Falcon Industries, Inc. v. R. S. Herbert Co.

128 F. Supp. 204
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 4, 1955
DocketCiv. 14128
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 128 F. Supp. 204 (Falcon Industries, Inc. v. R. S. Herbert Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Falcon Industries, Inc. v. R. S. Herbert Co., 128 F. Supp. 204 (E.D.N.Y. 1955).

Opinion

BYERS, District Judge.

The plaintiffs seek an injunction and damages by reason of alleged unfair competition and the alleged infringement of a design patent and of a mechanical patent owned by the first named plaintiff, to be called Falcon.

The plaintiffs are corporations of Indiana and Illinois, respectively. The three corporate defendants are R. S. Herbert Co., Inc., to be called Herbert; Continental Briar Pipe Co., Inc., to be called Continental; and Henry, Leonard & Thomas, Inc., to be called Henry. They are all New York corporations. The individual defendants are either residents of New York State or non-residents of either State in which the plaintiff corporations were organized.

It appears that Falcon manufactures the Falcon pipe involved in this litigation, and that Diversey Machine, Works Inc. is the exclusive selling agent thereof.

The respective roles of the corporate defendants are not made clear in the record but it is thought that Herbert is the manufacturer now of the pipe presently called the Viking, which is the subject of the plaintiffs’ attack. The Continental perhaps started that manufacture but is now inactive, having leased its machinery and equipment to Herbert. Henry is the exclusive selling agent of either or both of the other corporate defendants.

This decision will proceed upon that understanding which can be corrected at the foot of the opinion if a mistake has been made.

For convenience, reference hereinafter to the plaintiff will mean Falcon, and to the defendant will mean Herbert, for essentially the contest seems to be between those parties.

The causes will be considered in the order in which they are pleaded.

First: Alleged Unfair Competition

It should be said that the competing articles are tobacco pipes which closely resemble each other in general appearance and configuration. A side by side comparison and examination will reveal differences in details of construction but the testimony shows that uninstructed persons looking at the defendant’s product would assume that it was but a modified version of the Falcon pipe.

The evidence to support that statement will be referred to in connection with the Findings which, to avoid duplication, will be stated in this opinion:

Findings as to Unfair Competition

1. On the question of priority, the plaintiff’s product was put upon the mar *207 ket in 1947 and the exclusive selling arrangement was made with Diversey in September, 1948.

2. The sales in dollars of the Falcon pipe during the ensuing years through 1953, when defendant’s product was first sold, are shown to have been:

1949 $160,000.
1950 231,000.
1951 322,000.
1952 547,000.
1953 780,000.

3. Until the defendant’s pipe was placed on sale, the Falcon was the only pipe which had ever combined a removable briar bowl screwed into a supporting metal (aluminum) cup-shaped basin from which extended, laterally to the mouthpiece or bit, two integral metal (aluminum) side supporting members and a third element, namely, an exposed central metal (aluminum) tube through which smoke passed from the basin supporting the briar bowl, to the bit; from the latter the smoke entered the mouth of the user of the pipe.

4. The side supporting members were in effect parallel extended portions of the cup-shaped basin about of an inch apart and did not merge until at a distance of about V2 an inch from the bit where they were bridged or molded so as to constitute a continuous unit, commencing as extensions of the basin and ending at the bit.

5. The Falcon pipe was individual, unique, and entirely original in appearance, namely, there had never been any pipe on the market with an aluminum metal shank with three parallel bars connecting the tobacco burning element with the bit.

The word “Falcon” was legibly impressed into the flat surface where the side supporting members merge into the bottom of the cup-shaped basin.

6. Consumer acceptance as shown in the dollar volume of sales during the five year period mentioned, since there was no competing device on the market, was consistent with identification in the minds of pipe smokers of the plaintiff’s device as a product apart from pipes entirely of briar construction; the Falcon pipe has created its own individual place in the field of tobacco smoking devices.

7. The plaintiff spent $265,000 from 1949 through 1954 (9 months) in advertising and promoting the sale of the Falcon pipe. The figure for 1949 was $9,000, and for the first nine months of 1954 it was $41,000.

8. The pipes of both parties have been mounted upon cardboard easels for display on counters and shelves of distributors. The defendant’s easels were later in time than the plaintiff’s and are of the same general appearance.

Points of resemblance are

(a) Color scheme: Both employed the same shade of red and yellow, the part supporting the pipes being red in the plaintiff’s easel and yellow in the defendant’s; black lettering is used in both, with white background effect more extensive in the defendant’s easel than in plaintiff’s;

(b) By prominent illustration both easels emphatically call attention to the drops of moisture resulting from the burning of tobacco in the bowl (although in both the tobacco is absent) which fall into the cup-shaped bowl holder below the aperture connecting the central metal tube with the metal holder, to indicate that the smoke going through the tube loses much of the moisture content or residue of the smoking operation. The residue of ashes and moisture in this case is called the concentrate.

That asserted result was one of the important selling points exploited by the plaintiff’s easel and was pictorially overemphasized in the illustration showing a section of the briar bowl detached from the bowl holder to depict the operation above described. The plaintiff's illustration is almost grotesque in exaggeration, and that exaggeration is reproduced in the defendant’s easel in such simulation of the plaintiff’s illustration, *208 as to refute any possible suggestion of coincidence.

Comment

In making this Finding, the court has not overlooked Defendants’ Exhibits C, D and E.

(c) Both easels emphasize in printed form that the briar bowls are interchangeable and that the user of the pipe will experience a cool, dry smoke and that the bowl is dry, but the reading matter differs as to the color scheme, size of type and form. Both call attention to the lightness of the metal stem, the plaintiff’s statement being “Weight one ounce”, and the defendant’s “It’s light.”

Points of difference are

(a) The plaintiff’s pipe is priced at $3.50 while the defendant’s is $1.95;

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 F. Supp. 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/falcon-industries-inc-v-r-s-herbert-co-nyed-1955.