D.W.G., Inc. v. Gordon's Jewelry Co. of Oklahoma, Inc.

1981 OK 69, 635 P.2d 326, 216 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 452, 1981 Okla. LEXIS 270
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 9, 1981
Docket53655
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1981 OK 69 (D.W.G., Inc. v. Gordon's Jewelry Co. of Oklahoma, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D.W.G., Inc. v. Gordon's Jewelry Co. of Oklahoma, Inc., 1981 OK 69, 635 P.2d 326, 216 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 452, 1981 Okla. LEXIS 270 (Okla. 1981).

Opinion

DOOLIN, Justice:

The issue before us is trademark infringement, specifically the trade name 1 “Gordon Jewelers.”

Defendant is a national jewelry company with 184 “conventional” credit retail stores in 26 states. 2 All but 12 of the stores bear the name “Gordon’s Jewelers.” 3

Defendant incorporated in Oklahoma in August 1971, under the name “Gordon’s Jewelry Company of Oklahoma, Inc.” and entered into a lease agreement with Crossroads Shopping Mall on March 20,1973. On September 20, 1973, it filed a “Corporate Trade Name Report” with the Secretary of State because it intended to operate its Crossroads store under a different name (“Gordon’s Jewelers”) than its corporate name, all as required by law. 4

Plaintiff (D.W.G.) was incorporated in 1955 and is primarily owned by Norman Gordon. Plaintiff filed a Certificate of Registration of Trademark on January 23, 1973, claiming the name “Gordon Jewelers” as its own. 5

Norman Gordon boasts a long heritage in the Oklahoma jewelry business. His father, Samuel Gordon, founded Gordon’s Jewelers in 1904 and brought Norman and three other sons into the business in later years. Samuel Gordon incorporated his business in 1949 but dissolved it voluntarily four years later.

In August 1955, the plaintiff corporation was incorporated by Norman Gordon and two others. By 1958, Norman Gordon became the company’s primary stockholder.

In 1961, D.W.G., Inc. purposed to acquire “Samuel Gordon and Company” by “merger” and to use the exclusive right to the trade name Samuel Gordon and Company and thereafter held itself out as Samuel Gordon and Company. However at times plaintiff also held itself out as “Gordon Jewelers” or simply “Gordon’s” and therein lies the problem.

The trial court found that plaintiff’s use of the names “Gordon” and “Gordon Jewelers” had been “so sporadic and insubstantial that plaintiff has not acquired by use the exclusive right to the use of those names in Oklahoma.” We affirm.

I

The law of trade name infringement is not complicated but its application can be. It is governed by statute, case law and common law.

We have ruled that trademark infringement is an action in equity and “the trial court’s findings and judgment ... will not be set aside unless an examination of the record shows that same are clearly against the weight of the evidence.” Miller v. Barnes, 380 P.2d 965 (Okla.1963); Bell v. Davidson, 597 P.2d 753 (Okla.1979).

Plaintiff is claiming exclusive use of the name “Gordon Jewelers” by reason of (1) trademark registration in 1973, and (2) pri- or use of the trademark in the 1960’s and 1970’s.

Defendant argues the name should not be exclusive to plaintiff because (1) it incorporated under that name in 1971, (2) Alan *328 Gordon (brother of plaintiff Norman) has been allowed to operate under the name and (3) plaintiff has used the name only sporadically, primarily relying on the name “Samuel Gordon Jewelers” to distinguish his business.

II

Trademark law is controlled less by statute than one would suspect from the myriad of statutes covering the subject. 6

For more than 400 years the common law has recognized the right of a trademark owner to use it exclusively, and has awarded damages for the deprivation of such use. 7 The jurisdiction of the courts to restrain the use of a trademark is said to have been first recognized by Lord Hardwicke in the 1742 English case of Blanchard v. Hill (2 Atkyns 484). 8

In Oklahoma registration and approval by the Secretary of State of a corporate name does not itself guarantee the owner of a name the exclusive right to use it. Such registration can always be challenged by a person claiming “prior use” of the name. 9

Prior registration of a trademark is but only prima facie evidence of the exclusive ownership of a particular mark. The timely and bona fide use by another of the same or similar mark may materially affect the right of exclusivity claimed by the registrant, and may represent a valid defense in a suit for infraction. 10

The mere adoption of, or intention to appropriate, a particular mark or name, without actual use of it in trade, confers no rights of exclusivity, even though the adoption or intention is publicly declared. 11

“The true effect of respondent’s registration of its trade name and sign design was not to invest it instantaneously with a right to ‘exclusive use,’ but rather to establish for respondent the basis for invoking common law trade name protection principles which are predicated upon a prior use of the trade name as against the subsequent use by another.” 12

The Oklahoma trademark registration statute itself specifies that the name sought to be registered must first have been adopted and used prior to application to register it. 13 Although Section 22 of Title 78 prohibits registration of names in certain instances (names which are likely to cause mistake, confusion or deception), it asks the Secretary of State to make that judgment, which can be challenged in court.

A special case is presented when a family or surname is incorporated into the name of a business or corporation. 14 Early Oklahoma law held that every person, in the absence of a self-imposed restriction, has an absolute right to use his own name honestly and reasonably in his own business, even though the use of that name may cause an injury to another person in the same business having the same or a similar name. But he cannot use his name in such a way that it appears he has resorted to some contrivance or an artifice which is intended to or does produce an impression upon the public that his establishment, business or firm, or the goods sold, are the same as that of another whose business is established and producing similar goods in the same community, and thus produce injury beyond that which results from a similarity of the *329 names. See Flora v. Flora Shirt Co., 283 P. 1013, 141 Okla. 58 (1930). 15

In recent years other jurisdictions have limited the above rule, as to use of family name, to include creation of confusion in the public’s mind irrespective of the element of deception of one of the parties. 16

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Bluebook (online)
1981 OK 69, 635 P.2d 326, 216 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 452, 1981 Okla. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dwg-inc-v-gordons-jewelry-co-of-oklahoma-inc-okla-1981.