Cleveland Stone Co. v. Wallace

52 F. 431, 1892 U.S. App. LEXIS 1919
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan
DecidedMay 2, 1892
DocketNo. 3,289
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 52 F. 431 (Cleveland Stone Co. v. Wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland Stone Co. v. Wallace, 52 F. 431, 1892 U.S. App. LEXIS 1919 (circtedmi 1892).

Opinion

Swan, District Judge.

This is a motion for an injunction to restrain the defendants from the selling and offering for sale seythe stones under certain names and labels which are claimed by plaintiff as trade-marks. The plaintiff is a corporation organized in 1886 under the laws of Ohio, and since that date has been, and still is, engaged in the manufacture of seythe stones, whetstones, and grindstones. Its quarries and factories .are situate at and near Grindstone City, Mich. Upon its organization in 1886 it purchased the quarries, factories, and plant at Grindstone '«City, and the good will of Worthington & Sons, who had carried on business there for 15 years, or more. On the 23d of January, 1890, plaintiff bought the quarries, plant, business, good will, and entire property of the Lake Huron Stone Company, at Grindstone City, where the latter company had been quarrying and manufacturing grind and scythe stones since 1869. The Lake Huron Stone Company and Worthington & Sons, up to the time of said sales to complainant, had for [432]*432many years made, among other brands of scythe and whet stones, the “Diamond,” “Western Red Ends,” “Quinnebog,” “Star,” “Clear Grit,” and “Lake Huron,” and others, which had taken well with the trade, and were widely known as the product of the Grindstone City quarries, which stood well in the esteem of the western trade. For some years plaintiff’s vendors, the Lake Huron Stone Company and Worthington & Sons, had by agreement made and sold certain styles of scythe and whet stones under the same trade-mark or designation, except that the labels of each firm, which were in all other respects fac similes, truly stated the name of the manufacturer; as, for example, Worthington & Sons made and sold scythe and whet .stones under the name “Quinnebog,” but labeled as the manufacture of Worthington & Sons, instead of “Lake Huron Stone Co.,” which was the originator and owner of that trade-mark. ■ In like manner, the Lake Huron Stone Company labeled as “Western Red Ends” certain patterns of their manufacturers, similar in size, form, and appearance to those of that name made by Worthington & Sons, designating themselves on the labels (which were otherwise identical) as the makers, instead of Worthington & Sons. It also appears that in 1870 these two firms formed a pool or association at Chicago, 111., to supply the western markets, under the name of the “Western Grindstone Company.” This association continued until 1886, when plaintiff, as stated, bought out Worthington & Sons. The Western Grindstone Company had its warehouses at Chicago, and there received the products of the quarries of its two constituent firms, and filled the orders of its customers equally from the stones supplied by each, and used as trade names on the scythe and whet stones the words “Star,” “Clear Grit,” “Lake Huron,” “Quinnebog,” and other marks or names peculiar to each subordinate concern, or common to both, though for a time varying the form and color of the labels from those employed by the makers. Later in its history the Western Grindstone Company adopted labels on these various styles and patterns, designating either Worthington & Sons or the Lake Huron Stone Company as makers, in addition to its own name. In January, 1883, the Lake Huron Stone Company, Worthington & Sons, J. J. McDermott .& Co., of Ohio, and the Berea Stone Company, of Ohio, united to form a pool under the name of the Berea & Huron Stone Company, and under that name catalogued and offered for sale the various brands and patterns of scythe and whet stones claimed in the bill to be the trade-marks, brands, and patterns of- complainant. This pool continued until 1886, when it was dissolved by the sale by Worthington & Sons to complainant. The affidavits also show that Cooper, Grevey & Co., the predecessors in business of Worthington & Sons, had, in 1870, made and sold scythestones of like patterns under similiar label^'and of the same names with these made by the Lake Huron Stone Company, without objection by the latter. Since 1886, however, no person, firm, or corporation other than complainant and the Lake Huron Stone Company claimed, used, or-simulated the labels, names, or trade-marks here in [433]*433controversy, and this is admitted hy the answer. They preserved the general style and appearance of the label now in use by plaintiff, including the names applied to their various patterns of scythe and whet stones, and those names and labels, thus applied, have been known and associated to the trade for many years.

There was at one time a stone known to the eastern trade as “Quinnebaug,” made from a Connecticut quarry, which was exhausted some 80 years. The name consequently fell into disuse, and at the time of its adoption by the Lake Huron Stone Company, in 1869 or 1870, there had not been for many years a stone known to the trade by that name, though some four or five years later brands known as “ Premium Quinnebaug,” and “Extra Quinnebaug,” made from stone of obviously different character, formation, and color, were introduced into the eastern markets. The eastern “Quinnebaug” referred to were also marked by labels bearing no resemblance to those used by plaintiff and its predecessors. So far as appears from the affidavits read on the hearing of this-motion, the Lake Huron Stone Company, and the Cleveland Stone Company, as the vendee of Worthington & Sons, have used the names'“Quinnebog,” “Star,” “Diamond,” “Clear Grit,” “Lake Huron,” and “Western Red Ends” without interference by competitors in business, certainly since 1886, and the first-named company and Worthington & Sons were the only claimants of those trade-marks and labels for 15 years before that date.

The affidavit of Robert Wallace, submitted by defendants, clearly shows that the Lake Huron Stone Company made the “Star,” “Clear Grit,” and “Lake Huron,” “Quinnebog,” “Tiger Crown,” and “Harvest Queen” brands from 1868 to 1890, and for nearly as long a time the “Western Red Ends,” though he disparages the exclusive right of that company to the names and labels as trade-marks, and denies that it ever claimed such right, or objected to their appropriation by others. The force of this denial is greatly impaired by the fact that the affiant is the father of the defendants; and, though he was a member of the partnership known as the Lake Huron Stone Company from the year 1868, and joined in the sale of its quarries, business, good will, and property to the plaintiff in January, 1890, and therefore much should be conceded to his means of knowledge, the fact that he now appears to depreciate his grant-, when he covenanted with the plaintiff, as one of the conditions of the sale, not to engage in the business in that vicinity for 20 years, militates most strongly against the credibility of his denials. His relationship to the defendants, and the tenor of his statements, are more persuasive that, while he nominally observes his covenant, and has not personally engaged in the business from which he agreed to abstain, his interest now lies in the direction of detracting from the value of the property which he sold, and for which he received his share of the purchase money.

The formation of the Huron Grindstone Company, under which name defendants are carrying on business and offering to the trade the various-brands and patterns of scythe and whet stones under the same names, [434]

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Bluebook (online)
52 F. 431, 1892 U.S. App. LEXIS 1919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-stone-co-v-wallace-circtedmi-1892.