Eisenstadt Mfg. Co. v. J. M. Fisher Co.

241 F. 241, 154 C.C.A. 161, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1750
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedFebruary 27, 1917
DocketNo. 1260
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 241 F. 241 (Eisenstadt Mfg. Co. v. J. M. Fisher Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eisenstadt Mfg. Co. v. J. M. Fisher Co., 241 F. 241, 154 C.C.A. 161, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1750 (1st Cir. 1917).

Opinion

ALDRICH, District Judge.

In this case the alleged grievance is not for infringing a tráde-mark, trade-name, or a patent.

The proceeding is one directed against the sale of a particular article of manufacture, and the relief sought is an injunction and an accounting upon the ground of unfair trade competition. The particular article concerned is an elongated bracelet link, so formed that it can be strung upon a narrow ribbon, and the fanciful advertised idea in connection with the links has been that they are so adapted that they may be assembled and become a “friendship bracelet”; and to the end that the juvenile sentimental impulse may more surely and speedily yield to the maelstrom of show window attractions, the fascinating bob-o-link bird, so much talked about in juvenile books, is employed to do its work, and it is said in the advertisements that:

“It’s a bird of an idea that has -winged its way all over America.”

And to the trade it is said:

“Already, without any advertising, the demand for ‘bob-o-links’ is running 100,000 a day, and it has only started. When the full-page advertisement comes out in the ‘Saturday Evening Post,’ Ma.y 22, the whole country will break out with the ‘bob-o-link’ craze. Jewelers will not be able to supply the demand fast enough to keep up with the ever-multiplying, endless chain of •bob-o-link’ wearers.”

Again:

“We propose to feed the flames while they are raging by well-prepared striking advertisements in the ‘Saturday Evening Post’ and leading women’s publications.”
“On fast-moving propositions like this, the dealers who get in early get the biggest business. When the craze gets started in your town, the dealer who has a stock of ‘bob-o-links’ on hand will do a big business, while the other fellow is trying to get the goods.' It is a risky business to wait, because indications all point to the probability that orders will pile up faster than we can manufacture and fill them. Already we have increased our manufacturing facilities and are working double shift. If this is the present condition, what will it be when this big ad. appears, and starts the ‘bob-o-link’ craze going in every town where friends have friends and young folks live.”

And again:

’ “This isn’t just a fad — it is a pretty plan for the expression of friendship, made practical by the beauty and value of the completed bracelet.”

Then it is said:

“Here’s the Way it Works.
“A girl starts a bracelet by exchanging ‘bob-o-links’ with a friend. They each wear their ‘bob-o-link’ with the friend’s initials engraved upon it, on a narrow black velvet ribbon, around the wrist. Then they start other friends by exchanging ‘bob-o-links' with them. Thus they complete their own bracelet, and, in doing so, start ten or a dozen other girls, who, in turn, start another ten or a dozen, and so it goes until everybody has a ‘bob-o-link’ bracelet. It takes from nine to twelve ‘bob-o-links’ to complete a bracelet, and a girl isn’t satisfied until she has one completed — then she immediately starts another. There is no end to it.”
“Buy Her a Link — 25 Cents Each.”

[243]*243To the public, attractive advertisements were put out with a picture of gracefully clasped hands with a slight show of the feminine wrist; and to more effectively move the juvenile impulse to trade, the wrist is takingly adorned by a narrow band of black velvet ribbon strung with a single link.

It must be borne in mind in this case that the substantive thing sought to be protected is distinctively a thing of manufacture, a link of distinct form and appearance.

It is quite impossible to view the particular article of manufacture when disassociated from the advertised fanciful idea of friendship as the feature which in any substantial way attracted trade. As well said by the court below, the trading public was little concerned, if at all, with the particular link as a link, or with the question as to who made it.

It was the idea of receiving and holding tokens of friendship until they could be joined into a thing of adornment and remembrance that attracted juvenile buyers in the market.

This is not a case which is governed by rules obtaining in trademark, trade-name, and patent cases, where the attractive and distinctive features of the trade mark or name in one situation, and the novelties of the patentable device in the other, are the features to be protected, and where the one who originated the idea of attractive marks or of patentable design, or of patentable device or combination, being first in the field, under trade-mark, trade-name and patent law, is entitled to protection.

[1] The idea of cumulative signet tokens of adornment to become a friendship bracelet, like the old idea of the monogram coin bracelet, was old, and thus, so far as we can see, the situation was such that the defendant had as good a right to advertise the sentimental idea and employ it in the trade as the plaintiff.

The idea of the friendship bracelet thus formed being old, the plaintiff, by advertising, could not gain the right of monopolizing the idea of combining links of friendship into an attractive whole, because, independent of a protective patent, or of a protective trade mark, or name, his remedy in the field of competitive trade would have reference to the particular article of manufacture.

The friendship conception, not new with the plaintiff, attractively advertised under a catching dress, was well calculated to stir the friendship fancy and impulse, and particularly that of the young, and to induce them, not because of the particular form,of the link, or because the link was made by a particular manufacturer, but because of the friendship idea of joining link to link until they should become a thing of graceful adornment, to buy a link at a price 25 times in excess of its intrinsic value. But after all, in every substantial sense, the trade was attracted by the sentiment, rather than by the particular article of manufacture.

[2] While one’s trade should be protected against all unreasonable and unfair competition, it after all remains that the normal condition in the commercial field is freedom of the right to trade, and as the exceptional right of monopolizing trade must be clear and substantial, [244]*244when the plaintiff’s grievance has reference to a sentimental, unsubstantial, and frivolous fancy, calculated to stir and move the juvenile mind into paying largely more than a thing is worth, courts of equity will not lean very far to find grounds for disturbing normal trade equilibrium.

It has been said by a text-writer on unfair trading that, after years of struggle, the law has put all cases of unfair competition, as that term is now understood, upon a common basis of fact:

“Is the defendant representing his goods as the goods of the complainant?”

Responding to the requirements of such a question, we cannot see that the particular link, or the fact that it was made by a particular party, was the consequential element inducing trade. On the contrary, it was the old conception, skillfully advertised, that stimulated impulse and promoted trade.

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Related

Butler Bros. v. Pratt
253 F. 654 (Eighth Circuit, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
241 F. 241, 154 C.C.A. 161, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eisenstadt-mfg-co-v-j-m-fisher-co-ca1-1917.