Hellyer v. Wig Imports, Inc. of the Southwest

458 S.W.2d 492, 168 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 182, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2125
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 7, 1970
Docket4374
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 458 S.W.2d 492 (Hellyer v. Wig Imports, Inc. of the Southwest) 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
Hellyer v. Wig Imports, Inc. of the Southwest, 458 S.W.2d 492, 168 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 182, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2125 (Tex. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

GRISSOM, Chief Justice.

Wig Imports, Inc. of the Southwest sued Fred Hellyer and J. C. Claxton, a partnership, doing business under the name of “Imported Wigs of Lubbock” seeking to enjoin defendants from using “imported wigs” in their business in Lubbock County. *493 Plaintiff alleged it was in the wholesale wig business, buying, selling and distributing wigs, hairpieces, toupees and related products in the Lubbock area; that plaintiff’s post office address from October, 1966, until March 17, 1969, was Wig Imports, Inc. of the Southwest at 4142-34th Street in Lubbock and that it was so shown in public records, telephone directories, and the like; that, in 1967, plaintiff filed an assumed name certificate in Lubbock County showing that it conducted its business as Wig Imports, Inc. of the Southwest at 4142-34th Street in Lubbock; that from the inception of its business plaintiff was commonly known by beauticians and other hair customers in the Lubbock area, and by defendants, as “Wig Imports”; that “Wig Imports” was a trade name acquired by plaintiff and subject to protection by the court; that defendants in carrying out a scheme to appropriate plaintiff’s customers and good will opened a wholesale wig business in the building previously occupied by plaintiff at 4142-34th Street in Lubbock, where they offered for sale the same lines of merchandise previously offered for sale at that place by plaintiff, and used the words “Imported Wigs” in their name; that defendants were saying “Imported Wigs” when they answered the telephone at said place and in otherwise referring to their business; that, after plaintiff learned defendants had leased the building formerly occupied by it, plaintiff warned defendants not to infringe upon plaintiff’s proprietary rights to said name; that defendants had previously filed an assumed name certificate in Lubbock County showing their name as “Wig Imports of Lubbock”; that, after said warning defendants changed the name of their business and their assumed name record to “Imported Wigs of Lubbock”; that defendants have intentionally left the impression with the public, beauticians and other hair customers and all with whom they have dealt in the Lubbock area that they are the successors to, or connected with plaintiff, Wig Imports, Inc. of the Southwest; that by so using “Imported Wigs” and “Imported Wigs of Lubbock” at the place where plaintiff formerly conducted the same kind of business and sold the same lines of merchandise for 2½ years, defendants were infringing on plaintiff’s right to said trade name; that such acts constituted a deception and a fraud upon the public; that by plaintiff's prior adoption of the name “Wig Imports”, by being commonly so known, and by its continuous use thereof since October, 1966, plaintiff had acquired a right to the exclusive use of said name and that it had acquired a secondary meaning in the Lubbock area; that such use by defendants of “Imported Wigs” and “Imported Wigs of Lubbock” in their business was done with the intention of deceiving beauticians and other hair customers in that area and causing them to believe that plaintiff still operated its business at said location, or that defendants were connected with plaintiff and that such actions constituted unfair competition and was in derogation of plaintiff’s right to the exclusive use of said name. Plaintiffs prayed that defendant be enjoined from using “Imported Wigs” in their business, from using said words in advertising and from leading customers and prospective customers to believe they are the successors to, or connected with, plaintiff, and from in any manner appropriating the business and good will of plaintiff by the use thereof.

The defendants denied that “Wig Imports” was a trade name owned by plaintiff. They alleged that said words were used as a trade name by others prior to its use by plaintiff and that it was a descriptive term used, in Texas and elsewhere, by others to describe such a business. Defendants admitted they occupied the premises formerly occupied by plaintiff and that they were in the wholesale wig business, but they denied any scheme to appropriate plaintiff’s customers or good will by using said name. They denied that plaintiff had acquired the exclusive right to use “Wig Imports” in said area. Defendants admitted they were using the “descriptive phrase” — “imported wigs” and “Imported Wigs of Lubbock” in the conduct of their *494 business at said location. The defendants also filed a cross action seeking “nominal” and exemplary damages.

In a trial by the court, defendants were temporarily enjoined from using the name “Imported Wigs” in conducting their business in Lubbock County. Defendants have appealed.

Defendants’ points are that (1) the court abused its discretion in rendering said judgment “when evidence of false testimony was before the court”; that (2) it abused its discretion in rendering said judgment because “appellee did not come to court with clean hands” and that, (3) as a matter of law, “Imported Wigs” is only a descriptive phrase designative of the product being sold and therefore a user of “Wig Imports” could not prevent such use by others. Appellant urges that the court abused its discretion in granting said temporary injunction because plaintiff had conducted a wholesale business under the name of Wig Imports in violation of a city zoning ordinance restricting use of its premises to retail business. Defendants contend that, as a matter of law, plaintiff did not show that said words had acquired a secondary meaning because plaintiff had not used them for a sufficient length of time and they had been used by others and, further, that “Imported Wigs” was merely a descriptive term applicable to all engaged in said business and such words could not be appropriated exclusively by plaintiff. Defendants argue that even if “Wig Imports” had acquired a secondary meaning in said area, that nevertheless, plaintiff did not have a right to exclude defendants from its use because it was a descriptive term applicable to all engaged in that business. Defendants cite Region et al. v. Downtowner of Fort Worth, Inc., Tex.Civ.App., 420 S.W.2d 809, wherein it was held that “Downtowner” was a form of “Downtown”, descriptive of the place where such business was operated and therefore such name could not be exclusively appropriated against others who used it with equal truth.

Plaintiff’s wig and hair business was one of the first of its kind in the Lubbock area. It was started in 1965. About November, 1966, it was incorporated as “Wig Imports, Inc. of the Southwest” and opened its business under that name at 4142-34th Street in Lubbock, where it operated said business for two and one half years, and where defendants now operate the same kind of business and sell the same lines. Plaintiff filed an assumed name certificate in Lubbock County in 1967 under the name “Wig Imports, Inc. of the Southwest” showing its address to be 4142-34th Street.

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Bluebook (online)
458 S.W.2d 492, 168 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 182, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hellyer-v-wig-imports-inc-of-the-southwest-texapp-1970.