Hoyt v. J. T. Lovett Co.

71 F. 173, 31 L.R.A. 44, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 2601
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 3, 1895
DocketNo. 1
StatusPublished

This text of 71 F. 173 (Hoyt v. J. T. Lovett Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoyt v. J. T. Lovett Co., 71 F. 173, 31 L.R.A. 44, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 2601 (3d Cir. 1895).

Opinion

WALES, District Judge.

James Hoyt and Edwin Hoyt sued the J. T. Lovett Company for the infringement of their common-law and registered trade-mark, under which they claimed the exclusive right to propagate and sell grapevines, grapevine slips, and grapes cultivated and produced by them, and to which they had given the name of “Green Mountain Grape.” The circuit court dismissed the complainants’ bill, on the ground that “the case seems clearly to fall within the principles stated by Mr. Justice Jackson in Mill Co. v. Alcorn, 150 U. S. 460, 14 Sup. Ct. 151, and is governed by it.” In the case referred to the court says:

“The general principles of law applicable to trade-marks, and the conditions under which a party may establish an exclusive right to the use of a name or symbol, are well settled by the decisions of this court, * * * which * * * establish the following general propositions: * * * (3) That the exclusive right to the use of the mark or device claimed as a trademark is founded on priority of appropriation; that is to say, the claimant of the trade-mark must have been the first to use or employ the same on like articles of production. (4) Such trade-marks cannot consist of words in common use as designating locality, section, or region of country.”

The law being thus settled, we have only to consider its application to the facts of the case now before us.

1. Priority of Adoption and Use. Each of the parties to the present suit has been for many years extensively engaged in the business of a nurseryman; the complainants at New Canaan, in the state of Connecticut, and the defendant at Little Silver, in the state of New Jersey. The bill alleges that the complainants, in and about the year [175]*1751885, discovered the vine to which, after three years of experimental cultivation and propagation, they gave the name of “Green Mountain Grape'’; that they selected and used this name as a trade-mark in advance of all others, and have since continuously used it to denote and indicate their grapevines, and also the grape produced therefrom; that the said trade-mark was registered in the patent oflice of the United States on the 27th of August, 1889; and that the defendant has fraudulently used the same. The answer denies all the material matters set out in the bill, excepting the fact of registration, and specially denies tliat the complainants were the first to select and adopt the name which they claim as a trade-mark. The record shows tliat J. M. Paul, who carried on a nursery on a small scale at North» Adams, Mass., in the year 1884, and probably earlier, found some grapevines growing wild on or near the side of the Green Mountains, in the state of Vermont, on the farm of Mr. Clough, from whom he bought them, and that in the spring of that year he sent one of the vines to Mr. Hathaway, of Easton, N. Y., with a wooden label attached thereto, hearing the words “Green Mountain.” Previous to this Mr. Paul, while on a visit to the home of his old-time friend, Mr. Hathaway, had mentioned his discovery of the vines, and the two, after talking over the subject of a suitable name for the new vine, had concluded that “Green Mountain” “would cover the whole.” The first vine planted by Mr. Hathaway did not live, and in the spring of 1885 he planted another of the same variety, labeled with the same name, received from Mr. Paul, which survived, and bore fruit in the summer of 1886; and from this last vine he sold eyes on slips to different buyers, among whom was the J. T. Lovett Company, by the name of the “Green Mountain Grape.” This witness also states that he had sold and given away some of these vines to his neighbors as the Green Mountain grape, and that the vines are now known in his neighborhood by that name. Mr. Hathaway is distinct in his recollection of the circumstances thus briefly narrated, and he is corroborated as to the fact of prior use by other witnesses. Mr. Edwin Hoyt, one of the complainants, and the only witness produced in support of the bill, says that Mr. Paul sent them a sample of the Green Mountain grape in the spring of 1885; that they had at first thought of calling it the “New Canaan Grape,” and had prepared a device, taken from a pictorial Bible, representing the two returning -spies bearing on their shoulders a staff from which was suspended a large cluster of grapes, but upon further reflection “we thought the words ‘Green Mountain,’ the place where the vine originated, would carry with it the idea of hardiness; that, perhaps, the vine would take better; * * and we finally adopted the name ‘Green Mountain,’ with the same picture”; and that this name has been used by them since January, 1889. Mr. Hoyt also states that the vine was discovered by Mr. Paul, who bought it of Clough. In a letter from the complainants to the defendant, dated September 11, 1888, they wrote: “We send you by express a sample of our new grape, the ‘Green Mountain.’ This grape originated in the Green Mountains; hence its name.” The complainants published two advertisements, dated, re[176]*176spectively, February, 1890, and August, 1890, in which, after describing the excellent qualities of their new grape, they notify the public that:

“Each vine sold will be sealed with our trade-mark. * * * Our copyright name, ‘Green Mountain,’ gives us the exclusive right for its propagation for sale.”

On August 25, 1890, the defendant wrote to the complainants, inquiring:

“On what terms will you supply us some seals? A party offered us the wood of a vine of the Green Mountain grape last fall, which he said came into his possession before you had purchased. This was before we knew that you were going to have the grape copyrighted, and we bought the wood, and propagated from it a few vines, perhaps a hundred.”

The complainants reply by letter to this inquiry, on August 27, 1890:

“You say you got the wood' of a party who procured it before we had purchased it. We do not think this can be so, as we have had it nearly five years now, but did not offer it for sale until last spring a year ago. Would you object telling us from what source you received your wood? Mr. Paul told us there were no vines sold which would do us any harm. He is dead now, and there is no finding out to whom he sold vines, or the date he bought the vines from Mr'.' Clough.”

At the time of the sale by Mr. Paul to the complainants, — December 20, 1885, — he entered into a written contract with them, the substance of which was that he would furnish the wood grown from the Green Mountain vine on his place, or under his control, so long as the said Hoyt’s Sons shall require it, or until six years shall have expired; and without the latter’s consent would not furnish the wood to any other person. It is quite probable that the complainants honestly believed they had acquired the sole right, under this agreement, to propagate and sell the vine, but they acted mistakenly, since the evidence proves that, besides Hathaway, at least two other persons — Mr. Terry and Mr. Francis — had each procured a Green Mountain vine from Mr. Paul, and had successfully cultivated them, before the complainants had decided to adopt “Green Mountain” as a trade-name. The registration of the trademark does not help the complainants. It amounts to nothing more than prima facie evidence of ownership, and does not confer a title upon the claimant, if some other person has, by adoption, acquired a prior right to its use. Manufacturing Co. v. Ludeling, 22 Fed. 826. In Canal Co. v.

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Related

Canal Co. v. Clark
80 U.S. 311 (Supreme Court, 1872)
Columbia Mill Co. v. Alcorn
150 U.S. 460 (Supreme Court, 1893)
Glen Cove Manuf'g Co. v. Ludeling
22 F. 823 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1885)

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Bluebook (online)
71 F. 173, 31 L.R.A. 44, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 2601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoyt-v-j-t-lovett-co-ca3-1895.