General Baking Co. v. Grocers' Baking Co.

3 F. Supp. 146, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1568
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 8, 1933
Docket701
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 3 F. Supp. 146 (General Baking Co. v. Grocers' Baking Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Kentucky 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. Grocers' Baking Co., 3 F. Supp. 146, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1568 (W.D. Ky. 1933).

Opinion

DAWSON, District Judge.

This is a suit for alleged infringement of trade-mark and for unfair competition, the plaintiff being a citizen of the state of New York and the defendant a citizen and resident of the Western District of Kentucky. The cause is before me on motion for a temporary injunction.

Both the plaintiff and defendant for many years have been engaged in the baking and marketing of bread. The plaintiff has many plants located in nineteen different states, including one at Louisville, Ky., while the defendant has a plant at Louisville, Ky., one at Lexington, Ky., and owns or controls plants at Johnson City, Tenn., New Albany, Ind., and Bedford', Ind.

Prior to May, 1931, the plaintiff for many years had sold a bread which it called “Bond Bread,” which name, together with certain distinctive and identifying insignia, was at an early date in its business adopted by the plaintiff as its trade-mark. Por many years prior to May, 1931, plaintiff had been wrapping its bread in a white oil paper which had impressed upon it representations of a bond with the words “Bond Bread” and other words printed within the borders of these representations, and around the edge of the paper smaller representations of a bond, with the word “Bond” printed thereon.

During a considerable portion of this same time the defendant was advertising and marketing a bread known as “Honey-Krust.” In 1921 the defendant commenced the marketing of its Honey-Krust bread in oil paper, with the trade name “Honey-Krust” printed in large letters on the wrapper, and also certain other insignia not necessary here to mention. Prom time to time there were some changes made in the oil wrapper, but always in connection with its trade name of “HoneyKrust.” In 1928 the defendant adopted an oil wrapper which, in addition to the words “Honey-Krust,” had on it a rather large French oval, with the words “Honey-Krust” in large letters running through the middle of the oval and a border of small French ovals. The bread marketed under this wrapper had honey as one of its ingredients. The defendant, during this period of time, was advertising and marketing not only a bread claimed to contain honey, but also one which had no such ingredient in it, and in February, 1930, it adopted as a design for the wrapper in which its bread, not containing honey was marketed an oil paper with a Z-shaped blue ribbon running through the eenter of the wrapper, with a large gold seal between each angle of the ribbon with the words “Gold Seal” across the face thereof, and with a border composed of a narrow zigzag blue ribbon, with a small gold seal at each point of the ribbon with the words “Gold Seal Bread” and “Made by Honey-Krust Bakers” alternating on these small gold seals.

In February, 1931, the plaintiff, by contract with National Foods, Limited, the licensee of Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, secured the exclusive right to incorporate in bread and breadstuffs throughout the United States vitamin D obtained under St'eemboek patent, No. 1,680,818, owned by said Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, and the first bread containing this element was produced and marketed from its Boston, Mass., plant on March 16, 1931, and from then until October 12,1931, plaintiff was engaged in making, advertising, and selling such bread from various other plants owned by it. On May 9, 1931, plaintiff adopted as the wrapper for this bread an oil paper with the same insignia thereon as it had., theretofore used in marketing its Bond bread, with the addition of the representation of a large sun, having a yellow eenter, with a grayish band surrounding the yellow eenter and staggered red rays radiating therefrom, the yellow eenter bearing the words, “This bread brings you the extra Sunshine Vitamin D you need,” and printed on the band surrounding the yellow eenter the words, “Licensed by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation under Stecmboek Patent No. 1,680,818.” The wrapper also had a representation of small smis, with yellow centers and staggered red rays radiating therefrom, between each of the small representations of bonds appearing on the border of the wrapper. The plaintiff, from the time it commenced to market its vitamin D *148 Bond bread, conducted an extensive and expensive campaign, advertising its product under the name of “Sunshine Vitamin D Bond Bread,” the first advertising in Louisville appearing on October 5, 1931. The bread was first put out in Louisville from its Louisville plant on October* 12, 1931.

On August 25, 1931, the defendant entered into an agreement with National Oil Products Company, licensee of University Patents, Inc., the owner of Theodore F. Zueker Patent No. 1,678,454, by which it was given the right to incorporate in bread made, sold, and distributed from its Louisville, Ky., Johnson City, Tenn., New Albany, Ind., Bed-ford, Ind., and Lexington, Ky., plants vitamin D obtained under said Zueker patent. University Patents, Inc., is owned and controlled by Columbia University. It is apparent from the record that since the latter part of 1929 the defendant had been investigating the feasibility of incorporating vitamin D in the bread made and marketed by it. On October 6, 1931, it placed upon the market, bread produced by it at its Louisville, Ky., plant as’a licensee under the Zueker patent. This bread was marketed in a wrapper which was a combination of its Honey Krust wrapper and the Gold Seal wrapper heretofore referred to, with certain additions thereto. This wrapper retained the zigzag blue ribbon effect used on its Gold Seal wrapper and the French ovals used on the Honey Krust wrapper. The large French ovals had a center of red with a narrow border of white .merging into a wider border of blue, with the words “Vitamin D” printed in white, with blue shading appearing near the top of the red center, and the word “Loaf” similarly printed near the bottom, and between the two the words “Honey Krust” printed in blue, with white shading. Alternating on the border of the paper were a small circle and a small’ French oval, each having a yellow center and red circumference, the circles having printed therein the words “Vitamin D” and the French ovals the words “Honey Krust.” The wrapper also contained the representation of a large sun with a yellow center and red circumference, with broad yellow rays radiating therefrom, and within these yellow rays narrow staggered red rays. The center of the suns appearing to the left of the blue ribbon in the middle of the wrapper contained these words, “The Vitamin D contained herein was produced under U. S. Patent Number 1,678,-454, developed in the laboratories of and controlled by Columbia University.” The large suns to the right of the blue ribbon contained in the center these words, “Contains the Sunshine Vitamin ‘D.’ ” Defendant engaged in a more or less extensive advertisement of its vitamin D bread, advertising it as “Vitamin D Honey-Kust Loaf,” and as bread containing the “Sunshine Vitamin D.”

A careful consideration of all the evidence in this ease, and indulging the presumption that the court knows what is common knowledge, leads me to the conclusion that the plaintiff is not entitled to appropriate as its exclusive property in the marketing and advertising of bread the words “Sunshine Vitamin D.” It is generally known and understood that vitamin D has the same effect upon animal life, including human beings, as the ultraviolet rays of the sun. Such has been the understanding from the writings of scientists almost from the date of the discovery of this vitamin, and the evidence in this case I think abundantly establishes this fact.

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3 F. Supp. 146, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-baking-co-v-grocers-baking-co-kywd-1933.