Filley v. Fassett

44 Mo. 168
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 44 Mo. 168 (Filley v. Fassett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Filley v. Fassett, 44 Mo. 168 (Mo. 1869).

Opinion

Currier, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In 1851 the plaintiff employed N. S. Vedder, an extensive stove-pattern maker of Troy, New York, to design and construct for Mm a set or series of cooking stove patterns. The patterns were made as ordered, and in a form which resulted in the production of a cooking stove of a new and improved interior arrangement and construction, for which Vedder obtained letters patent, which he assigned to the plaintiff. The plaintiff originated and applied to the stove the name “ Charter Oak,” which was so formed upon the patterns as to produce the name upon the manufactured article, in combination with a sprig of oak leaves. The name and device was employed to distinguish and designate cooking stoves of the plaintiff’s manufacture. The manufacture and sale commenced the following year, and has been followed up continuously ever since ; the sales from 1852 to 1867, both years inclusive, amounting to 119,226. These stoves were distributed broadly through the western and southern country, and appear to have been highly popular and successful.

[173]*173The testimony shows that stoves are usually known in the trade by their distinctive names and designations, such as “Excelsior,” “Climax,” “Empire,” “Charter Oak,” etc.; and that they are advertised and bought and sold by such names and designations; that when a stove is favorably received, and acquires popularity in the market and with those who use it, the peculiar name by which it is knovpi and distinguished becomes a matter of importance to the manufacturer, and of great value to him in the prosecution of his business. The extent of the plaintiff’s sales of his “Charter Oak” cooking stove indicates its reputation and popularity, and the consequent value to him of the name by which it was known.

But the answer denies that the plaintiff first appropriated and used that name in such connection as indicating the source and origin of the article to which it was applied, and denies that his use of it has been either exclusive or uninterruptedly continuous, and avers that the contrary of all this is true. Upon these issues a large mass of testimony was taken, from which the following facts are deduced: 1. That the plaintiff’s appropriation of the name “ Charter Oak,” as already detailed, was prior in point of time to any similar use of that name by any other parties. The testimony is clear and entirely satisfactory on this point. 2. That notwithstanding such appropriation by the plaintiff, different manufacturers in Cincinnati, and in that region, at different times subsequently to 1852, applied the same name to cooking stoves of their manufacture, but without the consent of the plaintiff in any instance, and without his knowledge, except in two instances. The first of these two occurred in 1854, and was at once checked by the plaintiff, and abandoned by the Cincinnati manufacturer on being apprised of the plaintiff’s rights. The other is that of the manufacture of the stoves, the sale of which, with the plaintiff’s alleged trade-mark upon them, is sought to be enjoined by this suit; and the suit was commenced immediately after the facts came to the knowledge of the plaintiff. 3. That J. S. &. M. Beckham, of Utica, Oneida county, New York, manufactured• in Utica a “Charter Oak” cooking stove, from 1852 to 1857, and then abandoned it, and never [174]*174after resumed the manufacture of that particular stove. The Peckhams purchased their patterns for this stove of said N. S. Vedder, Filley consenting to the sale on condition that certain alterations were first made in the patterns. This transaction does not appear to have included specifically the right to use the plaintiff’s trade-mark, nor does it appear that Filley was ever made aware that the purchasers in fact used it. The design of the stove was patented, and the transaction with the Peckhams involved the granting to them the right to manufacture, in Oneida county, its patented features. That, with the right to sell in a defined territory, would seem to have constituted the inducement to the purchase of these patterns, rather than others. The particular name which the plaintiff had originated for the stove which he proposed to make does not appear to have been mentioned in the negotiations with the Peckhams, or to have been in the minds of the parties. It ought not, therefore, to be inferred from the mere permission granted to Vedder to sell the modified patterns that the plaintiff licensed or sold out the use of his trade-mark, particularly in a contest with third parties; the Peckhams themselves disavowing all right, claim, or interest in the trade-mark, either as originators or purchasers. 4. That the plaintiff’s use of the trade-mark claimed by him has been continuous and uninterrupted since its first adoption by him to the present time.

The fact that parties in Cincinnati, or elsewhere, manufactured “ Charter Oak” stoves, and sent them into the market to compete with the plaintiff’s manufactures, in no way aids the defense, unless it appears that the plaintiff assented to or acquiesced in such infringements upon his rights; and, as already indicated, there is nothing in the ease to establish a dedication or abandonment to the public, on the part of the plaintiff, of his supposed rights of property in the alleged trade-mark. There is no testimony having that tendency except the transaction with the Peckhams, and that is insufficient. In Gillott v. Esterbrook, 47 Barb. 455, it appeared that an imitation of the plaintiff’s mark had been in use for many years, and that for twenty years he had issued printed cautions ” to the public on the subject, [175]*175implying knowledge on his part of such use; but that was held no acquiescence, although the plaintiff had neglected to institute prosecutions.

The depredations of others upon plaintiff’s rights furnish no excuse to the defendants for similar acts on their part. It is rather an aggravation to the plaintiff that others have also injured him, and courts have not shown any disposition to encourage that line of defense. Woodbury, J., in Taylor v. Carpenter, 2 Wood & Min. 8, held this language: “There is something abhorrent in allowing such a defense to a wrong which consists in counterfeiting others’ marks or stamps, defrauding others of what had been gained by their industry and skill, and robbing them of the fruit of their good name, merely because they have shown forbearance and kindness.” (See observations of Story, J., same case, 3 Sto. 464.)

After this suit was commenced, Rosenbaum & Co., who seem to be the real parties defending against the action, made an attempt to appropriate the disputed trade-mark to their own use, in clue form of law, by filing in the office of recorder of deeds, in the county of St. Louis, a written claim thereto, under the act of March, 1866 (Gen. Stat. 1865, p. 912). A certified copy of the paper so filed, declaring that said Rosenbaum & Co. had adopted “ Charter Oak ” as their trade-mark for stoves manufactured by them, was given in evidence, and relied upon as showing their title to the trade-mark as against Filley, who had never filed any such document. If this proceeding can be made available for the purpose intended, it may be regarded as an entirely new and improved method of disposing of trademark cases, and of appropriating the property of others, the subject of such suits, without risk or inconvenience, and at very slight cost.

A glance at the statute, however, shows that it was intended for no such purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Mo. 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/filley-v-fassett-mo-1869.