French Bros. Dairy Co. v. Giacin

8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 549
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedMay 15, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 549 (French Bros. Dairy Co. v. Giacin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
French Bros. Dairy Co. v. Giacin, 8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 549 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Gorman, J.

This action was commenced by the plaintiff, a corporation duly incorporated under the laws of Ohio, 'against the defendant, John Giacin, doing an ice cream business under the pseudo corporate [550]*550name of “The French Ice Cream Co.” in the city of Cincinnati and vicinity, to enjoin forever the defendant from in any way using the name “French” in connection with his, the defendant’s, ice cream business, and for damages in the sum of $10,000, and for equitable relief.

The case is submitted on the amended petition, the answer thereto and the reply and upon the evidence and arguments of counsel. The trial of the cause consumed five days and was most strenuously contested on the part.of plaintiff and defendant.

The evidence discloses that the business of the plaintiff company was established in 1842 by Thomas French, and after his retirement from active participation in the management of the business, it was carried on for many years under the name of Thomas French’s Sons until, in 1889, the sons and grandsons of Thomas French incorporated under the laws of Ohio, adopting the name of the French Bros. Dairy Company; that the business originally conducted by Thomas French was that of a dairy farm, producing and selling in and about Cincinnati milk, cream, butter and other dairy products; that as time went on the business increased and expanded until at the time of the commencement'of this action the plaintiff, which is the successor of Thomas French and Thomas French’s Sons in business, good • will and reputation, owned and operated within a radius of fifty miles of Cincinnati twenty-one milk stations and creameries where it receives milk from its own dairies and from others who sell to it large quantities of milk daily; and from these stations the milk, cream, butter, etc., are shipped daily in large quantities to Cincinnati and sold to a large number of plaintiff’s customers throughout the city of Cincinnati and .all the surrounding towns and country, both at wholesale and retail.

In 1896 the plaintiff company as a part of its business began the manufacture and sale of ice cream, both wholesale and retail, and the business has grown to such large proportions that the sales extend out for a distance of many miles from the city of Cincinnati, and its ice cream has found favor and established a reputation for good ice cream among all classes of the public and has been extensively purchased during all these years by [551]*551families and ice cream stands, soda-water stands, drug stores and for church and social functions and picnics and all kinds of gatherings where ice cream is generally used, and thereby the ice cream of plaintiff has acquired a standing and reputation in the city of Cincinnati and vicinity for its good quality. Plaintiff to still further advertise its ice cream has for several years used and circulated among its customers and retail dealers attractive signs with the name “French Bros. Ice Cream,” and lettered a large number of its wagons used exclusively in the ice’ cream branch of its business in the same way. It also advertised the name “The French Bros. Dairy Co. Ice Cream” on the front part of its main and branch stores, and on placards, cartons used to carry away ice cream, on its buckets, tags and otherwise. At the time-of the bringing of this action plaintiff had eleven branch stores in and about Cincinnati, and one large central store on West Seventh street, from each of which it was selling large quantities of ice cream; and it used in the ice cream branch of its business twenty wagons containing the name of “French Bros.” and “Ice Cream” and was thoroughly and extensively known as a manufacturer of a fine quality of cream, all in connection with its other business and inseparately connected and associated with the word “French.”

It in common with practically every ice cream manufacturer in Cincinnati for many years manufactured a large part of its ice cream in a freezer called a “French pot”; and it is in evidence that this pot has been in use in Cincinnati for more than twenty-five years and was so used long before defendant came to Cincinnati or conceived the idea of beginning the ice cream business ; but there is not now and never has been any ice cream sold on the market in Cincinnati known to the public as French ice cream. The process of making ice cream whether by the “French pot” or by some other pot did not and does not determine the name of the cream, but rather the flavoring of the cream and the manner of putting it into shape for sale. It is in evidence by the dealers and manufacturers of ice cream that the various binds of cream sold are designated as vanilla, lemon, .peach, pineapple, etc., or Neapolitan, Delmonico, Tuti-fruiti, etc. The defendant, John Giacin or Giovanni Giacin as he wrote it in his native lan[552]*552guage, is an Italian and engaged in the work of making ice cream for twenty-five years or more in Italy, Germany, Austria, Switzerland and France, and later after coming to this country he'was thus employed for eight or nine years prior to 1906 in Cincinnati, but never in the employ of plaintiff. For some years he was employed as the maker of ice cream by Mr. Del Favero, who owns and carries on the Vienna lee Cream Co. within three or four squares 'of the plaintiff’s main store on West Seventh street, and while there employed defendant says that he heard of the French Bros. Dairy Co. and that it was engaged in the manufacture and s-a’e of ice cream. Defendant commenced business in 1906 at No. 2603 Vine street, Cincinnati, in what is commonly known as “Corryville” and advertised himself under the pseudo corporate name of “The French Ice Cream Co.” He was alone in business and started on a small scale with a very limited capital and in a modest way. He placed the name “The French Ice Cream Co.” on his windows in white enamel letters and. placed over the door swinging above the sidewalk and at right angles to the building in' which his store was located, a large illuminated -electrical sign with the same name conspicuously-lettered thereon and below the words “Ice Cream, Wholesale and Retail.” The same name “The French Ice Cream Co.” was lettered on his wagon and on the -cartons, letter-heads, tags, buckets, etc., used in the business. No other name appeared thereon until last July, when on the application of plaintiff, Judge Woodmansee ordered defendant to place his name on the windows, signs-, wagons, cartons, letter-heads, etc., since-which time in smaller letters his name, John Giacin, appears below the name of the French Ice Cream Co., as proprietor. Some time early in July, 1908, he established another ice cream store or parlor at the corner of Woodburn av'enue and Chapel street, Walnut Hills, and-on the windows-facing both streets he placed the name “The French Ice Cream .Co.” “Branch” in white enamel letters without his name, until afterwards in July in compliance with Judge Woodmansee’s ■order he placed his own name as “proprietor” in smaller letters below the name of the company. -Same time in February, 1908, he filed an affidavit' in the office of the clerk of this court setting,forth-that he was the sole proprietor, and, owner'of the [553]

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/french-bros-dairy-co-v-giacin-ohctcomplhamilt-1909.