Congress and Empire Spring Co. v. High Rock Congress Spring Co.

57 Barb. 526, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 271
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 57 Barb. 526 (Congress and Empire Spring Co. v. High Rock Congress Spring Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Congress and Empire Spring Co. v. High Rock Congress Spring Co., 57 Barb. 526, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 271 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1867).

Opinion

Bosekrans, J.

It is well settled that a court of equity will not exercise its power to restrain the use of a trade mark, the exclusive right to which is claimed by the plaintiff, unless a good legal title thereto is alleged in the complaint, and the court can see from the plaintiff’s own statements that the right which he seeks to have protected clearly belongs to him, and has been infringed. (25 Am. Jurist, 279.) Bor will the court interfere by injunction when such title is alleged, if the right is denied by the defendant, or is rendered doubtful. (2 Sandf. 599.) Wolfe v. Goulard, (18 How. Pr. 64,) opinion of Ingraham, J., citing 2 Barb., and Motley v. Dennison, (3 Mylne & Craig, 14,) is within these principles. I think that the injunction order in this case should be vacated, so far as it restrains the use by the defendant of any trade-mark used by the former proprietors of Congress Spring upon the bottles or corks used in bottling the waters of that spring, or the boxes in which they packed their bottles.

The plaintiff' does not aver that it purchased the right to use such trade-marks, or that the right was assigned to it, and such right is only deducible from the allegation that the plaintiff" purchased the Congress Spring. The conclusion by no means follows that the right to the trademark passed with the title to the real estate. Indeed, it is questionable whether the plaintiff could be protected in the use of the trade-mark of a former proprietor of the spring under an express assignment of the right, unless [532]*532he indicated that he used them as assignee of the former proprietor.

The use of such trade-mark without such indication, would be an imposition upon the public—“ a sailing under false colors,” to use the language of Wilson, Ch. J., in Sherwood v. Andrews, (Am. Law Reg. Aug. 1866, p. 597.) In Partridge v. Menck, (cited 13 How. R. 397; How. App. Cases, 547,) Gardner, J., delivering the opinion of the Court of Appeals, says: “An assignee of a trade-mark has no special privilege of deceiving the public, even for his own benefit.” It is, however, unnecessary to consider the question how an assigned trade-mark should be used. It is sufficient for the purpose of determining whether the injunction order should be retained, so far as it restrained the defendant in the use of the trade-mark of the former proprietors of Congress Spring, that the plaintiff has not alleged or set out such rights in himself, except inferentially; and the inference he seeks to have adduced from his allegations does not legally follow. In addition to this, the defendant’s answer expressly alleges that such rights were not assigned to the plaintiff, and that the parties who conveyed Congress Spring to the plaintiff neither conveyed or assumed to convey to the plaintiff any right, title, or interest in or to the use of any trade-marks, words, symbols, or other designation which had theretofore been used by the former proprietors of said spring; and the plaintiff, in the affidavits read in opposition to the motion to dissolve the injunction, fails to furnish any evidence to contradict these allegations of the answer. These remarks are inteúded to apply to all the trade-marks used by the former proprietors of Congress Spring, both their form and substance, except the words “ Congress Spring,” and “ Congress water.” As owner of the spring, the plaintiff has the right to use those words as descriptive of property in any manner it may choose, and the question whether such right is exclusive is the principal one to be consid[533]*533ered, The word “Congress,” as applied to this spring, was an arbitrary name, given to it at the time of its discovery in 1792, for the reason that the person who discovered it was at the time‘a member of Congress; and the water of this spring is called Congress water because the spring is called Congress Spring. These names are merely descriptive of the spring and its waters. They have been used for that purpose for three-fourths of a century, and by such use have become the proper appellation of the spring and its water. They have no reference to the title or ownership of either the spring or its water, but are used merely to designate them. It may be, and doubtless is the fact, that to most persons who use the water, the name thus adopted is suggestive of its properties and qualities; that it is a mineral water having certain medicinal qualities, and producing certain effects upon the human system. But to none can it convey any idea as'to who is.the owner of the spring, or who is engaged in bottling and vending its waters. The law in relation to the use of names or words as trade-marks, and the extent to which an exclusive right can be maintained to such use, under the protection of a court of equity, has been fully considered by the courts of this State, and is well established.

In Wolfe v. Goulard, (18 How. Pr. 64,) most of the cases are considered by Ingraham, J., and their substance is expressed by him as follows: “ "Where a person forms a new word, used to designate an article made by him, which has never been used before, he may obtain such a right to that name as to establish him in the sole use of it as against others who attempt to use it for the sale of a similar article; but such an exclusive use'can never be successfully claimed of words in common use, previously, as applicable to similar articles. * * ** Words, as used in any language, cannot be appropriated by any one to his exclusive use to designate an article sold by him similar to that for which they were previously used.”

[534]*534In Burgess v. Burgess, (17 Eng. Law and Eq. R. 257,) ifc was held that a person had a right to make and sell an article called “Essence of Anchovy,” although the plain-tiff and his father had, for a long term of years, been making and selling such an article, under that name, originally invented by them, and that, too, when the same was sold in bottles of .the same shape, as the plaintiff used, with labels, wrappers and catalogues bearing a general resemblance to those used by him.

In The Amoskeag Manufacturing Co. v. Spear & Ripley, (2 Sandf. 599,) Duer, J., says : “ It is certain that the use by another manufacturer, of the words and signs indicative only of these circumstances,” in indicating the origin of the article, its appropriate name, the mode or process of its manufacture, “may yet have the effect of misleading the public as to the true origin of the goods; but it would be unreasonable to suppose that he is, therefore, precluded from using them as an expression of the facts which they . really signify, and which m'ay be just as true in relation to his goods as those of another.”

In Stokes v. Landgraff, (17 Barb. 608,) the point - was fully discussed by Strong, J. After showing the cases in which one may by priority of appropriation obtain a right to the use of names, letters, marks or symbols of any kind, he adds: “ In respect to words, marks, or devices which do not denote the goods or property, or particular place of business of a person, but only the nature, kind or quality of the articles in which he deals, a different rule prevails. " bio property in such words, marks or devices can. be acquired.”

Mr. Justice Duer, in Fetridge v. Wells, (13 How. Pr.

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Bluebook (online)
57 Barb. 526, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/congress-and-empire-spring-co-v-high-rock-congress-spring-co-nysupct-1867.