Holeproof Hosiery Co. v. Richmond Hosiery Mills

167 F. 381, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 5478

This text of 167 F. 381 (Holeproof Hosiery Co. v. Richmond Hosiery Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holeproof Hosiery Co. v. Richmond Hosiery Mills, 167 F. 381, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 5478 (circtndga 1908).

Opinion

NEWMAN, District Judge.

This bill is brought by the Holeproof Hosiery Company against the Richmond Hosiery Mills to enjoin the latter company from using on boxes of hosiery and on wrappers around the hose certain trade-marks adopted and used by the complainant company on hosiery put on the market by it. It alleges that prior to 1891 the Kalamazoo Knitting Company, of Milwaukee, Wis., was engaged in the manufacture of gloves, hosiery, and similar articles, and that about 1898 this company devised hosiery of a peculiar manufacture and material, which possessed unusual wearing qualities, and which was given the name “Holeproof.” At the same time the Kalamazoo Knitting Company adopted an original’ trade-mark device, consisting of the name “Holeproof,” accompanied by the word “Sox” or “Hosiery,” inclosed in a circular garter, surmounted by a crown, below which appeared a characteristic monogram. Also that about 1898 the said Kalamazoo Knitting Company devised other hosiery of peculiar manufacture and material, which also possessed unusual wearing qualities, which product was given the name “Toeproof.” At the same time the said company adopted an original trade-mark device, consisting of the name “Toeproof,” accompanied by the word “Sox” or “Hosiery,” inclosed in a Maltese cross.

It is alleged that the Kalamazoo Knitting Company continued in the manufacture and sale of said product, and the use of said trade-mark names and devices from about July, 3898, until July, 1904, at which time the complainant company, Holeproof Hosiery Company, was organized under the laws of the state of Wisconsin. This organization was accomplished by substantially the same persons who had theretofore operated and controlled the Kalanmzoo Knitting Company, for the purpose of handling said hosiery; and for valuable consideration the Kalamazoo Knitting Company sold, assigned, and transferred unto the complainant company the trade-mark names and devices and all trade indicia, so that the complainant company is the sole and exclusive owner thereof. Also that, in order to further individualize its [382]*382product, the complainant company packed said hosiery in boxes of a yellow color with gilt edges, holding six pairs each of socks or stockings, with the trade-mark name and device stamped upon the top and ends of the boxes. It is alleged that it is also the custom of the complainant company to stamp the trade-mark device upon the feet of the socks or stockings. Further, that at the time the Kalamazoo Knitting Company inaugurated the manufacture of said hosiery said company conceived the idea of guaranteeing the same against wear for six months, and offered to replace, and did replace, any socks or stockings in which holes appeared within six months from the date of purchase, under the terms of a guaranty ticket which was attached to each pair of socks or stockings. This idea of guaranteeing hosiery against wear was original with the Kalamazoo Knitting Company. It is alleged that the right to all of the above was obtained by the complainant company from the Kalamazoo Company. That in connection with the guaranty by the Holeproof Hosiery Company of its hosiery it has used the words “Guaranteed Sox,” “The Hose Sold with a Guaranty,” “The Sox Sold with a Guaranty,” and other similar phrases, and that the public is in the habit of asking at retail stores for complainant’s product under the name of “Guaranteed Socks,” meaning solely the product of the complainant company, and that the company is frequently spoken of as “Guarantee Hosiery Company.” That long after the complainant company’s product had become widely known and established under its trade-mark names and devices the defendant, Richmond Hosiery Mills, in conjunction with one M. D. Stevenson, manufactured hosiery which is in appearance in close and intended simulation of complainant’s product, packing the same in yellow boxes holding a half dozen pairs each, these boxes bearing the words “Stahol Sox,” which is alleged to be a colorable imitation of complainant’s trade-mark name, “Holeproof Sox.” That M. D. Stevenson operates a retail men’s furnishing store at Kansas City, Mo., and for a considerable period handled complainant’s product. Rater on said M. D. Stevenson, with the knoAvledge and acquiescence of the defendant company, sold and palmed off the product of the Richmond Hosiery Mills as “Holeproof Hosiery,” and by reason of the imitated name, devices, etc., the public and purchasers have been and are now being misled and deceived, and are purchasing the product manufactured by the defendant for the product of the complainant. That the defendant company, in connection with one E. E. Hogue, of Chattanooga, Tenn., manufactured hosiery in close and intended simulation of complainant’s products, and packed in boxes holding half-dozen pairs, and bearing the words “Toeproof Hosiery,” which is a trademark name long heretofore used by complainant, and which words “Toeproof Hosiery” is in close simulation of the complainant’s trademark name “Holeproof Hosiery,” and that the boxes also bear conspicuously the word “Guaranteed” and the name “Guaranteed Hosiery Company,” and a device closely approximating the trade-mark device of complainant’s “Holeproof Hosiery.” That E. E. Hogue sold the defendant’s product in Chattanooga with the knowledge and acquiescence of said company and substituted and palmed off to the trade as [384]*384the genuine product of the complainant company. That the value of the exclusive right to the trade devices of the complainant, and the damage inflicted upon this company by the conduct of the defendant, exceeds, exclusive of interest and costs, the sum or value of $2,000.

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Bluebook (online)
167 F. 381, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 5478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holeproof-hosiery-co-v-richmond-hosiery-mills-circtndga-1908.