George H. Dentler & Sons v. Fuller's Food Products

183 S.W.2d 768, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 965
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 12, 1944
DocketNo. 11639.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 183 S.W.2d 768 (George H. Dentler & Sons v. Fuller's Food Products) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George H. Dentler & Sons v. Fuller's Food Products, 183 S.W.2d 768, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 965 (Tex. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This appeal is from a judgment of the 61st District Court of Harris County sus- *769 tabling appellee’s special exception to the legal sufficiency of the appellant partnership’s petition, wherein it sought a permanent injunction against the use by the ap-pellee of a label, design, or trademark, employed by him in selling bags of fried potato chips, claimed to infringe upon appellant’s package then in use for the same purpose, and dismissing appellant’s suit for such writ, inclusive of its claim for resultant damages from the declared upon infringement.

In so sustaining the special exception, denying the injunction prayed for, and dismissing the suit, the decree recited:

“ * * * it appearing to the Court and the Court having found that the action asserted by the plaintiffs in their first amended original petition is one for a permanent injunction-to restrain the defendant Fuller from the use of a label (which is variously referred to in the petition as a label, imprint, design, and trademark) on five-cent packages of fried potato chips, and for damages for past use of such label, grounded upon a claimed imitation and consequent infringement by defendant of plaintiffs’ label; and it further appearing that the plaintiff has attached to his first amended original petition one each of plaintiffs’ and defendant’s labels, which labels are by reference incorporated in and made a part of plaintiff’s first amended original petition; and it further appearing to the Court and the Court having found, upon a comparison of such labels, that they are so distinct that ordinary attention by a purchaser of the packages in question would enable him at once to discriminate the products of the plaintiffs from those of the defendant; and it further appearing that the plaintiff’s entire cause of action, as asserted in its petition, is based upon the proposition that the label used by the defendant so resembles the label used by the plaintiffs as to mislead and deceive purchasers of potato chips; and it further appearing to the Court, from an examination of the two labels so made a part of the pleading, that they are so distinct and dissimilar that any person exercising such reasonable care and observation as the public generally are capable of using and may be expected to exercise would not mistake the one for the other, the packages of the defendant being branded on the front and top with the name of the defendant in letters approximately two inches high on a package the total height of which ’is approximately eight inches, the Court is of the opinion, as a matter of law, that the package of the defendant as pleaded by plaintiff plainly shows an intention of identifying his products as his own, and that, as a matter of law, in view of the dissimilarity of the labels, and the plain use -by the defendant of his own name on his package, there is no infringement, the Court is of the opinion that the exception is well taken; it is accordingly ordered that it be, and it is, hereby sustained, and the petition is ordered dismissed at plaintiffs’ cost.

“The plaintiff is given leave to amend within thirty days from this date.”

Facsimiles of the respective labels of the parties, so recited to have been a part of the appellant’s petition, are likewise appended hereto and made a part of this opinion.

(Dentler Maid Saratoga Chips)

*770 (Fuller’s New Method Potato Chips)

EXHIBIT “B’\

In protest here against the decree so adverse to it below, the appellant-partnership presents two contentions : t

(1) The trial court erred in sustaining the special exception, and in holding that its petition did not state a good cause of action for the injunction sought, at least to the extent of “raising an issue of fact over whether or not appellee’s design and ensemble is an infringement upon appellant’s registered design and ensemble, as well as whether or not appellee had been guilty of unfair competition, with resulting damages to appellant”;

(2) “In passing upon the sufficiency of appellant’s petition, in the face of such special exception, the Court was required to concede the truth of what is alleged in the pleading objected to.”

' Neither of these presentments, it is determined, should be sustained. Disposing of the procedural one first, it is held that new Rule 90, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, having expressly repealed pre-existing district and county court Rule No. 17, wiped out all such presumptions of fact and reasonable intendments, as the appellant’s quoted second point so contends for; in other words, the general demurrer having been completely abolished by that rule, the burden was thereby left upon a plaintiff to sustain his pleadings, as against a special exception, by pointing to specific allegations of fact sufficient to sustain it, as distinguished from such conclusions of law and opinion as were formerly indulged in its favor. Franlci, Vernon’s Rules of Civil Procedure, Annotated, page 134; Rules of Civil Procedure, No. 90; Old District & County Court Rules, No. 17.

It seems clear also that the substantive question of whether or not a good cause of action for permanent injunction, as for an infringement, was properly decided in the negative, especially so, since the mere use by the appellee of his own rival label or design was the sole basis for the alleged “infringement, with resulting damages to appellant”, he charging no' other nor different act from which either infringement or unfair competition was even claimed to have resulted.

That being true, a facsimile of each of the respective labels having been made an integral part of the trial petition itself, the trial court, under well settled authority, was vested with the power to construe the two documents alongside each other with a view to determining, as a matter of law, whether they “would probably be mistaken [for each other]”, as our Texas Statutes, R.S. Article 851, puts it, or whether, on the other hand, “the form of the printed words, the words themselves, and the figures, lines, and devices were so similar that any person with such reasonable care and observation as the public generally are capable of using and may be expected to exercise would mistake the one for the other.”

The last copied rule was that quoted with approval by our Supreme Court in Caffarelli Bros. v. Western Grocer Company, 102 Tex. 104, 127 S.W. 1018, at page 1020, from Gilman v. Hunnewell, 122 Mass. 139, at page 148. In closing that opinion, and applying that rule as the law in trademark cases in Texas, while holding the question of infringement'or *771 not ordinarily to be one of fact to be submitted to the jury, and particularly so under the facts in that case, the court further said: “Of course, there might be such unquestioned similarity that a court would be justified in telling the jury as a matter of law that the one was an, infringement of the other, but such is not the evidence in this case.”

It is thought that the converse of that declaration was necessarily implied therein, that is, that there might be such unquestioned dissimilarity that a court would be justified in telling the jury as a matter of law that the one was not an infringement of the other, and it seems clear here that this was such an instance.

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183 S.W.2d 768, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-h-dentler-sons-v-fullers-food-products-texapp-1944.