Dry Ice Corp. of America v. Louisiana Dry Ice Corp.

46 F.2d 526, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1623
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedOctober 31, 1930
DocketNo. 370
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 46 F.2d 526 (Dry Ice Corp. of America v. Louisiana Dry Ice Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dry Ice Corp. of America v. Louisiana Dry Ice Corp., 46 F.2d 526, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1623 (W.D. La. 1930).

Opinion

DAWKINS, District Judge.

Plaintiffs allege that they are the holders of duly registered and lawful trade-marks and a trade-name embracing the words “Dry lee,” when used in connection with their business of manufacturing and dealing in solid carbon dioxide as a refrigerant. They seek to enjoin the use of these words in the corporate title of the defendant corporation, as well as to restrain it and the other defendants from using them in advertising or selling any of their products intended for the same purpose. A temporary restraining order was issued, and on hearing a preliminary injunction was granted.

Defendants first attack the corporate capacity of the complainant, Dry Ice Corporation of America, on the ground that it had not complied with the laws of the state of Delaware, under which it attempted to incorporate. However, without finding it necessary to go into the great mass of evidence on the point, I think it sufficient to say that this complainant has shown a reasonable compliance with the statutes of that state, at least enough to give it a proper standing in court to prosecute this cause. It was given a certificate of incorporation by the Secretary of State, which I find to have been recorded as required by the laws of Delaware, and the other questions raised I think involve issues which can be urged by the state or stockholders only for whose benefit these provisions were incorporated in the law, and are not available in defense of this suit.

The defense otherwise set up in the answer is twofold, first, that the term “dry ice” is generic and descriptive of the commodity, solid carbon dioxide, and hence no exclusive right to use the same could be acquired through its registration as a trade-mark, or otherwise; and, second, that complainants have lost any claim thereto by laches. They also deny that they have in any sense copied or imitated the symbol or design of the alleged trade-marks, but aver that they have used the term in their corporate title as descriptive of the business in which they were about to engage, to wit, the manufacture and sale of solid carbon dioxide. They say also that their process 'is different from that of complainants, in that they propose to 'manufacture solid carbon dioxide from natural gas.

I find the pertinent facts to be substantially as follows:

The predecessor of the Dry Ice Corporation of America was the Pressed Air Corporation, which was organized in 1922, and at first was engaged in the manufacture of automotive machines, but gradually drifted into the making of solid carbon dioxide for use as a refrigerant. Much experimentation was done along this line, and eventually certain containers and equipment were evolved and patented by some of the complainant’s employees, the main feature of which was to place the solid carbon dioxide in the center, with the food or other merchandise to be refrigerated around it, the walls and sides of the containers serving to hold the vapor or gas resulting from the sublimation or evaporation of the carbon dioxide; the space occupied by the food or other substance was thus kept cold for a much longer period than could be done with ordinary ice. O’nly a fraction of the refrigerant, as compared to ice, was required, and, in addition, there was an absence of moisture, and no necessity for using such a corrosive as salt. The result was that the same quantity of merchandise eould be packed, preserved, and shipped over great distances in packages about one-fourth the usual weight. This worked a great sav[528]*528ing in freight and express charges. The containers were made. of cheap material "which eonld be discarded after reaching destination, thereby saving the further expense of having them returned to the shipper.

The Pressed Air Corporation became the pioneer in this method of refrigeration, and at first called its product “pressed air ice.” However, this name was not satisfactory, and, after numerous suggestions from those connected with the company, the term “dry ice” was, on or about the 1st of January, 1925, selected as a name which has since been continuously used to designate the product. Thereafter trade-marks covering the use of said words were registered in the Patent Office, as follows:

“Trade Mark No. 200,934 issued July 14, 1925, as the trade-mark of the Dry Ice Corporation of America for carbon dioxide (CO) in solidified forms, mixtures and compounds, in class 6, Chemicals, Medicines and Pharmaceutical Preparations.
“Trade Mark No. 215,799, issued July 27, 1926, as the. trade-mark of the Dry Ice Corporation of America for refrigerators, in Class 31, Filters and Refrigerators.
“Trade Mark No. -230,202, issued July T9, 1927, for empty containers adapted for storage, transportation or use of carbon dioxide (CO) in solidified forms, mixtures, and compounds in Class 2, receptacles.”
In the ease of the second trade-mark, a disclaimer was required as to the word “ice” as being descriptive for refrigerants, except when used in combination with the word “dry.”

In 1927 the Dry Ice Corporation of America was organized, and all the rights of the Pressed Air Corporation were subsequently conveyed to it through the medium of an individual, according to the laws of Delaware. The first plant for the manufacture of the refrigerant in commercial quantities was established at Maspeth, L. I., in 1924, the second at Long Island City in the early part of 1925, and the third at Yonkers, N. Y., early in 1926. Since that time plants and warehouses have been established at the following places: Plants at Cambridge, Mass.; Atlanta, Ga.; Niagara Falls, Buffalo, and New York' City, N. Y.; • Chicago, HI.; Cincinnati, Ohio; Jacksonville, Fla.; Kansas City, Mo.; Minneapolis,” Minn.; Maspeth, L. I.; Elizabeth, N. J.; Yonkers, N. Y.; Philadelphia and Pittsburg, Pa.; Albany, N. Y.; St. Louis, Mo.; Denver, Colo. Warehouses at Cleveland, Ohio; New York City; Philadelphia and Pittsburg, Pa.; Detroit, Mich.; Baltimore, Md.; New Haven, Conn.; and Memphis, Tenn.

The quantities sold during the years 1925 to 1929, both inclusive, were as follows: In 1925, 269,801 pounds; in 1926, 1,093,840 pounds; in 1927, 3,412,031 pounds; in 1928, 9,959,518 pounds; in 1929, 27,376,006 pounds.

The revenue therefrom over the same period increased from $13,490.00 in 1925 to $1,324,124 in 1929; and the product is now shipped generally throughout the United States except to the territory “around the Rocky Mountains.” On the 19th day of April, 1929; the Dry lee Corporation of America granted to the Dry Cold Corporation of Texas-Louisiana a license to manufacture and sell the product in those states, and plants have been established at New Orleans and Fort Worth, Tex., which have a rapidly growing business. Over $27,009 has been spent in advertising and more than $500,000 in experimental and development work. At the time of the trial, further construction and enlargement of facilities were being made as follows:

“At present constructing new plants in Los Angeles, California and Seattle, Washington, Peoria, 111. and establishing new warehouses in San Francisco and Harrisburg; also increasing manufacturing facilities at the Niagara Falls plant, the Elizabeth plant, Chicago, Maspeth, L. I., Atlanta, Ga., Chicago, 111. A new plant will be erected at Cleveland, Ohio, and practically all plants are being furnished with additional equipment to increase the present capacity of those plants, and $25,000.00 is being spent during the present year for advertising.”

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46 F.2d 526, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dry-ice-corp-of-america-v-louisiana-dry-ice-corp-lawd-1930.