of suits for infringement, regardless of diversity of citizenship.” In other words, there may be unwarranted uses of this type of trade-mark or trade-name which do not involve any unfair competition, fraud on the public, or palming off, which will be restrained simply because of the plaintiff’s superior right. Such a use I conceive to be that made by the defendant in the instant case; that is, a use by a person whose product is in no way connected with the place which is the origin of the trade-mark.

This conclusion does not appear to be in conflict with the opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in Apollo Brothers, Inc., v. Perkins, 207 F. 530. That case did not involve a registered mark under the ten-year clause, and the rights acquired by such registration were not considered. All it holds is that in an ordinary secondary meaning case, unfair competition must be shown. In the Davids Case there was little if any similarity in dress beyond the use of the name itself in the same position on the labels as the plaintiff’s. This the court held “constituted a ‘colorable imitation’ within the meaning of the act.” At all events, the Davids Case was decided after the Apollo Brothers Case. Whether the Supreme Court would have held that, in order to restrain infringement of an unregistered geographical secondary meaning mark, unfair competition would have to be shown need not be considered. What the Supreme Court did hold was registration under the act gave that margin of protection.

*878 These principles would unquestionably entitle the plaintiff in this case to an injunction if its product were really “Italian,” in the sense of having been manufactured in Italy. I should think too that there would be no doubt about it. if it were made of ingredients imported from Italy (Perkins v. Apollo Brothers, Inc., 197 F. 476, opinion of District Court. Reversed solely because no unfair competition was shown), or possibly if it were made by methods or processes known to be of Italian origin. The fact is, however, that the plaintiff’s Italian Balm is not and never was made in Italy, and has nothing to do with that country in any way. There is a vague suggestion based on hearsay that it was invented by an Italian doctor, but there is no competent evidence whatever upon this point one way or the other. The real point of the defendant’s case is that the word “Italian” is false and misleading, and, therefore, in spite of its registration, invalid as a trade-mark, and not capable of creating any rights at all.

A large number of decisions involving the use of geographical trade-marks for products which have no connection with the place of the name have been cited. Although at first these cases appear confusing, as a matter of fact, there is not much conflict.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Supp. 876, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campana-corporation-v-glanzberg-paed-1935.