France Milling Co. v. Washburn-Crosby Co.

3 F.2d 321, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 863
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 5, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 F.2d 321 (France Milling Co. v. Washburn-Crosby Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
France Milling Co. v. Washburn-Crosby Co., 3 F.2d 321, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 863 (S.D.N.Y. 1925).

Opinion

WINSLOW, District Judge.

The plaintiff has moved on an order to show cause for a preliminary injunction heroin restraining the defendant from using the trade-mark “Gold Medal” in connection with prepared pancake flour and prepared buckwheat flour.

On the return of the motion and on its order to show eause the defendant has made a counter motion asking for a preliminary injunction restraining the plaintiff from continuing the use of the trade-mark “Gold Medal” as applied to prepared pancake flour and prepared buckwheat flour.

The facts are substantially as follows: On January 1, 1874, the Northwestern Consolidated Milling Company first adopted and used the trade-mark “Gold Medal” for flour, particularly wheat flour.

In 1880 the Washburn & Crosby Company, the predecessor of the defendant, adopted and used the same trade-mark for wheat flour, and the present defendant, successor to the Washburn & Crosby Company, registered the trade-mark on April 27, 1886, No. 13253. From that date until on or about June 1, 1923, the defendant corporation used the trade-mark solely in connection with the sale of its wheat flour, and, as far as this record discloses, never applied the trade-mark to prepared pancake flour or prepared buckwheat flour.

In 1904 the plaintiff, then being engaged in the manufacture of prepared pancake flour and prepared buckwheat flour, developed a formula. Its products, manufac *322 tured according to this formula, were exhibited at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., and the plaintiff was there awarded a gold medal and diploma incident thereto for the specific class of prepared pancake flour and prepared buckwheat flour. Immediately after this award the plaintiff adopted for its use the trade-name “Gold Medal” as applied to its prepared pancake flour and prepared buckwheat flour, and from that time (1904) until the present plaintiff has enjoyed the quiet and uninterrupted and exclusive use of the trade-mark “Gold Medal” as applied to its products, and its business and the sale of its products has grown from small proportions,particularly in the states east of the Mississippi, to a large business. The plaintiff’s products have been packaged in pasteboard cartons.

The defendant, in the sale of its products, has sold them in cloth sacks, bags, or barrels, except for a brief period in 1900, when its wheat flour was packaged -in a pasteboard cart.on for a few weeks, and then the practice was abandoned and never revived.

The plaintiff, in the preparation of its prepared pancake flour and prepared buckwheat flour, has from time to time since 1912, and each year thereafter, purchased wheat flour from defendant, which is one of the ingredients of its prepared flours. In the'early part of the year 1923 some correspondence, initiated by the plaintiff, asserting plaintiff’s rights, took place between plaintiff and defendant concerning the rumored prospective use by the defendant of the trade-mark “Gold Medal” as applied to prepared pancake flour and prepared buckwheat flour. Thereafter, in December, 1923, without notice, the trade-mark No. 177,829 was issued to the defendant for the trade-. mark “Gold Medal” for pancake flour. The sworn statement of the vice-president of the defendant, submitted on the application, in substance was to the effect that prepared pancake flour and prepared buckwheat flour are separate and distinct classes of goods, and so recognized by the defendant. Thereafter, on March 4, 1924, the plaintiff filed a petition in the Patent Office to cancel the ■ trade-mark so issued (No; 177,829) to the defendant for pancake flour. As a -result of such, petition, and pursuant to a stipulation thereafter entered into between the France Milling Company, the petitioner for the cancellation of said trade-mark, and the Washburn-Crosby Company, the respondent, the Washburn-Crosby Company withdrew its opposition to the. cancellation proceeding, and thereupon, on September 12, 1924, the Examiner of Interferences in the Patent Office rendered a decision recommending that the registration theretofore filed by the Washburn-Crosby Company for said trade-mark for the use of thp words “Gold Medal,” as applied to prepared pan-cake flour, be canceled. This was done.

The defendant herein is now selling prepared pancake flour and prepared buckwheat flour in pasteboard cartons with the trademark “Gold Medal” thereon in the same territory in which plaintiff for over 20 years has enjoyed the exclusive right to that trademark on its particular class of goods.

The defendant corporation, on its counter motion, contends that the trade-mark “Gold Medal,” which it has’used continuously since 1880 as applied to flour, necessarily includes pancake flour. It says that “Gold Medal” flour is the leading brand of the country, and that a vast business has been conducted by the defendant in this particular brand. Large sums of money have been spent by the defendant in advertising this brand, and it contends that the plaintiff, on its part', knowing the value and reputation of the trade-mark “Gold Medal,” appropriated it and applied it to its prepared pancake flour, and that such use is an infringement of the defendant’s rights, and that the public is constantly b,eing deceived into the belief that the plaintiff’s use of the words as applied to pancake flour originates with the plaintiff.

The facts necessary to a determination of the issues before the court on the motion and counter motion are undisputed, and therefore the result of the motion herein is equivalent to a final hearing on the merits.

There are two questions which naturally present themselves for determination. The first is' whether or not wheat flour on the one hand and prepared pancake flour and prepared buckwheat on the other hand are separate and distinct classes of commodities, or whether they are identical. The second question to which attention must be directed has to do with the words “Gold Medal” as a trade-mark and the latitude which must be recorded by this Court in the application of those words.

At the outset, the record discloses that the defendant itself (if the sworn statement of its vice president is considered at all), when it filed its application in 1924 for the trade-mark “Gold Medal” as applied to pancake flour, considered, certainly at that time, that wheat flour and the prepared flours were different classes of commodities. *323 However, the defendant contends that this registration by it (Ho. 177,829), which included pancake flour, was inadvertent, and was voluntarily canceled.

“It was inadvertently obtained, and constituted a mistake and blunder, and that defendant never intended to register the words ‘Gold Medal’ for pancake flour and cake flour apart from flour generally.”

Thereupon, as heretofore stated, after proceedings had been instituted by plaintiff to cancel such registration, a stipulation was entered into, as indicated, pursuant to which the registration was canceled.

The defendant now contends that the record is conclusive that any flour product labeled “Gold Medal” is assumed by the public to be the product of the Washburn-Cros-by Company, and that any flour, whether called pancake flour or merely flour, can support but a single trade-mark right.

In Aunt Jemima Mills v. Rigney, 247 F. 407, 159 C. C. A. 461, L. R. A.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F.2d 321, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/france-milling-co-v-washburn-crosby-co-nysd-1925.