Green v. Ludford Fruit Products, Inc.

39 F. Supp. 985, 50 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 435, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3103
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedJuly 18, 1941
DocketNo. 1023
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 F. Supp. 985 (Green v. Ludford Fruit Products, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Ludford Fruit Products, Inc., 39 F. Supp. 985, 50 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 435, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3103 (S.D. Cal. 1941).

Opinion

J. F. T. O’CONNOR, District Judge.

Plaintiffs, R. H. Green, A. M. Green, and J. B. Green, doing business as Green & Green, a copartnership, but formerly a corporation, are engaged in the business of marketing concentrates, extracts, and beverages for nonalcoholic carbonated soft drinks. Their principal place of business is Houston, Texas and their principal product is a soft drink known as “Fruit Bowl”, an opaque, reddish carbonated mixture of fruit concentrate, artificial coloring, flavoring, and a small amount of benzoate of soda. Plaintiffs produce other beverages known variously as Golden Bowl, Silver Bowl, Lemon Bowl, Rose Bqwl, Hawaiian Bowl, etc.

The defendant, Ludford Fruit Products, Incorporated, is a California corporation engaged in the manufacture of concentrate for a soft drink known as “Hollywood Bowl”, which name the plaintiffs allege constitutes an infringement of their trade[986]*986mark, and further allege that the defendant is guilty of unfair competition.

Plaintiffs have . filed very thorough and exhaustive briefs exploring the entire range of this type of action. Cases Have been cited by counsel in which numerous courts have held that the trade-marks being contested were confusingly similar. The court has examined with meticulous care all of the principal authorities relied upon by counsel for both sides in order to apply the law to the facts.

Plaintiffs contend mainly that the defendant’s Hollywood Bowl resembles their Fruit Bowl so closely that the ordinary customer who consumes such products would be deceived into purchasing the defendant’s concoction instead of the plaintiffs’. According to plaintiffs, the alleged similarity is so close that defendant’s product can be passed off for plaintiffs’ with whatever pecuniary loss results from the sále of the substituted article.

The alleged confusing similarity is derived from an imitation of the plaintiffs’ general dress of the Fruit Bowl including the trade-mark, label, cap, bottle, color, and the fluid itself.

Certain evidence was introduced by the plaintiffs in the form of depositions in which it was claimed that there was some confusion in the goods inasmuch as several employees of plaintiffs’ were sent to the store to purchase Fruit Bowl and claim that they were handed bottles of Hollywood Bowl. Ellis Mills and James Coleman, for example, are alleged to have entered stores in Houston, Texas, and asked for Fruit Bowl and claimed they were given Hollywood Bowl instead.

This line of testimony is interesting but not convincing.

The fact that 102,680,000 bottles of plaintiffs’ Fruit Bowl were sold by between four and five hundred bottlers in 1940 with only a few cases of confusion being reported almost calls for the application of the de minimus non curat'lex rule.

As was stated by Judge Soper in DixiCola Laboratories, Inc. v. Coca-Cola Co., 4 Cir., 1941, 117 F.2d 352, at page 360: “When products of a similar nature are extensively advertised and widely sold, the possibility of some confusion between the goods of competitors and the goods of the principal producer cannot always be avoided; but under the circumstances pertaining to the manufacture and sale of ‘Cola drinks’, the amount of confusion in the absence of fraud will be negligible and may be disregarded.” (Citing cases.)

There has been a great deal of discussion in this case, both at the trial and in the briefs, concerning the reddish color of the products made by the parties to this suit. Both are of substantially the same shade and appear to resemble diluted tomato juice. In the present suit, we find that the products have a citrus fruit base and are also artificially colored red. The source of the color is not indicated.

Plaintiffs claim that the defendant copied its color exactly in order to confuse the public into believing that it was plaintiffs’ product that was being purchased.

The defendant, however, introduced evidence that he had used this opaque red color for his beverages more than ten years before this suit. The opaque character of the drink comes from the citric juice which is naturally not transparent.

The geneology of defendant’s Hollywood Bowl shows that it is a direct descendant of Mickey Mouse Punch which was red. The defendant testified that he ceased to manufacture this drink under that name because the royalties paid to the creator of the Mickey Mouse character were too exorbitant for such a low priced article. It was then that Honolulu Punch was born which was apparently the same thing under another name. In 1938 it was known as Santa Anita Bowl and thereafter the name Hollywood Bowl was used to designate the same beverage.

In regard to the color of the drink, Mr. Ludford testified that he had no control over the shade of the eventual product which reached the public. He was engaged in the manufacture of the concentrate and the bottlers who used the syrup which came from his concern could change the shade by the amount of water they diluted it with during the bottling process.

The question of the color raises another problem. It is difficult to understand how the plaintiffs could claim a property right in the color alone. It is not subject to exclusive appropriation. Red is the natural color of several fruit drinks such as tomato and various berry juices. It is also used extensively in coloring artificially various soft drinks such as strawberry and cherry soda water. The color is nonfunctional and arbitrary, but the red shade probably [987]*987possesses a certain eye appeal not present in the paler colors.

Color alone can not be the subject of a trade-mark. No one could claim the right exclusively to use a certain color which was but one of the many characteristics of his product, and prevent the use of that color by others who manufactured similar articles.

The only way in which the color of the article could appear to be important in an action of this kind would be as one link in a chain of events showing acts of unfair competition wherein the defendant would be shown to have copied the general dress of the article including the various component parts, one of which might be a duplication of color.

It could be assumed, for example, that all taxicabs belonging to a certain company are painted yellow. This is their only distinguishing characteristic. They are stock automobiles just like thousands of others on the highways. The only way a prospective patron can tell from a distance whether or not he sees a taxi approaching is by its distinctive color. If he wants a ride, he would give an appropriate signal so the driver would stop for him. If, thereafter, a competing concern painted its taxis the same color, it would probably be guilty of unfair competition and the court would protect the public from being deceived, not that one company’s service would not be as good as that of the other, but the public has a right to know from whom it is purchasing goods or whose facilities are being used. See Yellow Cab Co. v. Gibbons, Ill.1918, 8 T.M. Rep. 248, wherein it was stated:

“There is no exclusive property in color.

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39 F. Supp. 985, 50 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 435, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-ludford-fruit-products-inc-casd-1941.