General Baking Co. v. Gorman

295 F. 168, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1800
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 19, 1924
DocketNo. 168
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 295 F. 168 (General Baking Co. v. Gorman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Baking Co. v. Gorman, 295 F. 168, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1800 (D.R.I. 1924).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

The General Baking Company charges that the defendant, James H. Gorman, by the use of the trade-mark “Liberty Bond” for bread sold by him in the cities of Pawtucket and Central Falls in the state of Rhode Island, infringes the trade-mark rights of the plaintiff, General Baking Company, in the trade-mark “Bond.”

The word “Bond” as a name for bread was first used by the plaintiff about July 10, 1915, in the city of Rochester, N. Y.

April 18, 1916, the plaintiff registered in the United States Patent Office 'the trade-mark “Bond.”

The plaintiff, General Baking Company, owned and operated 24 baking plants in 18 cities, including Rochester, N. Y., and Providencfe, R. I., and, prior to any use by defendant of the name “Liberty Bond,” had used the name “Bond” in Rochester since July 10, 1915; in Buffalo, N. Y., since October 18, 1916; and in three plants in Philadelphia since May 16, 1917.

March 17, 1917, plaintiff’s executive committee adopted a resolution:

“That the name ‘Bond Bread’ he adopted by the company, and that the name be put on in each and all of the plants as soon as expedient.”

[170]*170Though the plaintiff since July, 1915, was operating a baking plant in the city of Providence, it did not until March, 1921, use that name in Providence or in Rhode Island, but marketed its bread under other names.

The defendant began to use the name “Liberty Bond” on August 10, 1917, in a local business in the cities of Pawtucket and Central Falls, and has done no interstate business in connection with that name.

This was about 3% years before the plaintiff began to use the name “Bond” in Rhode Island. The defendant’s first knowledge of plaintiff’s claim was iff January, 1921, when he received plaintiff’s letter notifying him of plaintiff’s claim to trade-mark rights in the name “Bond” for bread. '

It is a novel and peculiar feature of the case that the plaintiff did not use its trade-mark “Bond” in Providence as a name associated with an old product, but first announced the name in Providence as one that it proposed to use as the name of a new product which it should make after a prize contest among the women of Rhode Island in baking bread.

In advertisements in the Providence Evening Bulletin of March 7, 1921, it was announced that after a prize contest—

“The prize-winning loaves will be taken as a model from whieh the General Baking Company will produce Bond Bread. This Bond Bread will be offered to the public after the expert bakers analyze the loaves the prize winners submit and copy these ingredients and qualities as modern baking science readily can.”
“These prize-winning loaves will be taken as ideals; which the General Baking Company will copy and incorporate in a new loaf of bread to be called Bond Bread.”

In an advertisement in the Providence Evening News of March 17, 1921, was announced the result of the contest, stating the selection by experts of 121 prize winning loaves; that the baking experts of the company took these loaves, examined and analyzed them, experimented for many hours, and—

“At last (last Tuesday) Rhode Island received the new Bond Bread, which these housewives had earned for their neighbors, and every day more and more Rhode Island people are adopting the ‘child’ of these public-spirited women who submitted their home-made loaves.”

The full text of plaintiff’s advertisements is appended.

There is also evidence as to a similar advertising campaign in other cities.

The defendant contends that the purpose of the plaintiff is plain— fo create a-local good will as distinguished from a foreign good will for its bread.

If the plaintiff at any time extended to Rhode Island a trade associated with its trade-mark “Bond,” it did not do so until 3% years after the defendant had adopted and used in its local trade in Pawtucket and Central Falls the trade-mark “Liberty Bond.”

At the conclusion of the oral testimony at final hearing, including the testimony of the designer of the defendant’s wrapper, and the defendant, I found that the defendant adopted and used the word [171]*171“Liberty Bond” without knowledge of the plaintiff’s use of the mark “Bond,” and in good faith and without intention to imitate or profit in any way from any trade reputation of the plaintiff, or to injure or forestall the extension of plaintiff’s trade. '

From the fact that in January, 1921, the plaintiff by letter notified defendant of its claim of right, it is evident that the plaintiff, when it instituted in Rhode Island its advertising campaign, had knowledge that the defendant Gorman was already using the term “Liberty Bond.’’

I am of the opinion that there is not in fact any deceptive similarity between the labels of plaintiff and defendant, and that the possibility of confusion is slight. The words “Libert}’- Bond” are not suggestive of the General Baking Company , or of any warranty by that company.

In the advertisement of March 7, 1921, it is said:

“This will be called Bond Bread because it will be guaranteed by the pond of the General Baking Company, to possess the same pure ‘home’ ingredients — the same‘home-made taste — the same crust and the same texture, as the best home-made loaves which your committee of well-known Rhode Island women judges will choose.”

The copy of the so-called bond appears in the appendix.

The plaintiff desires that the word “Bond” shall mean the General Baking Company, but such significance could hardly be attached by any one to the term “Liberty Bond,” especially when associated, as in defendant’s label, with a conspicuous drawing of the Statue of Liberty and a conspicuous statement, “Made by Gorman’s Bakery, 679 Dexter St., Central Falls, R. I.” It may be said that the dominant feature of defendant’s label is the word “Liberty,” associated with the Statue of Liberty.

To the defendant’s contention that Gorman was first in Rhode Island to associate with a trade in bread the word “Bond” and had acquired a right dating back more than three years before the plaintiff’s use, the plaintiff says that “there is no way in which the plaintiff’s trade-mark rights could have been territorially limited except by estoppel,” and relies upon certain expressions in Hanover Star Milling Co. v. Metcalf, 240 U. S. 424, 36 Sup. Ct. 357, 60 L. Ed. 713; United Drug Co. v. Theodore Rectanus Co., 248 U. S. 90, 39 Sup. Ct. 48, 63 L. Ed. 141.

This contention, however, is unsound. It assumes that general rights are created by the mere adoption of a trade-mark in a local trade, and that this right can be asserted in territory to which the trade nas never been extended unless by his conduct the proprietor has estopped himself against a defendant who has expended money in building up a business in reliance upon the failure of the plaintiff to enter his field.

In the present case, as in United Drug Co. v. Rectanus, the use of the trade-mark had been confined to a limited territory. In another territory to which the trade had not been extended, an innocent party in good .faith, and without notice of any prior use, selected a mark and built up a local trade.

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Bluebook (online)
295 F. 168, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-baking-co-v-gorman-rid-1924.