Goodman v. Bohls

22 S.W. 11, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 183, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 221
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 1893
DocketNo. 124.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 S.W. 11 (Goodman v. Bohls) 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
Goodman v. Bohls, 22 S.W. 11, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 183, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 221 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

On July 18, 1888, H. Bohls, plaintiff below, but appellee in this court, filed his original petition in the District Court of El Paso County, Texas, against the appellant, A. Goodman, for an injunction restraining him from infringing on appellee’s trade mark, and from packing and selling smoking tobaccos in packages that, from form, weight, color, material of wrapper, label, method of applying revenue stamp, and other external indicia, so nearly resembling in outward appearance the packages containing a smoking tobacco manufactured and sold by appellee, and named “ Havana Mixture,” that appellant was enabled to deceive persons intending to buy plaintiff’s said Havana Mixture, and thereby to induce them to purchase a smoking tobacco also called Havana Mixture, manufactured by others than appellee and sold by appellant. Appellee, plaintiff below, in said petition also claimed damages to the amount of 85000 from appellant for fraudulently and intentionally imitating, in outward appearance, the packages containing appellee’s smoking tobacco, and for thereby fraudulently and intentionally inducing customers of appellee’s to buy an inferior tobacco, sold by appellant, also named Havana Mixture, under the belief that same was the Havana Mixture manufactured by appellee.

A preliminary writ of injunction was granted by the district judge as prayed for, and the writ issued July 23, 1888, conforming in substance to the prayer of the original petition.

Appellant, as defendant below, filed both a general denial and a special answer, and plead in reconvention, claiming 82000 damages for the wrongful suing out of the temporary injunction.

*185 On November 27, 1889, the case was tried before a jury in said District Court, and resulted in a verdict for appellee, plaintiff below, and assessed his damages $1. Thereupon the court rendered judgment for the $1 damages, costs of suit, and perpetuating the injunction theretofore issued.

We find the following facts from the record:

1. In 1882 Y. Baumgartner and appellee were partners, under the firm name of Y. Baumgartner & Co., and among other kinds manufactured and sold a smoking tobacco which they designated “ Havana Mixture,” to distinguish it from other tobacco, and ptit up the tobacco so designated in paper packages, and adopted and used as a trade mark the picture of a ship, with the word “Havana” stamped above the picture and the word “Mixture” stamped below it, and as an additional device put the tobacco up in paper packages about three and one-half inches long, two inches wide, and one-half inch thick, and placed the revenue stamp on the edge of each package to which the masts of the picture of the ship pointed. The picture of a ship was stamped on one side of each package, with the word ‘ ‘ Havana ’ ’ in capital letters stamped above it in such form as to make the segment of a circle, and the word “ Mixture ’ ’ in capital letters was stamped in a line below the picture. The cautionary label, printed on red paper, was placed on the edge of each package opposite the one to which the masts of the ship’s picture pointed. An additional cautionary label, warning customers to beware of imitations, printed on red paper, was placed on each so as to cover the seal or tie at the end of each package, and extending lengthwise across the middle of the side opposite to that upon which the picture of the ship was stamped. Appellee succeeded to all the rights of Baumgartner & Co. in said device, and was the sole owner of it when suit was instituted. And that the trade mark and device as before described originated with Baumgartner & Co. in and about 1882, and had not been used by any one prior to that time, so far as shown by the evidence, and has been in use by Baumgartner & Co. and by appellee since that time, the appellee holding the same under Baumgartner & Co. And that the appellee as a dealer and manufacturer of tobacco introduced and sold to the trade and the public at El Paso, Texas, tobacco put up in the packages distinguished by the marks and devices above stated; and that was before and at the time of filing this suit, and was before the appellant adopted and used the trade mark and device so used in distinguishing the tobacco sold by him. The trade mark and device used by appellee did not show “ origin or ownership either in itself or by association.” That the appellee yearly sold considerable quantity of said tobacco in El Paso, which was sold to people there and those of the surrounding country by Kohlberg & Co., dealers in the tobacco manufactured by appellee, and that the tobacco was well liked and favorably known by the consumers thereof and to the trade generally.

*186 2. After the appellee had commenced to use the trade mark and device, and after he had introduced and sold the tobacco distinguished thereby to the trade in El Paso, Texas, and after such facts were known to the appellant, the appellant, a dealer in tobacco at El Paso, Texas, sold tobacco to the public at El Paso and the surrounding country in packages used by him of the same size, weight, form, nature, and color of material as those which contain appellee’s Havana Mixture, and have printed in the middle of one side of each package containing the same picture of a ship (except that the sails are numbered in small figures, which is not the case in appellee’s device), with the word “Havana” in the segment of a circle above said picture, printed in letters like those used by appellee in the word Havana on the packages of his said tobacco, and the word “Mixture” printed below said picture in a line in letters like those used by appellee in the word “ Mixture ” on the packages of his said tobacco, and stamp and cautionary labels in form, color, and size and method and place of attaching the same as those used by appellee on his said Havana Mixture. The packages of tobacco used and sold by appellee have upon each the words “ Kohlberg Bros.” that are not upon the packages used and sold by appellant. On the cautionary label of appellee’s package are the words and figures “Factory No. 16—First District of Cal.” The cautionary label is signed by Kohlberg Bros. The cautionary label upon the packages used and sold by appellant has upon it “ Factory No. 74—Second District of Va.” This is about the difference between the two packages. In all other respects the packages are similar. The appellant was using said device and selling tobacco in said packages in the city of El Paso when this suit was instituted, without any authority from the appellee or Kohlberg Bros. That the tobacco sold by him was inferior in quality to that sold by appellee in his packages. That the appellant used said packages and devices thereon in the sale of his tobacco for the purpose and intent of simulating the trade mark and device of appellee, in order to wrongfully impose his tofcacco upon the many consumers of appellee’s tobacco, in El Paso and vicinity, and with the further purpose of fraudulently depriving the appellee of his trade in his tobacco and the good will of his business.

3. There is such a similarity and resemblance between the packages and devices used by appellant in the sale of his tobacco and that used by appellee as to mislead and deceive an ordinary purchaser to suppose that he was buying the tobacco manufactured and sold by appellee.

Opinion.—1.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.W. 11, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 183, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodman-v-bohls-texapp-1893.