Candee, Swan & Co. v. Deere & Co.

54 Ill. 439
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 54 Ill. 439 (Candee, Swan & Co. v. Deere & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Candee, Swan & Co. v. Deere & Co., 54 Ill. 439 (Ill. 1870).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in chancery, exhibited in the Rock Island circuit court by John Deere and others, claiming to be manufacturers of plows at Moline, in this State, known by the trade and by the community, wherever sold and used, as the “ Moline Plow,” and against Candee, Swan & Co. other manufacturers of the same implement, at the same place. The object of the bill was to enjoin defendants from pirating their trade mark, to their injury, and from making, branding and selling their plows as the Moline plow, and for an account.

The bill alleges that complainants have, at great expense, and through the large experience, skill and ingenuity, and untiring energy and industry of John Deere, brought their plows to great perfection, and have been made acceptable to the public; that they are made of various qualities, sizes and patterns, and distinguished by different names, letters and numbers, originated and applied to them respectively and exclusively, and placed upon their plows by John Deere and his associates; that they are sold, used and known by the trade and community, wherever they are sold and used, as the “ Moline Plow,” and not by the name and style of the manufacturers, and are so advertised in newspapers, circulars, price lists and agricultural works and periodicals, and by their agents and others selling them, and that, upon all of their plows, there is branded or stenciled upon the sides of the beam, under the names of the manufacturers, or some one of them, which differed at different times, in a straight horizontal line, and in plain capital letters, the words “ Moline, Ill.;” that, by this name, the Moline plow has acquired a national reputation, and is in great favor, and commands a ready sale at a fair profit. It is further alleged, that until the last year, no other plows than those manufactured by complainants, were ever branded, stenciled, advertised, sold, used, or in any manner known as the “ Moline Plow,” nor until the last year was there any other plow factory at Moline than that with which John Deere has been connected; and complainants say that they have succeeded to all the rights that ever pertained to John Deere and his associates in this manufacture and business, and hoped they might continue to have and enjoy the benefits and advantages of the reputation so acquired, and of the name and trade marks so given and used, exclusively, and without molestation. The bill then charges, that the defendants, sometime in 1866, commenced the business of manufacturing plows at Moline, and envying the reputation of the plows made by complainants, and their business and prosperity based thereon, and wrongfully intending and fraudulently contriving to take advantage of the same, to their own profit, and to the injury of complainants in their business, and of their agents and customers, and to deceive and impose upon the community in that behalf, have hitherto, and are now, manufacturing plows of different sizes and patterns, as near like those manufactured and sold by complainants in size, pattern and finish, as they could or can, and have branded and stenciled them on the sides of the beams, under the name of Candee, Swan & Co. in a straight horizontal line, and in plain capital letters, the words “ Moline, Ill.” in all respects as the same are branded or stenciled on complain- ■ ants’ plows, and have advertised them in their circulars and price lists as the “ Moline Plow,” precisely as those manufactured by complainants, and distinguish the different sizes and patterns of the plows of their make, corresponding with those of complainants, and advertise them to the trade and community by the same names, letters and numbers, respectively, as complainants; complainants then show their trade circular or price list, used and circulated by them since its date, viz.: July 1, 1866, and also make an exhibit of defendants’ trade circular or price list, dated August 1, 1866, and charge that it was fraudulently intended by defendants, through its similarity in general, and in detail, to that published by complainants, to deceive buyers, and to affix to defendants’ manufacture the reputation earned and long enjoyed by complainants, and thereby secure a sale as ready and profitable as complainants’ plows have met with, and this to the injury of complainants; and they charge that defendants, by this wrongful and fraudulent imitation and use of the trade marks of complainants, have already greatly injured them in their business, and are preparing further to injure them in the same way.

The prayer is for an answer, not. under oath, and for an injunction “ wholly enjoining and restraining defendants from advertising, using or imitating the trade marks, names, letters, numbers, figures and words of complainants, or any or either of them, or from advertising, representing, or in any manner calling or designating the plows, or any of them, manufactured by defendants, the (Moline Plow/ and from branding, stenciling, or in any manner marking or placing thereon the words ‘ Moline, Ill.’ in imitation of those words as placed on complainants’ plows, or otherwise.” They also pray that an account may be taken of the amount of damages sustained by complainants, by means of these several wrongful acts of the defendants, and for general relief.

The defendants put in a joint and several answer to the bill, in which they allege that Moline, prior to the advent of John Deere, was a manufacturing town, where various kinds of manufacture were then made; that contemporaneous with Deere’s coming to the place, and commenced making plows, there were two plow makers there, namely: one Berry and one Kinsey, whose plows were known as the “ Moline plows,” and were marked, branded or stenciled with the maker’s name, in a circular form, on the beam, and “ Moline, Ill.” in a straight line underneath; that among the trade, and with people who buy and sell them, all the manufactures of Moline pass by the name of Moline—as Moline plows, Moline buckets, tubs and pails, Moline fanning mills, Moline pumps, etc., and was so done before John Deere came to the place, but that no manufacturer-has ever undertaken to assume to himself or his business the name of “Moline, Ill.” as a trade mark; that the name of the town has been always used, and now is used, by all its manufacturers, not as a trade mark, but to show the place where the article was made; that when Deere came to Moline and made plows in company with Tate, they made a plow called by the public the “ Grand De Tour Plow;” that Berry’s plows were called the “ Moline Plow,” a part of which Deere and Tate adopted, that is, the wrought iron land side.

They deny that it is through the skill of John Deere and his energy the plow has been improved, or that it is preferable to those manufactured at other establishments, and that the improvements made in the name of Deere are due to the skill, experience and ingenuity of Robert Tate and one of the defendants, Fryburg; they deny that Deere originated the system of numbers and letters and names placed on their plows, and insist that they are used to designate particular qualities of goods, and that it has been common to all manufacturers; that the term “ clipper,” as applied to a plow, was borrowed by Deere and Tate from a plow brought to Moline by one Wheelock, made by Price, of Chicago; that the numbers A 1 X 1, etc. marked on Deere’s plows, are so marked to designate their quality, and were borrowed by him, and copied by Mr.

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54 Ill. 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/candee-swan-co-v-deere-co-ill-1870.