Grove Laboratories, Inc. v. Brewer & Co.

103 F.2d 175, 41 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 330, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3530
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 11, 1939
Docket3316, 3317
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 103 F.2d 175 (Grove Laboratories, Inc. v. Brewer & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grove Laboratories, Inc. v. Brewer & Co., 103 F.2d 175, 41 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 330, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3530 (1st Cir. 1939).

Opinion

BINGHAM, Circuit Judge.

These are cross appeals from a final decree of the federal District Court for Massachusetts in a suit in equity brought by the plaintiff, the Paris Medicine Company, a Delaware corporation, against Brewer & Company, a Massachusetts corporation, to restrain the latter from using the letters “L P Q” upon its tablets and the labels on its boxes in the manufacture and sale of tablets as a medicinal remedy for the relief of colds, headaches, etc., charging infringement and unfair competition, and praying for damages and profits. The bill was filed on June 21, 1934, and, among other allegations, it was alleged in sections 4 and 6:

“4. That plaintiff is the sole manufacturer of a medicinal remedy for the relief of colds, fever, headache and neuralgia sold under the denomination ‘Laxative Bromo Quinine’ and is the sole and exclusive owner of a certain trademark consisting of the letters ‘L. B. Q.’, which is a contraction of said denomination and applied to said remedy by being printed on the boxes thereof and impressed upon the tablets contained in said boxes as shown by the specimen box and tablets filed herewith and made part hereof marked ‘Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1’; that said remedy so denominated and marked has been manufactured and sold exclusively by plaintiff and'its predecessor, Paris Medicine Company, a Tennessee corporation, in interstate commerce, continuously since about February 1, 1893, or earlier; that the name and address of plaintiff or of its predecessor has always been conspicuously printed upon the boxes containing said remedy in association with said denomination and trade-mark; that said trade-mark was first registered in accordance with the Statutes of the United States by plaintiff’s said predecessor under date of January 4, 1898, as evidenced by certificate No. 31,087; that said trade-mark was subsequently registered by said predecessor in accordance with said Statutes under date of May 2, 1899, as evidenced by certificate No. 32,-803; and that said trade-mark was registered by plaintiff in accordance with said Statutes under date of October 24, 1933, as evidenced by certificate No. 307,417, and also registered by plaintiff in accordance with the laws of the State of Massachusetts under date of October 23, 1933, as evidenced by certificate No. 11813. Certified copies of said certificates are filed herewith and made part hereof, marked, respectively ‘Plaintiff’s Exhibits 2’, ‘3’, ‘4’ and ‘5’.”'
“6. That said trade-mark ‘L. B. Q.’ has at all times since the date of its adoption, as aforesaid, been applied to said remedy by plaintiff and its said predecessor, exclusively, in the manner • described *178 in the preceding clause number 4 hereof and that the labels affixed to the boxes of said remedy have at all times carried the statutory notice ‘Trade-Mark Registered in U. S. Patent Office’ substantially as shown by the specimen box above referred to as Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1; that for the purpose of further distinguishing and enabling dealers and the purchasing public to readily identify said remedy plaintiff -and its said predecessor have continuously produced the same in the form of small tablets weighing approximately four and one-half (4%) grains each, having convex formation and of distinctive color substantially as shown by the tablets forming part of Exhibit 1.”

The defendant in its answer denied the validity of the plaintiff’s trade-mark, registered or otherwise, but admitted among other things, “the issuance of the certificates of the several trade-mark registrations referred to in said paragraph 4”; denied infringement; and alleged that it had a trade-mark in the words “Laxative Phospho Quinine” registered June 8, 1928, in the United States Patent Office, No. 246,- 444; also thát the plaintiff was barred by acquiescence and laches from maintaining its suit and that it was estopped to do so.

Since the suit was brought the corporate name of the plaintiff' h^s been changed to the Grove Laboratories, Inc.

January 16, 1935, the plaintiff amended its bill and further alleged that the defendant infringed its trade-mark “L B Q” by the use of the letters “L. D. Q.” upon the labels of its boxes in the sale of like tablets, but this claim is now abandoned.

In the District Court it was adjudged (1) that the plaintiff was the sole owner and entitled to the exclusive use of the trade-mark “L B Q” as applied to medicinal tablets for the use of colds, etc., and that it was a good and valid trade-mark; (2) that the defendant had infringed the plaintiff’s trade-mark by manufacturing and selling medicinal tablets for the relief of colds, etc., which were embossed or stamped with the letters “L P Q”; (3) that the use by the defendant and its vendees of the letters “L P Q” on its labels was not an infringement of the plaintiff’s trademark; (4) directed that a permanent injunction issue enjoining the defendant from making, compounding, advertising, sellipg, offering for sale, or- in any manner disposing of any medicinal tablets embossed or stamped or otherwise marked with the letters “L P Q” or any combination of such letters, but that the injunction should not restrain it from making and selling any medicinal tablets not so embossed or stamped, in boxes or containers with labels bearing the letters “L P Q” and the words “Laxative Phospho Quinine”; and (5) denying other relief in the way of damages and an accounting.

All the evidence was taken by depositions and the case was submitted upon the evidence thus taken and the briefs of counsel. Although objections to some of the evidence were noted before the magistrate they were not pressed for rulings by .the court. No such rulings having been made, no exceptions were or could have been saved or errors assigned to the admission of the evidence. This being so all the evidence introduced, so far as it is relevant to any issue in the case, is open to consideration; and no witness having testified before the District Court we are in as good a position to pass upon the weight of the evidence and the credibility of the deponents as it was.

When the case was previously before this court we were of the opinion that the words “Laxative Bromo Quinine” printed upon its labels in connection with the letters “L. B Q” were descriptive of the ingredients contained in the tablets, and that the letters “L B Q,” being a contraction of the words “Laxative Bromo Quinine” and used in connection therewith for many years on the labels, were likewise descriptive and not the subject of a technical common-law trade-mark. And because of findings by the District Court and statements of plaintiff’s counsel affecting registrations No. 30,753, of October 26, 1897, and No. 31,087, issued January 4, 1898, each of which purported to have been applied for by a corporation described as the Paris Medicine Company, organized under the laws of Missouri, we were led to believe that there was a Missouri corporation antedating the Paris Medicine Company of Tennessee. And as each of these registrations stated that “This trade-mark has been used continuously by said corporation [the Missouri corporation] since about February 1, 1893,” and registrations No. 32,803 (issued to the Paris Medicine Company of Tennessee May 2, 1899), and No.

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Bluebook (online)
103 F.2d 175, 41 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 330, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grove-laboratories-inc-v-brewer-co-ca1-1939.