Household Finance Corp. v. Household Finance Corp.

11 F. Supp. 3, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1521
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. West Virginia
DecidedMay 24, 1935
Docket170
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 11 F. Supp. 3 (Household Finance Corp. v. Household Finance Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Household Finance Corp. v. Household Finance Corp., 11 F. Supp. 3, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1521 (N.D.W. Va. 1935).

Opinion

BAKER, District Judge.

The subject-matter of the controversy is the adoption by the defendant of the exact same name as that of the plaintiff. Plaintiff objects to the defendant using its name, on the grounds that the public will become misled; that confusion will exist in the mind of the public; that plaintiff’s stock value is likely to depreciate; that plaintiff’s banking connections and stock have been and are still endangered; and that plaintiff’s credit, business, borrowing power, and stock valuation will diminish by reason of defendant’s acts, and that the plaintiff is being damaged by the defendant’s use of its name, and that if defendant is not enjoined from continuing the use of its present name, the plaintiff will suffer irreparable loss and damage.

Plaintiff, Household Finance Corporation, is a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Delaware, and has an office and place of business at 919 North Michigan avenue, Chicago, 111.

Defendant, Household Finance Corporation, is a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the state of West Virginia. The defendant corporation originally was incorporated under and by virtue of the laws *5 of the state of West Virginia, on the 1st day of December, 1922, tinder the name “Commercial Finance Company.” Defendant, on March 5, 1931, changed its name from “Commercial Finance Company” to “Household Finance Corporation,” the exact same name as that used by plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s record in this case shows that plaintiff acquired its name through predecessor organizations, by purchase, merger, or otherwise; that the business was originally established by one Frank J. Mackey in the year 1881, with the opening of a small loan office in Minneapolis, Minn.; that the business of said Mackey expanded, and that about 1892 the word “Household” was first used in Milwaukee, Wis., as part of tlie name under which one of the predecessor officers operated.

Through the adoption of the predecessor organization by purchase, merger, or otherwise, plaintiff claims the dominant right to use the word “Household” in connection with the loan and finance business. Furthermore, plaintiff shows it has spent thousands and thousands of dollars in advertising the words “Household,” “Household Finance,” and the name “Household Finance Corporation,” until this name has become synonymous with plaintiff’s business.

Plaintiff further owns, operates, and controls three subsidiaries under the following names: “Household Finance Corporation of New York, a personal loan company,” “Household Finance Corporation of America,” and “Household Finance Corporation of Massachusetts.”

The record shows that plaintiff’s business, originally established by Frank J. Mackey in 1881, grew from a relatively small concern, until at the time of its incorporation in 1925, it had net assets of $5,000,000, not including an exceedingly good will. By September 1st of the same year of plaintiff’s incorporation, its net assets grew to $6,000,000, and the plaintiff has expanded rapidly and continuously to such an extent that its net assets, at the time when defendant changed its name to that of the plaintiff, were over $24,000,000, not including good will. The net assets of plaintiff, at the time of filing the bill of complaint in this case, were over $29,000,-000.

Plaintiff has offices in approximately 76 cities and towns in the "United States, and conducted an advertising program over the radio which was heard in practically every state of the United States, and some foreign countries. Plaintiff regularly advertises in local newspapers and other publications, including “Time,” “Christian Science Monitor,” “Fortune,” “American Fedcrationist,” “Rotarían,” “American Bankers’ Association Journal,” “Saturday Evening Post,” and others.

Plaintiff has spent, and is still spending, large sums of money in advertising, both in national and local periodicals.

Plaintiff maintains an office in Pittsburgh, Pa., about 60 miles from Wheeling, W. Va., and is licensed to do business in several states bordering West Virginia.

Defendant is located in Wheeling, W. Va., scarcely a mile away from the state of Pennsylvania, where plaintiff has several offices.

Plaintiff is not endeavoring to put defendant out of business, but is merely trying to prevent defendant from continuing to use plaintiff’s name, which plaintiff alleges it has spent many thousands of dollars to make known to the public.

Nims on Unfair Competition and Trade Marks (2d Ed.) p. 163, § 82, states that the fact that the defendant corporation in a suit for unfair competition, involving its name, lias been chartered by some state government, does not afford it a defense or immunity from action against it in a federal court or a state court by a corporation of another state, where the name adopted is used to compete unfairly with the complaining company.

Cook on Corporations, vol. 1 (8th Ed.) page 84, § 15, reads as follows: “The right of a corporation to the exclusive use of its chosen name is recognized by statute in many states. Moreover, it is usually protected by the courts, independently of any statute. The matter of protecting the use of a corporate name is intrinsically of equitable' cognizance, and the injured party seldom, if ever, has an adequate and complete remedy at law. To prevent the continuance of such a wrong, equity will interfere, and at the suit of the injured party, will grant an injunction.”

In General Film Co. of Missouri v. General Film Co. of Maine, 237 F. 64, *6 Circuit Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit, the court held as follows: “As a corporation adopts its own name, complainant could not, though the name of the foreign corporation had not been registered, obtain the right to use the name of such corporation for the purposes of unfair competition, and such use may be enjoined by the courts, notwithstanding the approval of complainant’s name by the sec-' retary of state.”

When a state grants a charter to a corporation in accordance with the name selected by the corporation, the state does not warrant the name, nor does it guarantee that the domestic corporation shall have the full right and privilege to that name, regardless of any previous existing right to another.

In Liberty Life Assurance Society v. Heralds of Liberty, Delaware (15 Del. Ch. 369), 138 A. 634, it was held that the general right conferred by the law of a state to choose any corporate name must be held to those considerations of justice and fair dealing which it is the special province of equity to promote and protect, hence the courts of a state will not permit a business to be carried on in a manner unfair to a corporation of another state or in a name which unjustly interferes with the business of such a corporation, although the same may have been organized and registered under the general laws of the state.

The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in Grand Lodge, I. B.' & P. O. O. Elks v. Grand Lodge, I. B. & P. O. O. Elks (C. C. A.) 50 F.(2d) 860, 861, stated:

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Bluebook (online)
11 F. Supp. 3, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/household-finance-corp-v-household-finance-corp-wvnd-1935.