De Long Hook & Eye Co. v. American Pin Co.

200 F. 66, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1071
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 17, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 200 F. 66 (De Long Hook & Eye Co. v. American Pin Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Long Hook & Eye Co. v. American Pin Co., 200 F. 66, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1071 (S.D.N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

MAYER, District Judge.

In October, 1889, letters patent of the United States, No. 411,857, were issued to Charles F. and Frank E. De Long, for an invention involving an improvement in hooks or fastenings for garments. In the same month the brothers De Long [67]*67entered1 into a copartnership with a Mr. Richardson, under the name of Penn Button Works, for the purpose of manufacturing and selling hooks and eyes under the above referred to tetters patent, and these lettei's patent were duly assigned to the copartnership, which became the owners thereof. In May, 1891, the firm name of the copart-nership was changed to that of Richardson & De Long Bros.

Immediately after the organization of the firm in 1889, they commenced to prepare for the manufacture of hooks and eyes, and about March, 1890, they commenced! the manufacture and sale thereof. In May, 1900, a corporation, under the name of the De Long Plook & Eye Company, was organized under the laws of West Virginia to take over the business of Richardson & De Long Bros., who assigned and transferred to said corporation the letters patent above referred to, together with all trade-marks and other property rights belonging to said firm, and said! corporation succeeded to all the interests and rights of Richardson & De Long Bros, in respect thereof.

The firm of Richardson & De Long Bros, continued to manufacture said hooks and eyes from March, 1890, until the organization of the De Long Hook & Eye Company, and the latter company continued the manufacture and sale thereof until May, 1907, when the West Virginia corporation transferred and assigned to the complainant (a corporation organized under the laws of Pennsylvania) all of its interest in all of its letters patent, together with all trade-marks and other property rights belonging to the West Virginia corporation. Since then the complainant has been the owner of and has succeeded to all the rights and interest of Richardson & De Long Bros, and of the West Virginia corporation, and has continued the manufacture of hooks and eyes until the present time, and is still manufacturing and selling the same.

The invention of De Long was simple, but ingenious, and proved a great commercial success. This success was attained, probably, through a combination of the merit of the article with able and energetic business methods. Through the period of the 17 years while the patent was alive, the De Long hook and eye had become very generally known, and with its clever and interesting advertising legends and catchwords had become familiar, not alone to the wholesale trade, hut as well to the retail trade, which consisted almost entirely of the women purchasers of articles of this kind. The defendant insists that it has the right to use the name “De Long Hook,”. and that the maimer in which it places its goods before the public is fair; while the complainant urges that it still possesses the sole right to the use of the designation the “De Long Hook,” and that the methods of the defendant constitute unfair competition.

[ 1J 1. Upon the facts in this record, I am saiisfied that the “De Long Hook” had become known to the public as descriptive of the patented article, and not as indicating the source of manufacture, or, in other words, that the name or phrase had become generic, and that, when the complainant lost its monopoly by expiration of letters patent, it also lost the use of this generic name, under the doctrine announced in Singer v. June, 163 U. S. 169, 16 Sup. Ct. 1002, 41 L. Ed. 118.

[68]*68Complainant, however, insists that there are some distinctions between this and the Singer Case. Since the year 1890, the words “De Dong Hook and Eye” have been used 'by complainant’s predecessor and by complainant, as applied to their hooks and eyes generally and to their other products; but that fact does not differentiate this case from the Singer Case. The doctrine of the Singer Case could be readily avoided, if it were held that, because the distinctive or generic name applied to the patented article was used on other goods, therefore that the original patentee could retain the use of that generic name for the patented article, after his letters patent had expired.

No matter in what other connection the owner may have used the name, it must be remembered that one of the advantages of his patent monopoly has been to have his article known to the public by a name which in the public mind can only mean one thing as applied to that patented article, to wit, that it is the article. When, during the life of the patent, the public bought a Singer sewing machine, it bought a machine of a particular character, and associated solely in the public mind with the machines made under the Singer patents. I am confident that the result in Singer v. June would not have been different, if the Singer Sewing Machine Company had sold thread or other articles in connection with the use of the machine or independent thereof.

A more difficult question is presented by the contention of complainant that the defendant cannot use the words “De Dong Hook,” in view of the fact that those words have always been used in conjunction with the words “and Eye” so as to constitute the phrase “De Dong Hook and Eye.” I have not been able to find any case in which this precise question has arisen, because in the Singer and other cases, similar in principle, the generic name involved was the full name, and not part of the name. “Rahtjens” paints, Holzapfels v. Rahtjens, 183 U. S. 1, 22 Sup. Ct. 6, 46 L. Ed. 49; “Fairbanks” scales, Fairbanks v. Jacobus, 14 Blatchf. 337, Fed. Cas. No. 4,608; “Tucker” spring beds, Tucker v. Boyington, Fed. Cas. No. 14,229; “Wheeler & Wilson” sewing machines, Wheeler Co. v. Shakespeare, 39 L. J. Ch. 36; “Mason” fruit jars, In re Consolidated Fruit Jar Co., 14 O. G. 269.

It is undisputed that the “eyes” are in some instances unpatented articles, and in other instances articles upon which patents have not yet expired; andl the question is, where the original name is conjunctive, may the defendant, or, in other words, the public, take part of that name, upon the theory that such part has been dedicated to the public use ?

The answer to this question must be found to some extent in the history of the use of the invention, and to some extent in the practical or commercial purpose of the article. The eye used upon a woman’s garment has long been, known to commerce, and the problem which De Dong sought to solve, and ultimately did solve, was to invent a hook by which this eye could be caught in such a manner as to be efficient and as to prevent the tearing or abrasion of a garment.

Prior to October, 1889, there were but two hooks in commercial use — one the Swan bill, and-the other the Nichols; but, with a single [69]*69exception, there was no hook in commercial use having a resilient spring tongue. That exception was a certain hook patent called the “Eagle Hook.” That embodied a resilient spring tongue, which lacked, however, the features of the complainant’s hook, and was withdrawn from the market as a commercial failure. What, then, this particular trade was waiting for, and what De Long succeeded in inventing, was a successful hook.

In the patent specification (C. R., Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, lines 10-17) the applicant said:

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Bluebook (online)
200 F. 66, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1071, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-long-hook-eye-co-v-american-pin-co-nysd-1912.