Dr. David Kennedy Corpn. v. . Kennedy

59 N.E. 133, 165 N.Y. 353, 3 Bedell 353, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1422
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 22, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 59 N.E. 133 (Dr. David Kennedy Corpn. v. . Kennedy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dr. David Kennedy Corpn. v. . Kennedy, 59 N.E. 133, 165 N.Y. 353, 3 Bedell 353, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1422 (N.Y. 1901).

Opinion

Bartlett, J.

This is a suit in equity where the plaintiff corporation seeks to secure the delivery of mail matter to its proper officers and to enjoin the defendant from interfering therewith; the complaint also asks a judgment for damages.

*356 About the year 1875, the defendant, who was a practicing physician in the city of Kingston, Ulster county, established the business of making and selling proprietary remedies; he advertised extensively ; the business was almost entirely conducted through the mails, and became, ultimately, very profitable. Advertisements and pamphlets were sent out which referred to some eight distinct remedies that were compounded by Dr. David Kennedy of Rondout, N. Y., and each was alleged to cure some particular disease or diseases. In this manner it was suggested to the public that a sample of the particular remedy desired would be sent to any person on application; and, also, that letters might be addressed to Dr. Kennedy describing the condition of the patient and he would prescribe without making any charge therefor. The effect of this mode of advertising was that the defendant received a large number of letters from different parts of the country, wherein the writers described their physical condition and thereupon the defendant would recommend some one of the remedies as appropriate to the case. This system of free consultation wag, a device to enable the defendant to sell his remedies.

The defendant conducted this business for about fifteen years, his mail matter being addressed to him as Dr. David Kennedy, or Dr. D. Kennedy, Rondout, N. Y.

In the year 1890 the defendant concluded to turn his business into a corporation and thereupon the plaintiff company was organized. The defendant executed and delivered to the corporation a bill of sale of all the personal property in his former business including the good will, which was transferred by the following provision of the instrument: “ Also, the Good-Will ’ of the business of Dr. David Kennedy now carried on by me at Rondout, N. Y., with the sole and absolute and only right to use the names Dr. David Kennedy of Rondout, N. Y., or Dr. D. Kennedy, Rondout, N. Y.,’ in connection with the manufacture of proprietary medicines, hereby granted and sold by me to the said corporation; and also all articles of office furniture and implements used in the manu *357 facture of the Favorite Remedy and the other preparations as aforesaid; and I do hereby agree, in consideration of such payment of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, as aforesaid, to execute and deliver any other or further paper the said corporation may be advised is necessary and requisite to convey and vest more fully in the said corporation all my right, title and interest of, in and to any or all of the said property or business hereby sold or intended to be sold to the said Dr. David Kennedy Corporation.’ ”

For about seven years after the organization of the corporation the defendant was its president and the owner of one-third of its stock; the mail matter of the company, which came addressed to Dr. David Kennedy of Rondout, N. Y., or Dr. D. Kennedy, Rondout, K. Y., was placed in the post office box of the corporation. When this mail was delivered at the office of the company the private letters of the defendant Avere opened by him, and the balance of the mail matter, which included the medical or patients’ letters, was dealt with by the corporation in the due course of business.

In January, 1898, the defendant Avas deposed as president of the plaintiff company, and thereupon he removed his office, Avhich had been located in the general offices of the corporation, and practically severed his personal relations Avitli the business.

Some two weeks 'after this event the defendant directed the superintendent of the Rondout post office to deliver the entire corporate mail, addressed, as already stated, to him; this Avas done for two or three Aveeks, Avhen the post office department at Washington countermanded the order of the local official, and the former mode of delivery to the corporation was restored. A little later the department at Washington reversed this last order and directed that the entire corporate mail, addressed as aforesaid, should be delivered to the defendant. Thereupon this suit Avas commenced. The case Avas tried before a referee and resulted in a dismissal of the complaint. The report of the referee, after quoting from the bill of sale, states as follows : Here the express terms of the instrument *358 limit or extend no further than a grant of the right to plaintiff to use the title Dr. David Kennedy and Dr. D. Kennedy of Kondout, U. Y., in connection with the manufacture (and by fair construction with the advertising and sale) of the eight enumerated remedies. The plaintiff thereby acquired the right, according to the manifest intent of the agreement, to use these titles in their manufacture and sale of the remedies acquired by them as an assurance to the public that they were genuine preparations of the defendant, and thus to avail themselves of the success and pecuniary value which attached to these remedies as the genuine productions as known and as theretofore sold by the defendant. In every other connection and for all purposes the defendant retained a full and perfect right to the use of his own name and address as if no transfer had been made to the plaintiff.”

Tinder this construction of the bill'of sale and the dismissal of the complaint, the referee practically held that the corporation never acquired the right to take from the post office the mail matter directed to Dr. David Kennedy of Rondout, N. Y., or Dr. D. Kennedy, Rondout, N. Y., which was one of the most important factors in conducting its business. The result was that the plaintiff company could only receive such portion of its mail matter as the defendant determined was proper after his personal inspection — this being the position of the parties under the final ruling of the post office department.

The Appellate Division reversed the judgment entered upon the report of the referee, and held in substance that the plaintiff has the absolute right and property in the names and address of Dr. David Kennedy of Rondout, N. Y., and Dr. D. Kennedy, Rondout, N. Y., and to the sole right to use the same in the business, unless in addition to such form of address some additional mark or word indicates that the same is intended for the defendant personally; also, that the plaintiff has the right to receive and open all letters, packages and mail matter addressed in the forms aforesaid which have been or may hereafter be received in the post office in the city of Kingston and at the jiost office or station of such Kingston *359 post office, known as the Kondout station in the said city, without interference therewith by defendant or any other person in his employ or interest. The court also ordered that an injunction issue enjoining and restraining the defendant in the premises and directing that plaintiff on receiving mail matter of defendant shall, without opening the same, when practicable, forthwith deliver it to defendant.

We agree, in the main, with the judgment of the learned Appellate Division, but differ as to the manner in which the mail matter should be examined and distributed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 N.E. 133, 165 N.Y. 353, 3 Bedell 353, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dr-david-kennedy-corpn-v-kennedy-ny-1901.