Hudson Handkerchief Mfg. Corp. v. Hudson Pulp & Paper Corp.

175 F. Supp. 281, 121 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 576, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3232
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 27, 1959
StatusPublished

This text of 175 F. Supp. 281 (Hudson Handkerchief Mfg. Corp. v. Hudson Pulp & Paper Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hudson Handkerchief Mfg. Corp. v. Hudson Pulp & Paper Corp., 175 F. Supp. 281, 121 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 576, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3232 (S.D.N.Y. 1959).

Opinion

' THOMAS F. MURPHY, District Judge.

This action, originally brought in the State Court and removed here because of diverse citizenship, is for an injunction to restrain defendant’s alleged unfair competition.

Plaintiff, a New York corporation organized in 1945, is a manufacturer of cloth handkerchiefs and is the nominal successor to two similarly named companies that have been in the same business since 1925. Originally, a New Jersey corporation known as Hudson Handkerchief Co., Inc., secured from the Patent Office in August 1939 a registered trademark. The mark was an elliptical seal with a drawing of a single masted sailing ship and on the top border had the legend, “Half Moon,” and below, “The symbol of a fine handkerchief,” the latter phrase being disclaimed apart from the mark.

Plaintiff claims the right to the trademark by virtue of what purports to be two duly executed assignments from two defunct corporations, i. e., plaintiff’s predecessors, the New Jersey corporation and a New York corporation of the same name, both of which were permitted by plaintiff to lapse for non-payment of taxes in 1946. These assignments are dated March 1957, approximately ten years after the dissolution of the assignor corporations and two years after this action was commenced.

Plaintiff’s principal business is the sale of men’s cloth handkerchiefs to jobbers and retailers, grossing between $800,-000 and $1 million a year. It also sells gloves, scarves, and belts. Half of its handkerchiefs are sold without label or name of any kind identifying plaintiff as the manufacturer. The other half indicate plaintiff as the source by means of its trademark and others with a small label identical in all respects to the label with plaintiff’s trademark but with a different legend, to wit, on the top border “Fine Quality” and below, “Handkerchiefs by Hudson.” This mark has never been registered.

. With two exceptions its principal advertising has been in trade catalogues plus a listing in the Manhattan Classified Telephone Directory. Its two attempts at national advertising occurred in 1952. In September of that year it had an ad of about !4tth of a page in Esquire Magazine and in October had a %oth of a page ad in Life Magazine. Each ad read: “Fine Handkerchiefs — at Better Stores —Hudson Handkerchief Mfg. Corp.”

Defendant has been in business since 1900 and originally made only paper bags and sacks. Between 1940 and 1950 it began also to manufacture and sell a large number of paper products including napkins, towels, facial tissues and, since 1954, paper handkerchiefs. These paper handkerchiefs are packaged in cardboard containers with a transparent cellophane [283]*283opening so as to disclose the color of the paper. Since 1954 it has sold these paper handkerchiefs in groceries and in supermarkets in the household paper products sections where no cloth handkerchiefs are sold. The box container has prominently displayed on five sides the name “Hudson Hankies.” Defendant spends large sums of money each year in national advertising- — $1 million per year since 1953; between $1% and $2 million in 1958, and its present budget is $2 y2 million. It markets all its products under the name “Hudson.” Its sales of “Hudson Hankies” are currently at the rate of 6,000 to 8,000 cases per month, each case containing 72 boxes.

Plaintiff’s only witness, its president, testified that some time in 1954 he learned of the fact that defendant was advertising its “Hudson Hankies” on radio and television. It was his testimony also, which was not corroborated and which we do not accept, that he received some telephone calls from people thinking that it was his company that was doing the advertising for “Hudson Hankies.” This witness further testified that he received two orders from F. W. Woolworth & Company for merchandise manufactured by defendant. An examination of the exhibits, however, discloses that these orders were actually addressed to defendant, and intended for defendant, and somehow or other were received by plaintiff and, incidentally, were not for handkerchiefs, cloth or paper. The only other exhibit relating to confusion was an order from F. W. Woolworth & Company for cloth handkerchiefs, addressed to plaintiff and intended for plaintiff but inadvertently sent to defendant and forwarded by defendant to plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s president also testified that in 1950 he thought of packaging a paper handkerchief and went so far as to contact a number of paper houses, and in 1957 went to Japan for a variety of reasons, including the possibility of purchasing paper. It was obvious that he did very little about this thought, assuming that he seriously considered going into that business. He exhibited a complete ignorance of the quality and style of paper that could be marketed, plus a complete unfamiliarity with its cost.

Although the complaint alleges infringement of the trademark and unfair competition with what it describes as its trade name, to wit, “Hudson Handkerchiefs,” plaintiff’s brief after trial states its claim as follows:

“At the outset let it be stated that the plaintiff has never sought and does not now seek to have the defendant enjoined from using the word ‘Hudson’ as such as a part of its corporate title. Nor has the plaintiff any dispute with the defendant's general operations insofar as it relates to the many products displayed in Court and manufactured and sold by the defendant.
“Plaintiff merely seeks to have the defendant restrained from using the word ‘Hankies’ which is concededly a contraction of the longer word ‘Handkerchief’ in combination with the word ‘Hudson.’ Plaintiff’s position is simply that in the present circumstances the defendant’s use of the words ‘Hudson Hankies’ does not give the plaintiff the protection to which it is entitled and constitutes ‘unfair competition’ according to recognized and well-established principles of equity.”

Quite obviously there is no claim for infringement of trademark, nor could there be, even assuming that the mark belongs to plaintiff by virtue of the assignments from the defunct corporations —in fact plaintiff does not claim such infringement. As we understand the restatement of plaintiff’s claim it would appear that it feels it has a trade name, to wit, “Hudson Handkerchiefs,” and that defendant by the use of the words “Hudson Hankies” unfairly competes with it.

We are not satisfied that plaintiff has in fact the trade name “Hudson Handkerchiefs.” The only proof offered (the two minute ads in Life and Esquire in [284]*2841952, and the trade circulars) is significantly without the phrase “Hudson Handkerchiefs.” The ads and the trade circulars prominently use plaintiff’s corporate title “Hudson Handkerchief Mfg. Corp.” plus the trademark “Half Moon,” and are primarily concerned with advertising cloth handkerchiefs of good quality manufactured by plaintiff that can be found in better shops. However, assuming that plaintiff has.a trade name and has developed sufficient good will and reputation in it by long use, the question remains whether any tort has been committed by defendant, i. e., has defendant unfairly competed with plaintiff?

At the outset it must be stated that there was no evidence whatsoever of any palming-off, nor was there any proof that plaintiff ever received any letters which indicated a confusion between its product and that of defendant’s.

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175 F. Supp. 281, 121 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 576, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudson-handkerchief-mfg-corp-v-hudson-pulp-paper-corp-nysd-1959.