Coleman v. Flavel

40 F. 854, 12 Sawy. 220, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2523
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon
DecidedDecember 26, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 40 F. 854 (Coleman v. Flavel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coleman v. Flavel, 40 F. 854, 12 Sawy. 220, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2523 (circtdor 1886).

Opinion

Deady, J.

This suit was commenced on November 8, 1886. It is prosecuted by the plaintiffs, William T. Coleman, F. S. Johnson, C. C. Coleman, and Richard Delafield, citizens of California, to have the defendants, George Flavel and Samuel Elmore, citizens of Oregon, enjoined from using a certain label on salmon packed by them, or so much of the same as represents that the plaintiffs are the agents for the disposition of such article.

On the filing of the bill an order was made requiring the defendants to show cause why a provisional injunction should not issue, and that the defendants be restrained in the mean time.

The matter was subsequently heard on the bill and sundry affidavits produced by the plaintiffs and one by the defendants.

The material facts appear to be as follows:

That long prior to the year 1881, and ever since, the plaintiffs have been, and now are, engaged at San Francisco, under the firm name of Wm. T. Coleman & Co., in the business of selling Columbia river canned salmon, as the agents of a large number of persons engaged in packing 'said salmon. That in the conduct of said business the plaintiffs are accustomed to guaranty the good packing and merchantable quality of said salmon to the purchasers thereof, and to have printed on a label placed thereon the said firm name of Wrn. T. Coleman & Co., as the sole agents of such brand of canned salmon. That during said time the plaintiffs have disposed of such salmon in all the markets of the world; and at great expense to themselves in establishing agencies, advertising, and by fair and honorable dealings, have introduced into such markets and established there a demand for the brands of salmon represented by them. That what is known as the “Columbia river spring salmon,” which is taken between April 1st and August 1st of each year, is the most in demand, and commands the highest price in the markets; and all salmon taken after that time on said river, or at any time elsewhere, is inferior in quality, and less in demand, and commands less price, than said spring salmon.

On August 1, 1881, a corporation, the Union Packing Company, was formed under the laws of Oregon, to engage in canning and packing [855]*855salmon át Astoria, and soon after entered into a contract with the }<’ .in-tiffs whereby the latter agreed to make advances to the corporation to enable it to carry on its business, and also became iiu sole agent for the sale of its fish. That thereafter said corporation, through the agency of the plaintiffs, had lithographed a parti-colored. iUbeí, mino and three-quarters inches long and four inches wide, to be pJfe e.ii on the cans of salmon put up by it, which contained the following;

In the left-hand division, a tree and ⅞ salmon, — the latter on a dish, as if prepared for the table; am1 on three sides of it the words, “Union Packing Co., Astoria, Or» "/.xn,, Frt«h Columbia River Salmon.” In the right-hand division, whu i> ⅛ only two inches long, the words, “Win. T. Coleman * Co.,. Sole Agents, San Francisco, Cal., U. S. A.,” with directions in ill low»?/ half thereof for opening and serving; which labels were used by ¡said corporation in its business, until the assignment of its property ¡hi the benefit of its creditors, on July 31, 1884; and that in said yea y, and prior to said assignment, said corporation procured 500,-000 of y;u,l labels to be printed for its use in said business.

In /\u. ,ust, 1884, a compromise and final settlement was had between thí i-',1' diutiffs and the company, contained in a written offer by the latter, d.iftyi August 9th, to deliver the former 5,000 eases of salmon, they to tyi'pay it certain drawbacks and premiums, and a written acceptance /iiiereof by the plaintiffs, dated August 23d. The offer of the packing ‘ company contained the following clause; “And said Union Packing Company claim the right to use the labels they now use on all canned salmon they shall have packed in the year 1884.”

On December 2, 1885, the company and its assignee, by separate deeds, conveyed certain real property in Astoria,, presumably the cannery, to the defendants, and on the same day the former made a bill of sale to them of a lot of personal property and material, such as usually pertains to a cannery, including “one hundred thousand salmon labels, more or less, (used by Union Packing Company on salmon canned;) also ail and singular our right, title, and interest in and to corporation’s trademark, box-brand, and label used in packing salmon.”

It is charged in the bill that the defendants, on November 5, 1886, placed at least 1,350 cans of salmon, with these labels on the cans, in a warehouse at Astoria, for export to domestic or foreign ports, as opportunity might offer; and that, if the defendants are permitted to export said fish, the reputation and value of the brands of salmon represented by the plaintiffs will be much injured and depreciated in the markets of the world, and plaintiffs thereby greatly and irreparably damaged; and it is admitted in the affidavit of the defendant Elmore that 654 eases of salmon have been labeled by the defendants with copies of the label above described, and stored for export as alleged; and it was also admitted on the argument that the fish therein were taken in the Tillamonk liver, and not the Columbia.

The defendants contend that the label, as a whole, constitutes a trademark, in which they have the exclusive property, but that the words on the right hand of the label do not constitute such mark; and that, if they [856]*856might, not having been recorded as provided by statute, (Gen. Laws Or. 659,) the plaintiffs cannot claim any right to the exclusive use of them.

Generally, words in common use may be adopted as trade-marks, if at the time of their adoption they were not employed to designate the same or like articles. The office of a trade-mark is to indicate with certainty the origin or ownership of the article to which it is affixed. Canal Co. v. Clark, 13 Wall. 322; Browne, Trade-Marks, §§ 39, 144.

But the plaintiffs do not and need not claim that the words “Wm. T, Coleman & Co., Sole Agents, San Francisco, Cal., TJ. S. A.,” constitute a trade-mark, or that, abstractly considered, they have any exclusive right to the use of them. Their claim is that by means of these words, so placed and used, the defendants are guilty of a false and fraudulent representation, to their injury as well as that of the public.

.After a careful examination of the subject, and particularly the discussion contained in the interesting work cited by counsel for defendants, (Browne, Trade-Marks,) I am satisfied that my impression at\be argument is correct. This is not a case of trade-mark at all, but one of a false use of a label, with intent to injure the plaintiffs as well as the puMic.

No one ever had or could have the right to use so much of this label as represents that the plaintiffs are- the agents for the sale of the fisly, in the can on which it is placed without the plaintiffs’ consent.

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Related

Canal Co. v. Clark
80 U.S. 311 (Supreme Court, 1872)

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Bluebook (online)
40 F. 854, 12 Sawy. 220, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coleman-v-flavel-circtdor-1886.