Furniture Hospital v. Dorfman

166 S.W. 861, 179 Mo. App. 302, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 197
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 166 S.W. 861 (Furniture Hospital v. Dorfman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Furniture Hospital v. Dorfman, 166 S.W. 861, 179 Mo. App. 302, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 197 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, J.

This is a suit by the Furniture Hospital, a corporation, to enjoin defendant from tbe use of tbe name “New Tork Furniture Hospital” in connection with bis business of furniture repairing at No. 1704 Troost Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri, on tbe ground that tbe name “New Tork Furniture Hospital” by tbe respondent was an unlawful use of plaintiff’s trade name “Tbe Furniture Hospital,” and constituted unfair competition as against tbe appellant herein. The circuit court sustained a demurrer to the petition on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and on plaintiff’s refusing to plead further, rendered judgment in favor of the defendant, and plaintiff thereupon appealed.

The petition alleged that it was a corporation and since 1904 it had been conducting at 1301 East 12th street, Kansas City, Missouri, the business of furniture repairing under the name of “The FHrniture Hospital” and that about March, 1913, defendant began a similar business about a quarter of a [305]*305mile distant from plaintiff’s shop which he carried on under the name of “The New York Furniture Hospital”; that by reason of plaintiff’s long use of the name “Furniture Hospital” and its advertisement thereof and the consequent identification of plaintiff’s business with that name in the mind of the trading public of Kansas City, plaintiff is entitled to the exclusive use of the name “Furniture Hospital” in Kansas City for the business of repairing furniture; “that the use of the name ‘Furniture Hospital’ was intended by defendant, and apart from his intention was likely to, and did, confuse and mislead the trading public and attract plaintiff’s customers to defendant’s shop, and that it constituted unfair competition and is contrary to equity and good conscience.” The petition further stated that by such unfair competition and by the wrongful assumption and use of plaintiff’s trade name, defendant is diverting to his shop many of plaintiff’s customers deceived by his use of the name, and has obtained business which would have come to plaintiff amounting to $1000.

There is no claim on the part of plaintiff that there has been a violation of a technical trade mark but that under the circumstances plaintiff has a right to designate his business by the name “Furniture Hospital” and that defendant has no right to give his business such a similar designation as will enable him to deceive and mislead the public into thinking: they are dealing with plaintiff. In other words, plaintiff claims that defendant is violating the rule against unfair competition which consists in passing off, or attempting to pass off, the goods or business of one-person as and for the goods or business of another. In such case no exclusive proprietary interest in the trade-name is necessary to relief while in trade-mark cases an exclusive right is necessary, and this seems to be the-principal distinction between the two. [38 Cyc. 763.]

[306]*306Trade names are divided into exclusive and nonexclusive trade names. The former are protected upon the same principles that trade marks are. Nonexclusive trade names are such names as are publici juris, that is, open to or exerciseable by all persons in their primary sense but which in a secondary sense have come to indicate the business of a particular trader. [38 Cyc. 765.] The name which plaintiff in this case seeks to protect is that of a nonexclusive trade name in its secondary meaning. In 38 Cyc. 769 it is said: “Words or names which have a primary meaning of their own, such as words descriptive of the goods, or the place where they are made, or the name of the maker, and which are not capable of exclusive appropriation as a trade-mark, may nevertheless by long use in connection with the goods or business of a particular trader come to be understood by the public as designating the goods or business of that particular trader. Such words have both a primary and secondary meaning. In their primary descriptive sense, they are publici juris, and all the world may use them, but they must be used in such a way as not to falsely convey the secondary meaning, for this would constitute unfair competition as tending directly to pass off the goods or business of one man as and for that of another. This is what is known as the doctrine of secondary meaning. Its perception by the courts was the genesis of the law of unfair competition as distinguished from technical trade marks. In all this class of cases where the word, name, or other mark or device is primarily publici juris the right to relief depends upon the proof. If plaintiff proves that the name or word has been so exclusively identified with his goods or business as to have acquired a secondary meaning, so as to indicate lxis goods or business and his alone, he is entitled to relief against-another’s deceptive use of such terms. If he fails in such proof, he is not entitled to relief. [307]*307There is an exclusive right to the secondary meaning of a name, which has been deemed a property right, in the same sense that technical trade-marks are property. This exclusive right is strictly limited to the secondary meaning of the word.”

As to what will constitute unfair competition by the unlawful use of a nonexclusive trade name in its secondary meaning, no inflexible rule can be laid down. Each case is, in a measure, a law unto itself. Unfair competition is always a question of fact. The question in every case is whether or not, as a matter of fact, the name adopted by defendant has previously come to indicate plaintiff’s business and whether the public is likely to be deceived. [38 Cyc. 779; Sarta v. Schaden, 125 Iowa 696, l. c. 701; Atlas Ins. Co. v. Ins. Co., 138 Iowa 228, l. c. 232; O’Grady v. McDonald, 72 N. J. Eq. 805, l. c. 807.]

Of course this rule is qualified by the further rule that names which are mere descriptive terms of the business and generic in their nature are not capable of being appropriated by any one. Hence if the name sought to be protected and claimed to be infringed upon and unfairly used is one which may be used by every one in an honestly descriptive and non-deceptive manner, the court may declare, as matter of law, that there can be no unfair competition in the use of such terms. For instance, no one could appropriate the name of “Swedish Snuff Store” or “Felt Hat Store,” “Law Book Store,” “Divinity Book Store” or any such name as would simply notify the public that a particular class of business or merchandise was carried on or kept there. [Choynski v. Cohen, 39 Cal. 501.]

But even descriptive terms may by long use become identified in the minds of the public with the business of a particular trader, and in such case it is unfair competition for a subsequent trader to use them in such manner as to pass off his business for that of [308]*308the other. [38 Cyc. 800.] If the name adopted he an odd, unusual, fanciful, or striking name it may be appropriated by a trader even though it be descriptive of the business he carriers on. If, for its description of the business, it depends upon a figure of speech or an association of ideas and is not merely a literal description thereof, it is a name that is subject to appropriation within the limits of the territory which the business serves. Such a name is one likely to catch the public notice and fancy, to stick like a bur in the memory, and is therefore of great value in advertising a public business.

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.W. 861, 179 Mo. App. 302, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furniture-hospital-v-dorfman-moctapp-1914.