Consolidated Home Specialties Co. v. Plotkin

55 A.2d 404, 358 Pa. 14
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 1947
DocketAppeal, 169
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 55 A.2d 404 (Consolidated Home Specialties Co. v. Plotkin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Home Specialties Co. v. Plotkin, 55 A.2d 404, 358 Pa. 14 (Pa. 1947).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Maxey,

The first question in this case is whether or not the defendant has unlawfully appropriated a trade name. A further question is whether the complainant is estopped from obtaining equitable redress on the grounds of its acquiescence.

Complainant, a Pennsylvania corporation, organized in 1938 for the purpose of selling home furnishings at retail on the installment plan by house to house solicitation, took over the business of the Pittsburgh division of the Consolidated Home Furnishing Company, a corporation registered in this Commonwealth in 1926 to engage in a similar business, having its principal office in Philadelphia. The latter Company, after 1938, restricted its operations to the Eastern part of Pennsylvania. The complainant conducted its business from 1938 to 1943 in the Western part of Pennsylvania, establishing its main office in Pittsburgh and branch offices, with branch managers in charge thereof, at Kittanning, *16 Johnstown, Altoona,. New. Castle, and Canton, Pennsylvania, at Steubenville and Youngstown, Ohio, at Jamestown, New York, and at Clarksburg, West Virginia.

Due to tbe curtailment of the supply of merchandise and other “war conditions” the Consolidated Home Specialties Company in the early part of 1943 undertook to sell to the branch managers employed by it the accounts receivable of their respective branch offices, the equipment of those offices, and in some cases, supplies of merchandise. In this manner the branch offices of Kit-tanning, Uniontown, Steubenville, Johnstown, and Clarksburg were disposed of. Plaintiff retained its principal office in Pittsburgh and continued to operate the wholesale part of its business.

On April 21, 1943, the plaintiff company sold the accounts receivable, equipment and certain merchandise of the Kittanning branch office to Arthur Plotkin, defendant, who was its manager prior to and at that time. It also sold to him the accounts receivable in the contiguous territorities of Oakmont, Verona and Aspinwall, in Allegheny County, formerly handled by the'main Pittsburgh office. Prom April 21 to July 15 the defendant, as an individual under the registered fictitious name of “Armstrong Home Furnishings Company”, operated the business of selling items of merchandise similar to those sold by the plaintiff on the installment plan by house to house canvassing in the same area and territory formerly served by the plaintiff. His office was maintained in the same location formerly occupied by plaintiff’s Kittanning office. On or about July 15, 1943, defendant adopted and registered the fictitious' name “Consolidated Home Supply Company” and continued to use the same until the filing of plaintiff’s bill.

On March 19, 1945, plaintiff filed a bill in equity against the defendant setting forth, inter alia:

“Sixth. Defendant, after separating from the employ of the plaintiff, organized his own business of selling *17 home furnishings on the instalment plan by house to house solicitation under the name of Armstrong Home Furnishings Company, with principal place of business in Kittanning, Armstrong County, Pennsylvania. Defendant operated this business in Armstrong County and Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, soliciting plaintiff’s customers and others; '
“Seventh. At some time before March 7, 1944, defendant changed the trade name of his business from Armstrong Home Furnishings Company to Consolidated Home Supply Company, and has continually used the latter name in connection with his business, on his stationery and printed matter and in his dealings with both sellers and purchasers of home furnishings.
“Eighth. Defendant has also used the name of Consolidated Home Specialties Company, identical with plaintiff’s name, in connection with the operation of his business. . '
“Ninth. Plaintiff, by its president, Samuel Lobel, has repeatedly relnonstrated with defendant since learning of the defendant’s use of the name ‘Consolidated- Home Supply Company’ in connection with defendant’s business, and protested against the use of said name by defendant, but defendant refused and still refuses to discontinue the use of said name in the conduct of his business.”
“Eleventh. Defendant’s above described activities will inevitably in the future and- in fact already have produced confusion in the minds of the public. Defendant’s actions are calculated to mislead the public in the belief that purchases from defendant are. purchases from the plaintiff. ■ .
“Twelfth.. Plaintiff is informed, believes and therefore avers that said action of defendant- in' adopting and using the names Consolidated Home Supply Company and Consolidated Home Specialties Company was taken by the defendant in fraud of the rights of the plaintiff and so to confuse and deceive the public and to obtain *18 business under the impression that said public is dealing with the plaintiff, and to damage and injure the plaintiff and to deprive the plaintiff of the value of the trade name Consolidated Home Specialties Company.”

Plaintiff then avers irreparable damages and prays for an injunction restraining the defendant, his servants, etc., from using the name “Consolidated” in connection with any business of selling home furnishings on the installment plan by house to house solicitation and restraining the defendant, his servants, etc., from representing by statements, advertising, etc., that said defendant, his servants, etc., are in any manner connected or associated with, employed by, agents for or representative of the plaintiff. Damages and further relief are also asked for.

The plaintiff supplied articles of merchandise to the defendant for resale from the time of the sale of its accounts receivable until July 1944. Plaintiff, through its president, Samuel Lobel, also furnished defendant with bailment leases and other forms néces-sary for the conduct of his business. In September 1945 plaintiff again resumed the retail phase of its business, i. e., sales on the installment plan by house to house solicitation. The court below dismissed plaintiff’s bill on the basis of the following “conclusions of law”:

1. The trade name “Consolidated Home Supply Company” used by the defendant is not deceptively similar to the name “Consolidated Home Specialties Company” used by the plaintiff corporation and its use can therefore not be enjoined.

2. The delay of the plaintiff in filing its bill in the instant case, coupled with conduct which constituted acquiescence in defendant’s use of the name so that to deprive the defendant of the right to use its trade name would now work to defendant’s disadvantage, bars the plaintiff from equitable relief either by an accounting or by injunction against defendant.

*19 3. Plaintiff’s conduct in tbe instant case amounts to more than mere laches in the sense of delay to bring suit and constitutes an acquiescence in defendant’s use of the name.

The general rule is that a corporation has a right to its name and another will be restrained from its use: 7 R. C. L.

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Bluebook (online)
55 A.2d 404, 358 Pa. 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-home-specialties-co-v-plotkin-pa-1947.