Holmes v. BORDER ETC. CO., INC.

321 P.2d 898, 51 Wash. 2d 746, 116 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 539, 1958 Wash. LEXIS 497
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1958
Docket34079
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 321 P.2d 898 (Holmes v. BORDER ETC. CO., INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holmes v. BORDER ETC. CO., INC., 321 P.2d 898, 51 Wash. 2d 746, 116 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 539, 1958 Wash. LEXIS 497 (Wash. 1958).

Opinion

Hunter, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment granting the plaintiffs injunctive relief and requiring the defendant corporation to file and obtain a new corporate name in an action brought to restrain the use of a trade name.

A detailed chronology of the use of the trade name “Border Brokerage Company,” now sought to be used by both the plaintiffs and defendant, is necessary to understand and evaluate their respective positions.

*747 Ben S. Armstrong and Clarence S. Holmes, both individually licensed as customhouse brokers by the Federal government, formed a partnership in 1927 to engage in the customhouse brokerage business under the firm name of “Border Brokerage Company.” The partnership was licensed as such by the Federal government, having qualified under the rules and regulations of the customs department which required at least two officers of a corporation, or two members of a partnership, to have customhouse broker’s licenses in order to engage in such business as a corporation or partnership.

The following year, the partnership incorporated under the same firm name and obtained a corporate license from the customs department of the Federal government to conduct its business. It continued to operate under this license until 1942, when, for tax purposes, the corporation was dissolved and inquiry was made to the customs department as to what further action, if any, was necessary. No reply was received in respect to this inquiry. However, Armstrong and Holmes, intending to continue their business as a partnership, included a bond for the Border Brokerage Company, not incorporated, in their letter of notification of the dissolution of the corporation. The customs department informed them it would be necessary to increase the bond to thirty thousand dollars, and the bond was promptly posted. Nothing was done by either the government or Holmes and Armstrong concerning the actual corporate license, which remained in the office of the company until about December, 1950, when a representative of the customs department discovered it during an inspection. Thereafter, the license was removed and revoked.

Subsequently, A. G. Grasher and C. L. Croft, former employees of the corporation, came into the picture as the successors of Armstrong, having purchased his interest. On January 1, 1951, plaintiffs Holmes, Grasher, and Croft formed a new partnership to continue to do business as the “Border Brokerage Company,” This new partnership could not obtain a brokerage license, since only one member, Holmes, was a duly licensed broker. Grasher *748 had made application for a broker’s license the preceding year (1950), but his license had not, as yet, been granted. Therefore, from'January 1, 1951, to September 16, 1953, all the customhouse brokerage business of the partnership was carried on under the name of “C. S. Holmes.” The plaintiffs made their position known to the United States customs bureau by a letter, dated October 25, 1951.

The “Border Brokerage Company” (the new partnership) , in the meantime, engaged in the- insurance business under the firm name, having obtained a license from the state insurance commissioner and a certificate of registration from the state tax commission of the state of Washington. It occupied the same office, carried a bank account under the firm name, and at all times carried two and sometimes three listings in the telephone book of the Farmers Mutual Telephone Company. This arrangement continued until September 16, 1953, when the partnership received a licerise.from the Federal government, it having qualified for such license when Grasher obtained his individual license on August 16, 1953.

Shortly after the license was granted to Grasher, and prior to the time the plaintiffs were granted their partnership license, the defendant “Border Brokerage Company, Inc.,” came into existence on September 4, 1953, by filing its articles of incorporation with the secretary of state of the state of Washington. The primary object of the defendant corporation, as stated in its articles, was to engage in the customhouse brokerage business with its place of business at Sumas, Whatcom county, Washington.

Upon learning that the defendant corporation was operating in the same customs district, the plaintiffs notified Norman G. Jensen, one of the incorporators of the defendant corporation, of their trade-name right and advised him not to use the name. Thereafter, the plaintiffs commenced this action for an. injunction because of the confusion they allege had arisen and which would increase if the defendant corporation carried out its primary business as a customhouse broker in the same customs district.

*749 During the trial, the evidence revealed that Norman G. Jensen and Gordon Jensen, two of the incorporators of the defendant corporation, were also engaged in the customhouse brokerage business as “Norman G. Jensen, Inc.,” with Gordon Jensen as its president. The Jensen corporation opened an office in Blaine, Washington, in October, 1953. Norman G. Jensen was called as an adverse witness by the plaintiffs and testified in part, as follows:

“Q. How did you happen to pick on the name of Border Brokerage Company ? A. I wanted to buy Ben Armstrong out. . . . Q. All right. You didn’t buy him out, did you? A. No. . . . Q. Mr. Jensen, why did you choose the name of Border Brokerage Company? A. (No reply). Q. Why did you pick on that particular name? A. I just had a feeling that Mr. Armstrong would sell to us, and then I wanted, if he had, I was ready to pay him most any price he asked for his business. Had he sold it to us we would have continued the same name. Q. In other words, you knew that the name was being used, didn’t you? A. Yes. But my brother, Gordon, and I figured that we could buy his business, use that name, incorporate. The name, we knew it wasn’t a corporation, because everybody in the customhouse here in Seattle knew that the license had been kicked out and that the old corporate name wasn’t going.”

The plaintiffs contended that confusion resulted from the use of the two names in the same customs district, as evidenced by mail, loss of. clients and loss of business. The evidence disclosed that all documents in the customhouse brokerage business are processed by the collectors of the customs liquidation office; that liquidations are posted by name and number, and Sumas, Blaine, and Seattle are all in the same customs district.

At the completion of the trial, the court found that there had been no abandonment of the name “Border Brokerage Company”; that the names were confusing, and entered judgment for the plaintiffs from which the defendant has appealed. The judgment provides, in part, as follows:

“ . . . that defendant be and it is hereby enjoined and restrained forever from the display or use in any way of a firm name employing the'name ‘Border’ or any similar name *750 to plaintiffs’ firm name ‘Border Brokerage Company,’ in ^connection with the handling or solicitation of customs brokerage on shipments between the United States and Canada, and
“. . .

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Bluebook (online)
321 P.2d 898, 51 Wash. 2d 746, 116 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 539, 1958 Wash. LEXIS 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-border-etc-co-inc-wash-1958.