Home Insulation Co. v. Home & Building Insulation Co.

1935 OK 1072, 52 P.2d 1065, 175 Okla. 428, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 915
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 5, 1935
DocketNo. 25365.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1935 OK 1072 (Home Insulation Co. v. Home & Building Insulation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Insulation Co. v. Home & Building Insulation Co., 1935 OK 1072, 52 P.2d 1065, 175 Okla. 428, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 915 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

For several years Johns-Mannville Corporation and Johns-Manville Sales Corporation, New York and Delaware corporations, engaged in manufacturing, advertising, and selling insulation materials for hemes and other buildings under the trade name Home Insulation Company, which trade name they used in the various states of the Union and in connection with their national advertising program, in which they spent some $200-000 in newspapers, magazine and radio advertising.

It appears that in promoting their business they made contracts or granted franchises to dealers in the various trade territories covered by them, generally requiring the dealers to incorporate under the name of Home Insulation Company, under the laws of the state in which it operated, and gave this dealer the exclusive sale of its products.

The contract or franchise covering the trade territory of Oklahoma and Kansas was held by a Kansas corporation known as Home Insulation Company. This corporation made a contract with E. A. Shaw and B. E. Sanders as copartners, of Tulsa, Okla., to advertise and sell the products of Johns-MannviYe Company in the Tulsa territory; the said Home Insulation Company (the Kansas corporation) furnishing the finances to operate said business in the Tulsa territory. Shaw and Sanders, though partners, operated under the name of Home Insulation Company, and 'it appears that they entered upon said enterprise with energy and advertised and sold these products in that territory as the Heme Insulation Company. Their contract with the Kansas corporation having expired, they sought to renew the same, but being unable to do so, they organized a corporation and procured a char *429 ter tmder the name of Home & Building Insulation Company. The incorporators were E. A. Shaw, B. E. Sanders, and Wm. F. Muir, the latter being an employee and salesman of Shaw and Sanders while they operated as Home Insulation Company.

The new corporation immediately entered upon a campaign of advertising and selling a similar product manufactured by the Eagle Richer Company, a competitor of the Johns-Mannville Company. Immediately thereafter Muir withdrew from the Home & Building Insulation Company and entered into a contract With and was granted a franchise by the Johns-Mannville interests to advertise and sell its products in the Tulsa trade territory, using the name Home Insulation Company, the same as that formerly used by Shaw and Sanders, copartners while they sold the same materials. These two corporations, it appears, became competitors and the evidence shows that the Home & Building Insulation Company expended 'about $1,700 in advertising and the Home Insulation Company spent about $2,000 for the same purpose.

After much confusion in the business of the two corporations because of the similarity of their names, the Home & Building Insulation Company, defendant in error here, filed its action in the district court of Tulsa county'against Home Insulation Company and the individuals constituting the corporation, claiming that it. had the right to transact its business under its corporate name to the exclusion of defendant and prayed for an injunction preventing defendant from using its' corporate name in that trade territory.

Johns-Mannville Corporation and Johns-Mannville Sales Corporation intervened and alleged that for years Home Insulation Company was the trade-name under which it had conducted its business and extensively advertised and sold its products, and prayed that Home & Building Insulation Company he prohibited from using that name because of Its similarity to that adopted and used for many years by interveners. In its cross-petition defendant joined in this prayer. Judgment was for plaintiff granting its prayer for injunction and denying the prayer of defendant and interveners for injunction, against plaintiff, and defendant and inter-veners appeal.

The parties will be referred to herein as they appeared in the (rial court.

Defendant and interveners present their contention under a single proposition of law, as follows:

“A corporation may not adopt as its corporate name the trade-name of a competitor operating and advertising in the same trade territory, which trade-name had been used pnoiJ to the date of the incorporation.”

This court has not often been called upon to consider the question here presented. However, a very similar state of facts was considered by us in Red Seal Refining Co. v. Red Seal Refining Corp., 115 Okla. 63, 241 P. 762. In that case the Red Seal Refining Corporation was a foreign corporation which ultimately became domesticated in Oklahoma. A short time prior thereto, however, the Red Seal Refining Company was organized and procured a charter to transact business in Oklahoma. The Red Seal Refining Corporation filed its injunction 'action in the district court of Oklahoma county, and from a judgment In its favor, the Red Seal Refining Company appealed to this court and the judgment of the trial court was affirmed. In the body of the opinion in that case we find the following language:

“It may be stated at the outset that the authorities generally hold that a foreign corporation may maintain an action in a court of equity to restrain a domestic cor-lioration from infringing its corporate name. Atlas Assurance Co. v. Atlas Insurance Co. (Iowa) 112 N. W. 232; United States L. & H. Co. of Maine v. United States L. & H. Co. of New York, 181 F. 182. In the case of Celluloid Mfg. Co. v. Cellonite Mfg. Co., 32 F. 94, it is said in the opinion: ‘First, as to the imitation of the complainant’s name. The fact that both are corporate names is of no consequence in this connection. They are the business names by which the parties are known, and are to be dealt with precisely as if they were (he names of private firms or partnerships. The defendant’s name was of hig own choosing, and, if 'an unlawful imitation of the complainant’s, is subject to the same rules of law as If it were the name of an unincorporated firm or company. It is not identical with the complainant’s name. That would be too gross an invasion of the complainant’s right. Similarity, not identity, is the usual recourse when one party seeks to benefit ‘himself by the good name of another, what similarity is sufficient to effect the object has to be determined in each case, by its own circumstances. We may say, generally, that a similarity which would be likely to deceive or mislead’ 'an ordinary unsuspecting customer is obnoxious to the law.’
“It is contended that the evidence shows that the doing of such business, by which the plaintiff claims a priority of use under *430 its trade-name of ‘Red Seal Refining Corporation,’ w.as in violation of the laws of the state of Oklahoma, and that at the time the plaintiff obtained the right to lawfully do business in this state, the defendant was already using the name at its filling station in connection with its business, and hence defendant’s lawful use of the name was first in time, and that plaintiff is an interloper and not entitled to any relief. Two decisions of this court: Myatt v. Ponca City Land & Improvement Co., 14 Okla. 189, 78 P. 185, and Lafferty v. Evans, 17 Okla. 247, 87 P. 304, are cited in support of defendants’ proposition.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 1072, 52 P.2d 1065, 175 Okla. 428, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-insulation-co-v-home-building-insulation-co-okla-1935.