E. F. Prichard Co. v. Consumers Brewing Co.

136 F.2d 512, 58 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 362, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3083
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 28, 1943
Docket9293
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 136 F.2d 512 (E. F. Prichard Co. v. Consumers Brewing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E. F. Prichard Co. v. Consumers Brewing Co., 136 F.2d 512, 58 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 362, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3083 (6th Cir. 1943).

Opinion

McAllister, circuit judge.

The Consumers Brewing Company was, by the district court, awarded an injunction against the use, by appellants, of a trademark on beer products, known as the “Olde Towne Lamplighter” label, together with a decree for an accounting. The E. F. Prichard Company claims the right to the use of the trade-mark in the territory south of the Ohio river. The Heidelberg Brewing Company acted under contract with the Prichard Company in brewing, bottling, and labeling the beer for the latter company, and was included in the injunction and subjected to the accounting.

In 1933, after repeal of the prohibition law, E. F. Prichard entered the beer business in Lexington, Kentucky, as a distributor of the products of several breweries. He, thereafter, became interested in the possibility of organizing a brewery, using for such purpose, the properties of an old brewery in Lexington, which had not been manufacturing beer for many years. This brewery was known as the Lexington Brewing Company, and Prichard ascertained that it was owned by the Dixie Race Track Company. He then found that the stock in this latter company was largely held by the members of the Bruckmann family, or the Bruckmann Company, a brewing concern located in Cincinnati.

Prichard, thereupon, went to Cincinnati, where he interviewed William Bruckmann, vice president of the company, and carried on negotiations directed to a possible sale of the brewery properties in Lexington. During these negotiations, Prichard came in contact with John C. Bruckmann, president of the Bruckmann Company, and, thereby, on March 1, 1934, became associated with the Bruckmann Company, as manager of its Lexington and southern division in charge of the sale and distribution of the company’s products in central Kentucky and adjoining states.

During this time — over the course of more than a year — John C. Bruckmann discussed with Prichard, his proposition with regard to the Lexington brewery. On March 1, 1935, John C. Bruckmann severed his connection with the Bruckmann Company, and became general manager and vice president — later president — of the Consumers Brewing Company, appellant herein, located at Newark, Ohio. Before, he left the Bruckmann Company, John C. Bruckmann advised Prichard of his plans and told him that the Lexington property was going to be sold; and, as Prichard testified, “that we would open the Lexington Brewing Company; and * * * that he wanted me to go with him.” Shortly after John C. Bruckmann left the Bruckmann Company, Prichard also discontinued his association with the company, and Bruckmann and Prichard entered into business relations as partners, under the name of John C. Bruckmann Company, for the purpose of engaging in the distribution of the products of the Consumers Brewing Company throughout central Kentucky and adjoining states.

For some time, Prichard and John C. Bruckmann were associated in this partnership in carrying out the arrangement which they had entered into with regard to the distribution of the products of the Consumers Brewing Company. Prichard drew a salary of $250 a month, and had $50 a month for expenses. He stated that he had a partnership interest in the concern and that his understanding with Bruckmann was that they “would work into the Lexington Brewing Company.” The trial court found that, as to the John C. Bruckmann Company, Prichard and Bruckmann were engaged in a joint enterprise. It appears that Prichard at first operated the business on behalf of the partnership, in his own name, and later, in April, 1935, under the name of the John C. Bruckmann Company.

In 1934, while Prichard was reading an old copy of a Dickens’ novel, his attention was attracted to one of the illustrations — - a quaint picture of a man wearing a tall hat, and lighting an old-fashioned street lamp. It immediately occurred to him that the picture would serve as a design on a lable for ale or beer. He, therefore, employed an artist to copy the picture; had *516 plates made for its reproduction; and caused a number of the labels to be printed with the picture, referred to in this case as the “Lamplighter” design.

In the first part of 1935, Prichard went to the offices of the Consumers Brewing Company at Newark, Ohio, where he had a conference with Bruckmann, then president and general manager of the brewing company, as well as a partner of Prichard in the distributing company at Lexington. Prichard showed Bruckmann the new labels • with the “Lamplighter” design, ■ and after some talk, they determined upon the addition of the name “Olde Towne” to the label. The district court found that they then agreed upon certain terms as to the use of the label. The Consumers Brewing Company was to place the label upon the beer which it was selling to the partnership in Kentucky, as well as upon its own beer, which it was selling in Ohio. The label was to bear the name “Newark” in addition to “Olde Towne” on the Lamplighter label.

However, it was also agreed that when the new Lexington Brewing Company was organized and producing beer, the new company would have the exclusive use of the Olde Towne Lamplighter label, prefixed by the name “Lexington,” for the distribution and sale of its product in the states south of the Ohio river; that the Consumers Brewing Company would have the use of the Olde Towne Lamplighter label, prefixed by the name “Newark,” for the product sold and distributed by it in the territory north of the Ohio river; and tiial, further, Prichard would have the right to take back his design for his own exclusive use, when he wished. In 1933, Prichard, while in business for himself, had bought two or three carloads of beer from Harrison, New Jersey; and about the same time, he had received a letter from a friend in Elizabeth, New Jersey, quoting him prices on carload lots of beer, on which he could place his own label. The letter also gave Prichard a list of names he could use on the beer, including the name “Old Town.” While the origin of the name “Olde Towne,” as used in the transactions .in this case, is vague and disputed, Prichard stated that he got the suggestion for “Olde Towne” from the letter he received from New Jersey in 1933. But as we view the issues in this case, the origin of this particular name is unimportant.

Nevertheless, on the understanding above recited, the partnership continued to buy its beer from the Consumers Brewing Company, which was now marked with the “Newark Olde Towne Lamplighter” label —until 1938, when the Lexington Brewing Company was incorporated. This practice of a concern, in purchasing beer from a brewery and then labeling and selling it under a different name — sometimes, as its own beer — appears, from the evidence, to have been a common method of marketing brewery products.

The Lexington Brewing Company was organized with the intention of manufacturing its own beer; and it appears from appellee’s witnesses that it was the further plan, at the time of the organization of this company, to use the Olde Towne Lamplighter label on its product. The evidence shows that it was agreed at a meeting of the Lexington Brewing Company directors, and others interested in financing the new company, that Prichard was the owner of the Lamplighter label. Bruckmann, who was president of the new Lexington Brewing Company, caused a large amount of the stock therein to be issued to Prichard, who became vice president and general manager.

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Bluebook (online)
136 F.2d 512, 58 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 362, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3083, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-f-prichard-co-v-consumers-brewing-co-ca6-1943.