Horton Manuf'g Co. v. Horton Manuf'g Co.

18 F. 816, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2471
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana
DecidedDecember 29, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 18 F. 816 (Horton Manuf'g Co. v. Horton Manuf'g Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horton Manuf'g Co. v. Horton Manuf'g Co., 18 F. 816, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2471 (circtdin 1883).

Opinion

Woods, J.

Bill in equity for an injunction against the use of a name by the respondent, and a cross-bill by the respondent for an injunction against the use of the same name by the. complainant, [817]*817both the parties being incorporated under the name, The Horton Manufacturing Company. The material facts are as follows:

Sometime prior to 1873, Dr. Theodore Ilorton was engaged at Bluffton, Indiana, in the manufacture and sale of corn-planters, under letters patent of which he owned a half-interest only. This corn-planter was advertised and sold, and became known, as the “American Iloosier Hand Corn-planter.” William K. Vandegriff, having purchased the other one-half interest in the patent, entered into partnership with Dr. Horton and ono Rachel Y. Blackstone under the firm name of T. Horton & Co., and by the terms of their partnership articles undertook to prosecute the business aforesaid for the period of twelve years from October, 1873, the date of the articles. In tlie conduct of the business Mrs. Blackstone was represented by her husband, William A., who was made the book-keeper of the concern.

Soon after the organization of the company, it purchased a patent for a washing-machine, which it proceeded to manufacture and sell, in considerable quantities, under the name, “Improved Western Washing-machine.” In December, 1879, Dr. Horton sold his interest in this business to Vandegriff and W. A. Blackstone, but reserved his half-interest in tlie letters patent upon the corn-planter and one-third interest in the patent for tlie washing-machine; his vendees agreeing to pay him a royalty upon sucli articles as they should maimtacture under either patent, and at th'e same time taking of Horton a lease for one year of the building in which the business had been theretofore conducted, with the intention of continuing the business in the same place. Mrs. Blackstolie also retired from the firm at this time, leaving her husband and Yandegriff to constitute the new firm, for the continuance of which no definite time was agreed upon.

There is conflict in the evidence upon the questions whether or not certain patterns were included in the sale by Ilorton to Yandegriff and Blackstone, and whether "or not Ilorton agreed not to engage again in the same line of manufacture. The preponderance of the evidence seems to be that he did so agree, but upon tlie understanding, implied but not expressed, that his successors should continue to carry on the business at Bluffton. It was distinctly understood between the parties that Yandegriff and Blackstone should continue the business. The sale and transfer of Horton’s interest having been completed, he consented, without consideration, that the new firm should adopt the name, The Horton Manufacturing Company. It did accordingly take this name, and under it prosecute the business at Bluffton, until June, 1880, when the members of the firm concluded to remove, and did remove, to Jamestown, ST. Y. Preliminary to this removal the company resold to Ilor-ton the engine, boiler, shafting, and some other articles used in the business, and settled with him for the rent of the building and for royalties then due. At Jamestown, the company, under the same name, carried on the same business until March 12,1881, when its members, said Yandegriff and Blackstone, united with T. J. and J. J. Yandegriff in organizing an incorporated company, tlie complainant, which company has since that time prosecuted the business upon a large scale.

A few months after the removal of the company aforesaid to Jamestown, Dr. Ilorton, in association with two others, under the firm name of T. Horton & Oo., resumed the business at Bluffton, and published a circular to the effect that lie had no connection with the company at Jamestown, and that that company was without a Horton and was sailing under false colors.

That company put forth a counter circular, claiming to be the lawful successor of the original T. Ilorton & Go. The new firm of T. Horton & Co. continued in business until June, 1883, when it was placed in the hands of a [818]*818receiver, and Dr. Horton associated himself with others in the orgauizátion of the respondent corporation, which, under the same name as the complainant, is engaged in and proposes to prosecute the same business as the complainant, and has put forth circulars, cuts, and advertisements which will tend to confuse the public in respect to the manufactures of the two companies.

The goods manufactured by the parties, and by the companies which preceded them, have always been advertised and sold and known to the trade by the names aforesaid, which were stenciled or painted upon the respective articles, and in addition there was on each article the phrase “manufactured by,” followed by the name and place of business of the company which put it upon the market; and in the ease of the complainant and its predecessor the goods were marked, besides the name of the particular article, as “Manufactured by the Horton Manufacturing Company, Jamestown, N. Y.: Successors to T. Horton & Co.”

The respondent has an express grant from Dr. Horton of his good-will, letters patent, and of the right to use his name. It does not appear that the Horton Manufacturing Company, as a firm or by act of its individual members, made any formal attempt to confer upon the complainant its name or good-will, or the right to use Horton’s name, and if that right exists it is by force of the facts stated, and not by express grant.

For the general principles by which, upon these facts, the rights of the parties must be determined, counsel on either side have cited the opinion in Holmes v. Holmes, etc., Manuf’g Co. 37 Conn. 278. Stated generally, the decision announced in that case is to the effect that incorporators of a business company, who had permitted the use of their individual names in the composition of the corporate name, could not, after the business of the company had become established and its manufactures well known under that name, confer upon a new and rival company or corporation the right to use their individual names in a similar way, to the confusion of the public and consequent detriment of the first company; and this, upon the ground that in the use of a name lawfully acquired, which designates the origin and ownership of its goods, a manufacturing company or corporation will be protected “upon the same principle and to the same extent that individuals are protected in the use of trade-marks.” The following extract from this opinion illustrates well the views of the court, and will be found to bear somewhat directly on the ease now presented:

“The principles we have been contending for should, under similar circumstances, be applied to partnerships and corporations alike. It is only when the circumstances change that the principle becomes inapplicable. A person whose name appears in the firm name of a partnership, in the absence of anything raising a contrary presumption, will be presumed to have agreed that it should so continue during the existence of the partnership. If, before the partnership expires, he merely sells his interest in the concern to a stranger, he conveys to the purchaser a right in the use of the name during the remainder of the term. If, at the expiration of the term, he sells his interest, with an agreement, express or implied, that the business shall thereafter be continued under the same name, the same rule applies. At the dissolution of the partnership, the partners revert

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Related

Holmes, Booth & Haydens v. Holmes, Booth & Atwood Manufacturing Co.
37 Conn. 278 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1870)
McGowan Bros. Pump & Machine Co. v. McGowan
2 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 313 (Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati, 1872)

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Bluebook (online)
18 F. 816, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horton-manufg-co-v-horton-manufg-co-circtdin-1883.