Chester H. Roth, Inc. v. Esquire, Inc.

186 F.2d 11, 88 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 140, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 4076
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 17, 1951
Docket21650_1
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 186 F.2d 11 (Chester H. Roth, Inc. v. Esquire, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chester H. Roth, Inc. v. Esquire, Inc., 186 F.2d 11, 88 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 140, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 4076 (2d Cir. 1951).

Opinion

CHASE, Circuit Judge.

These parties.disagreed as to the validity and effect of a contract, executed on July 21, 1938, by their immediate predecessprs, governing their joint use and protection of a trade-mark. The plaintiff, a New York corporation, brought this suit against the defendant, a Delaware corporation, on January 21, 1947, for a declaratory judgment to establish that it was not bound by the contract; the defendant sought by counterclaim to have the plaintiff enjoined from using the mark at all. Both parties have appealed from the judgment entered.

The plaintiff owns, through succession from its predecessors, the trade-mark “Esquire,” registered on May 15, 1923 under the 1905 Act, now 15 U.S.C.A. § T051 et *13 seq., and renewed on May 15, 1943, for hosiery, scarfs, neckties, and mufflers. The defendant also owns, through a predecessor, the trade-mark “Esquire,” registered under the 1905 Act on June 5, 1934, for a monthly magazine. These parties succeeded to the respective rights of their predecessors under the contract the latter had executed on July 21, 1938, setting forth their agreement as to the use of the trademark and providing for their cooperation to prevent others from infringing or from competing unfairly with it. This contract superseded another to like effect which one of the same parties and the predecessor of the other had previously entered into, and was executed to make sure that the new parties would be bound as the old had been. Hereinafter whenever the contract is mentioned, that of July 21, 1938, is meant, and by plaintiff or defendant is meant such party and its predecessor or predecessors, indiscriminately, unless the context otherwise indicates.

The contract was executed in the light of the following facts and circumstances. Nickels & Lauber, a predecessor of plaintiff, was a Pennsylvania corporation which was organized in 1917 and in that year began to manufacture and sell in Philadelphia men’s high grade full-fashioned socks. It adopted the trade name “Esquire” for them in 1922 and secured the registered trade-mark, as above noted, the following year. From then until 1938 it advertised these socks nationally in a modest way and built up a fair national distribution of them. The boxes in which the socks were packed and delivered to retailers were never marked with the manufacturer’s name. Its name appeared as the manufacturer in its own advertising but retailers to whom the socks were sold advertised them by trade-mark without the manufacturer’s name. The advertisements usually displayed a rather unique drawing of a ■man’s head which has been, properly enough, called a “Pickwickian” figure.

The defendant’s predecessor, Esquire Publishing Co., began in 1933 to publish a monthly magazine called “Esquire,” subtitled “The Magazine for Men,” which at first was confined to men’s fashions and distributed to men’s stores. But it soon was expanded in scope to include matter relating to women’s wear and topics of general interest, though from ten to fifteen per cent of it continued to be devoted to men’s fashions. It contained a considerable quantity of advertising of which about half was of men’s wearing apparel. Its distribution became general and extensive and it acquired a wide and favorable reputation as an authority on men’s fashions.

Until late in 1934, the defendant knew nothing about any trade-mark “Esquire” which Nickels & Lauber had. It did nothing about it until the summer of 1935, when the secretary of Nickels & Lauber informed it that the magazine had so built up the name “Esquire” in connection with men’s wear that the plaintiff was having difficulty protecting its mark of that name. It was suggested to the defendant that the two cooperate to protect their respective rights in the mark and this led to the execution of the forerunner of the contract in suit.

On July 7, 1938 a New York corporation called Nickels & Lauber, Inc., hereinafter to be called Nickels, which was a wholly owned subsidiary of Mock, Judson, Voeh-ringer Company and organized for such purpose, bought the entire business of the original Nickels & Lauber of Pennsylvania, including its- hosiery inventory, machinery, supplies, good-will, and the trade-mark “Esquire.” The seller was then dissolved.

It was this change of parties in interest which brought about the execution of the contract in suit two weeks later. That contract set forth the ownership and use of the registered trade-mark “Esquire” by the respective parties and asserted that “numerous persons, firms and corporations” had, since the magazine “Esquire” appeared, adopted the name “Esquire” as a trademark, style mark, or trade name, in connection with various articles and businesses in an attempt to trade upon and profit by the good name and reputation of the magazine. It also asserted that in many instances such persons also infringed the trademark rights of Nickels and were guilty of unfair competition. Further asserting that it was for “the interests of both parties *14 that the unauthorized and unfair uses of the word ‘Esquire’ be enjoined,’’ and that they desired to cooperate to that end and “also to define their respective rights in and to the word ‘Esquire’ as a trade mark,” they agreed, as the trial court found, as follows:

“(1) Nickels agrees not to use its trademark ‘in any manner other than as shown on the labels, * * * to use said trademark solely and only in connection with men’s hosiery, * * * men’s knitted neckwear, men’s scarfs and men’s mufflers, * * * never to extend the use of its said trade-mark to any other articles or business, and never to use the word “Esquire” as part of its corporate name,’ and ‘to use its best efforts to prevent any likelihood of confusion between its said products bearing its said trade-mark, and the products or services sold’ by the defendant.

"(2) Nickels agrees, upon request of the defendant, to file suits for an injunction,, accounting and damages against any person using the word ‘Esquire,’ or any word confusingly similar thereto, as a trade-mark in connection with any article of men’s Wea.r, or as a name under which to do a men’s wear business, and to file Patent Office proceedings to prevent the registration of ‘Esquire’ for goods of the same class to which Nickels applies its trade-mark, or to cancel any registrations that may have been obtained, and the defendant agrees to pay all the costs of prosecuting such suits or proceedings, including any costs or damages that may be assessed against Nickels, and also including the fee of Nickels’ attorneys, provided that the defendant shall have the right to select them.

“(3) Inasmuch as Nickels used the word ‘Esquire,’ together with the (Pickwickian) illustration, for its products before the defendant began to use the word, the defendant agrees not to interfere with its use by Nickels upon its products in the manner shown by the labels, and Nickels agrees not to interfere with the right of the defendant ‘to use the word “Esquire” as its corporate name, to identify itself as an authority in connection with articles of interest to men, as a trade-mark for its magazine, * * * and also in any manner to indicate, that it approves, sponsors, vouches for or designs any articles of interest to men, including the articles upon which Nickels uses its said trade-mark.’

“(4) The agreements shall be binding upon the successors and assigns of the parties.” -

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 F.2d 11, 88 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 140, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 4076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chester-h-roth-inc-v-esquire-inc-ca2-1951.