Hat Corporation of America v. DL Davis Corporation

4 F. Supp. 613, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1285
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJune 23, 1933
Docket2263
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 4 F. Supp. 613 (Hat Corporation of America v. DL Davis Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hat Corporation of America v. DL Davis Corporation, 4 F. Supp. 613, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1285 (D. Conn. 1933).

Opinion

HINCKS, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above).

Although I have separately stated the facts of this ease and my controlling conclusions, the importance of the ease, and, even more, the importance of the principles of law involved, seem to me to justify a fuller discussion.

The first glimpse of the facts discloses that Wm. H. Dobbs has no part in the corporate organization of the defendant. Yet, the defendant is distributing its product under his name. Such use by the defendant of the name of one not a part of its organization, in view of its close similarity to the name “Dobbs,” so long used by the plaintiff and its predecessors and so thoroughly established as indicating the plaintiff’s product, clearly gives rise to an inference of fraud. This inference must stand unless rebutted or explained. In an apparent effort to offset this inference, the defendant has introduced much evidence to show that precautions were taken not only by itself but also by Wm. H. Dobbs and Bert Pope, Inc., to prevent eonfusion amongst the purchasing public between the plaintiff’s product under the name “Dobbs” and the defendant’s product under the name “Wm. H. Dobbs.” But since on the evidence it is clear that eonfusion has resulted, irrespective of the bona tides of these efforts (which the plaintiff disputes), these facts at most attest an effort to minimize the damages resulting from the tort, and standing alone do not constitute a defense to the plaintiff’s right of action, at least against the defendant herein.

Nor do the other facts exonerate the defendant from this imputation of fraud. On the contrary, the evidence furnishes clear and convincing confirmation of that imputation. It is wholly clear that Wm. H. Dobbs personally had never acquired any particular reputation in the hat trade in New York City, to which his activities up to the time of his association with the defendant had been almost wholly confined; outside of New York he was wholly unknown. The fact that the defendant, whose president had had a long experience in the hat business, was ready to split its earnings with Wm. H. Dobbs either directly ior indirectly through interposed corporations. can only be attributed to a desire to acquire the name for its propensity to mislead and confuse the public to the defendant’s gain and the plaintiff’s hurt. There is nothing here to show that the name had any legitimate “residual advantage” to Wm. H. Dobbs, within the meaning of the opinion in Waterman Co. v. Modern Pen Co., 235 U. S. 88, 35 S. Ct. 91, 59 L. Ed. 142.

The form of the relations between Wm. H. Dobbs and the defendant and their subsequent history serve but to confirm this conclusion. The interposition of Bert Pope, Inc., a corporation in which, to be sure, Wm. H. Dobbs had a stock interest, as the “distributor” of the defendant’s product, cannot disguise the fact that the defendant itself under the name “Wm. H. Dobbs” sold the hats which it manufactured. To be sure, Bert Pope hired and directed the salesmen; he may have “approved” the design of the product. But Bert Pope, Inc., including Wm. H. Dobbs, its officer and employee, did nothing in connection with the distribution of the product that is not ordinarily performed by a sales manager of the manufacturer. That the defendant manufacturer had a right to employ Bert Pope, Inc., and Wm. H. Dobbs to assist in its sales I have- no doubt. That it could com *619 pensate them for their services on a contingent basis I have no doubt. But all this the defendant could do and can still do without poaching on the plaintiff’s good will.

The fraudulent character of the defendant’s conduct is further manifested by the calculated deliberation with which it subordinated its own name in the merchandising of its product to the name which it had attempted to hire. Instead of emphasizing its product as its own, it has consistently and deliberately designated it, and encouraged others to designate it, by the name of “Wm. H. Dobbs” alone. On the women’s hats of its manufacture, it has imprinted the Wm. H. Dobbs facsimile on the sweatband; its own name nowhere appears on the product. On the men’s hats, the Wm. H. Dobbs name and crest are conspicuously printed on the sweatband or lining, and its own name is relegated to a paper size-label pasted to the felt beneath the sweatband. The hatboxes, though they bear no resemblance to those of the plaintiff or its predecessors, are conspicuously marked with the Wm. EL Dobbs name and crest; the defendant’s name nowhere appears thereon. The defendant’s shipping labels* salesmen’s cards, invoices, and stationery, to be sure, show the defendant’s name. But such papers are not normally seen by the ultimate consumer. And even these papers stress the legend, “Sole Manufacturers of Wm. H. Dobbs Hats.” And in the advertising of the product, most of which is done by the defendant’s retailers but with the defendant’s acquiescence, the defendant’s name is wholly absent. The conclusion is irresistible that the use of the name by the defendant was an act deliberately intended to enable the defendant to reap the plaintiff’s harvest by indirect imposition upon the purchasing public.

And so the defendant in its answer seeks to justify the use of the name under a claim of right derived from the contract in evidence as “Exhibit R.”

It may he noted at the outset that Exhibit R purports to license the defendant to use the name “Wm. H. Dobbs” in the manufacture only of men’s felt hats. It contains no authority to use the name in connection with ladies’ hats. The defense of a special license is therefore at most a defense pro tanto. However that may be, it is apparent that the defendant’s use of the name is' with the full consent of Wm. H. Dobbs, and-it makes no difference for present purposes whether the license upon which the defendant relies for its justification is a special license such as set forth in Exhibit R or a license implied from the underlying facts.

In any event, this license, according to the plaintiff, is at most an attempted assignment of a trade-name in gross, and such an assignment, plaintiff contends, is illegal and ineffective. The plaintiff cites many cases in support of this contention but makes no effort to reconcile the doctrine of these cases with the remark of Justice Holmes in Waterman Co. v. Modern Pen Co., supra, at page 96 of 235 U. S., 35 S. Ct. 91, 93, 59 L. Ed. 142, where it was said: “While it very well may be true that the transfer of a name without a business is not enough to entitle the transferee to prevent others from using it, it still is a license that may be sufficient to put the licensee on the footing of the licensor as against the plaintiff.”

Does this mean that any man who has no business, but who happens to have a name which others have made valuable as a trade-name, may license another to use the name in competition with the proprietor of a trade-name? I think not. Such a holding, impliedly authorizing one to capitalize the nuisance value of his name, would he an invitation to blackmail and deception.

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Bluebook (online)
4 F. Supp. 613, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hat-corporation-of-america-v-dl-davis-corporation-ctd-1933.