Charles Hansen's Laboratory, Inc. v. Kirk

12 F. Supp. 361, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1373
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 9, 1935
Docket8311
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 F. Supp. 361 (Charles Hansen's Laboratory, Inc. v. Kirk) 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
Charles Hansen's Laboratory, Inc. v. Kirk, 12 F. Supp. 361, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1373 (E.D. Pa. 1935).

Opinion

KIRKPATRICK, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity to restrain infringement of a registered trade-mark. The mark consists of the word “Junket,” and the plaintiff uses it in connection with the sale of tablets and powders, containing a preparation of rennet, for making the milk jelly dessert which is now almost universally known as junket.

The plaintiff is the largest manufacturer of this product in the country. It does business under the name of “The Junket Folks” and has spent a great deal of money in advertising, in all of which the word “junket” has been stressed, and in which it is applied indiscriminately to the product which the plaintiff sells and to the dessert which the housewife makes by its use. Examples: “Junket makes Milk into Delicious Desserts.” “Junket is Milk'—Plus.” “You’ll love Junket— served ice cold for dessert.” Again: “Junket Powder makes milk into cool, creamy desserts.” “Junket .Tablets make milk into dainty desserts.” “Chocolate Flavored Junket made yvith Junket Tablets.” It is most confusing, and it is impossible to say whether, in the plaintiff’s vocabulary, “junket” means the tablets and powders which the plaintiff sells, or the enzyme which they contain, or the dessert which the cook makes. It looks very much as though the plaintiff, having registered its mark as applied to its tablets and powders (“preparations for coagulating or curdling milk”), is attempting to build up a complete monopoly of the word and to appropriate it to its exclusive private use. At any rate, that would be the practical result if uses such as this defendant makes of it were to be restrained, as will be seen.

The defendant makes and sells a liquid rennet preparation for the same pur *362 pose. He does not call his liquid “junket,” but “Jullicum,” which word he has registered as his trade-mark. His packages and advertising, however, in substance carry the message that “Jullicum” is for use in making “Junket,” “Junket desserts,” and “jullicum junket.”

At this point it may be said that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the charge that the defendant is trying to palm off his product as that of the plaintiff, and I find that he is not doing so. Nor does he print or display the word “junket” in the manner which would be a “copy or colorable imitation” of the plaintiff’s mark. See Thaddeus Davids Co. v. Davids Mfg. Co., 233 U. S. 461, 34 S. Ct. 648, 652, 58 L. Ed. 1046, Ann. Cas. 1915B, 322.

This being so, it seems perfectly clear that the defendant does not infringe, unless the plaintiff “owns” the word—has the sole right to use it in trade to the exclusion of all others. This was undoubtedly the basis of Judge . Lacombe’s order in Hansen v. Siegel-Cooper Co. (C. C.) 106 F. 691, in which he expressly permitted the defendant in that case to sell “Anker’s Capsules for Making Junket”;, and of Judge Knox’s recent order in the Jelkwik Case (D. C.) 12 F. Supp. 296, also permitting the phrase “for making junket.” If, however, the plaintiff can sustain the broad trade-mark rights which form the real basis of this suit, then, I think, the defendant unquestionably infringes.

This brings us immediately to the question of the scope of the plaintiff’s rights, acquired by its registered trademark. It claims under two registrations, the first in 1897 under the act of March 3, 1881, 21 Stat. 502, and the second in 1922 under the Act of Feb. 20, 1905, 33 Stat. 724 (15 USCA § 81 et seq.). The, important question is whether the word “junket” was at the time of its adoption by the plaintiff a descriptive word. If it never was, the plaintiff has a technical trade-mark and would have the exclusive right to use it. If the word was descriptive and the plaintiff’s rights depend upon a secondary meaning, the registration^ might still be valid and the plaintiff would be entitled to a measure of protection but not the relief asked for against this defendant.

'As I understand the plaintiff’s position, it is this: It concedes that the word “junket” is a very old word in the English language, which, prior to the time when the plaintiff began to manufacture its tablets, had a number of different meanings. As applied to food products, it meant, says the plaintiff, curds of milk from which the whey had been removed by straining, which curds were then mixed with clotted cream and sweetened. This, however, was never called “junket” simply, but always “Devonshire junket.” The word was also used of cheese cake and more generally of any delicate food. It also referred to a drink made of cream and rennet, or whey and rennet, flavored with wine. In addition, it referred to a party or pleasure trip (in America by politicians at public expense). It never meant the dessert which we now know as junket. The plaintiff’s case is that it took this word of somewhat vague and varied meanings and applied it to something new,—the rennet ingredient which it manufactured and sold as “junket tablets”; that its advertisement and sale were so extensive that the word became definitely associated in the public mind, first with its special product and later by a natural process of transfer with the dessert which the product was designed to make, and that if the word is now in the dictionary as meaning a milk jelly dessert it is because the plaintiff put it there. Plaintiff contends that if it is true that it used an English word in an arbitrary and nondescriptive sense it is entitled to it as a trade-mark, and that it does not lose its rights merely because its own widespread sales and advertising, have caused the word to become descriptive, not only of the ingredients sold by the plaintiff but of something which the ingredient is used to make.

Assuming, without deciding, that the plaintiff’s position is sound in law, is its contention as to the facts supported by the evidence in this case? Was the word “junket,” at the time the plaintiff began to apply it to its rennet preparation, a descriptive word as denoting the dessert which it is used to make? Very likely it had never been applied to powders and tablets such as the plaintiff made, but that is unimportant. If “junket” meant the dessert, the plaintiff could not appropriate the word for its exclusive use in connection with the necessary ingredient to make it, any more than it could invest some special kind of yeast cake, christen it “bread,” and thereafter prevent *363 others from making and selling the staff of life as bread.

In view of the plaintiff’s position the time element is important. The plaintiff’s first-claimed use in America of the word as applied to its product goes back to 1878. Its first proved use was in 1887, and I think it is agreed that that would be about the period to which we must direct our inquiry as to whether the word was descriptive or not. Of course uses after that time also have a bearing upon the question because words do not acquire meanings overnight, and the whole history of this word must be considered together.

I shall not attempt to detail all the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
12 F. Supp. 361, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-hansens-laboratory-inc-v-kirk-paed-1935.