Delaware & H. Canal Co. v. Clark

7 F. Cas. 399, 7 Blatchf. 112, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1578
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedJanuary 5, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 F. Cas. 399 (Delaware & H. Canal Co. v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delaware & H. Canal Co. v. Clark, 7 F. Cas. 399, 7 Blatchf. 112, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1578 (circtsdny 1870).

Opinion

BIiATOHFORD, District Judge.

The plaintiffs are a corporation created by the state of New Xork. The defendant is, and has been for twenty-nine years, a dealer in coal, carrying on business at Providence, in the state of Rhode Island, and having yards there where he stores, and from ■which he sells, coal. The plaintiffs own and operate a canal, from Rondout, on the Hudson river, to Honesdale, in the state of Pennsylvania, and a railroad from Honesdale to lands in that state which they own, and from which they have, for many years past, been mining coal, which they have afterwards sent to market on said railroad and said canal. They assert, in their bill, which was filed January 2d, 1807, that they have a title to the name of “Lackawanna coal,” as a special, particular, and distinctive name or trade-mark for their coal, the product of their mines, in distinction from the coal of other parties; that, for a number of years past, they have sold and consigned, and still continue to sell and consign, large quantities of the said “Lack-awanna coal” for sale and consumption in Providence aforesaid, and in its vicinity; that certain dealers in Providence keep on hand for sale, and advertise and sell, the plaintiffs’ coal under the aforesaid name of “Lackawanna coal;” that the defendant has carried on and still carries on, at Providence, the business of a coal merchant or dealer in coal, and for that purpose owns and occupies a yard in which he keeps anthracite coal for sale; that he does not purchase, keep, or have for sale any of the plaintiffs’ “Lackawanna coal,” but exclusively buys, sells and deals in other and different kinds of anthracite coal, which have been named by the producers thereof, and are generally called and known by the names of, “Scranton coal” and “Pitts-ton coal,” and are produced by other and different companies; that the coal in which the defendant deals is of the same general appearance as the plaintiffs’ “Lackawanna coal;” that the defendant has been wrongfully and fraudulently selling and offering for sale his aforesaid Scranton and Pittston coal by the name of, and as, and for, “Lack-awanna coal,” and, to carry out and effect such fraud and deception, has erected, or caused to be erected, ana has, a sign upon or at his coal yard, whereon is painted or inscribed the name “Lackawanna coal,” thereby falsely and fraudulently representing, and designing and intending to have the public to understand and believe, that he keeps and has for sale the plaintiffs’ “Lackawanna coal;” that, in order further to carry out his aforesaid false and fraudulent designs and intentions, and to injure the plaintiffs in the sale of their'aforesaid coal, he has falsely advertised, and continues to advertise, in the public newspapers printed m the city of Providence, that he has for sale “Lackawanna coal,” whereas, in truth and in fact, he has. not any of such coal; that he has been and is selling and offering to sell his said coal as and for the "Lackawanna coal” of the-plaintiffs; that he is, in these ways, pirating, and wrongfully and fraudulently using, the-plaintiffs’ aforesaid name or trade-mark, and thereby injuring them in the sale of their “Lackawanna coal,” and deceiving the public; that, as an excuse for such wrongful and fraudulent acts, he gives out and pretends, that his coal' comes from a region of country in the state of Pennsylvania, known as the Lackawanna region or valley, and that, therefore, he is entitled to advertise and sell his coal by the name of “Lackawanna coal;” that his coal is sold and delivered to him by the original producers thereof, under their distinctive trade-marks or names of “Pitts-ton coal” and “Scranton coal,” so given to it by the producers thereof, and that the greater portion thereof, if not all, is taken from the valley or region more properly known as the Wyoming Valley; that, when the word “Lackawanna” was adopted by the plaintiffs as their trade-mark as aforesaid, it had never-been used or combined with the word “coal,” so as to form the compound word or term “Lackawanna coal,” and that it has not, at any time since, been so used by any producer of coal except the plaintiffs; that, so far as respects the use of the word, as applied to coal, the plaintiffs have a prior and exclusive right thereto, in which they should be protected; that the use of the plaintiffs’ aforesaid trade-mark or name by the defendant is fraudulent, and is used with the design to obtain for his coal the reputation and credit due to, and possessed by, the plaintiffs’ coal, and to injure the plaintiffs in the premises; and that the plaintiffs have never, in any manner, authorized the defendant to use or apply such name to his coal, nor, in any wise, acquiesced in his use thereof. The prayer of the bill is, that the defendant, and his agents, may be enjoined and restrained from keeping or using a sign over, or upon, or about his coal-yard, or place of business, with the words "Lackawanna coal,” or “Lack-awanna,” painted or inscribed thereon, and from advertising “Lackawanna coal” for sale, and from selling, or offering or attempting to sell, his aforesaid coal or any coal which does not come from the plaintiffs’ mines, under or by the name of “Lackawanna coal,” and that he may account for or pay to the plaintiffs whatever profits ha may have realized from tile use of the plaintiffs’ name or trade-mark, and from the sale of his coal under or by the name of “Lackawanna, coal.”

The answer, which was filed on the 11th of April, 1S67, denies that the name of “Lack-awanna coal” ever has been, or now is. either in the city of Providence and vicinity, or elsewhere, the peculiar property and trademark of the plaintiff's. It admits that the [401]*401defendant has been, and still Is, engaged in business as a dealer in coal in Providence, and occupies a yard in which he keeps anthracite coal for sale, and does not purchase or keep, for sale any of the plaintiffs’ “Lack-awanna coal,” and deals almost exclusively in the varieties of coal mentioned in the bill by the names of Scranton coal and Pittston coal. It denies that the said varieties of coal are exclusively known by those names, and avers that they are generally known by the name of “Lackawanna coal,” and are so regarded and so styled by dealers in coal and the public generally.

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. Cas. 399, 7 Blatchf. 112, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delaware-h-canal-co-v-clark-circtsdny-1870.