Hudson Motor Car Co. v. Hudson Tire Co.

21 F.2d 453, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1388
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 12, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 21 F.2d 453 (Hudson Motor Car Co. v. Hudson Tire Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hudson Motor Car Co. v. Hudson Tire Co., 21 F.2d 453, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1388 (D.N.J. 1927).

Opinion

RUNYON, District Judge.

The plaintiff herein, manufacturer of Hudson automobiles, has brought suit in equity against the Hudson Tire Company, of Newark, N. J., charging trade-mark infringement and unfair competition on the part of the defendant in its manufacture and sale of automobile tires, variously marked “Hudson Cord,” “New Hudson Cord,” and “Hudson Super Cord.”

The Hudson Motor Car Company was organized under the laws of Michigan in the month of February, 1909, and has continued to do business under such original corporate name at all times since that date.

In July, 1909, it adopted as a trade-mark for its ears and various parts thereof the word “Hudson,” displayed within an inverted triangle, and registered the same under the Trade-Mark Act of 1905 (15 USCA § 81 et seq.), filing its application therefor on October 6, 1911, and receiving such registration on August 8, 1916.

On October 2, 1915, this company also adopted the word “Super-Six” as a trademark to designate its automobiles, filed its application for registration thereof on November 26,1915, and secured same on May 2, 1916. ’ '

The word “Hudson,” within the triangle, is placed on the radiator name plate of the company’s ears, and stands out conspicuously, being enameled a dark color as against the white-enameled background of the solid metal triangle. The name also appears on various other parts of the cars and on accessories, such as bag containers and shipping crates.

The trade-mark “Super-Six” is used in connection with the word “Hudson,” and appears on the hub caps of the company’s cars, within the triangle, and forming the phrase “Hudson Super-Six.”

Mr. Ehrlich, president of- the defendant company, testifies that he began the use of the word “Hudson” in connection with his business about 1906 or 1907. He had had a stable, located near the Hudson boulevard in Jersey City. Converting it into a garage and renting a portion thereof to the local agent of the Cadillac car, he named his place the Hudson Garage, and, after conducting same as a general garage for about five years, sold it later to another party who continued the business under the name of the Hudson Taxicab Company & Hudson Garage.

After five years in the garage business, he testifies that he drifted into the making of tires, first at Jersey City in the garage, and.after 1914 in the city of Newark.

The nature of his early product is described by him as follows:

“Why, I took a — like a used tire, like it would go had in the bead, some of the tires that they run fiat, or the bead wasn’t perfected right in those days; they put in some fabrics or something instead of putting in steel wires and the bead wouldn’t stand up; and I would buy up these tires at the factories or various different places where they had them, and then tho tires that were wore out, I would put that tire on top of the other one and then sew it together.”

On this product were burnt in with an electric stencil the words “Hudson Double,” or the single word “Hudson.”

While these double-tread tires are still continued as a part of defendant’s business, the manufactured tire, first made by another company for defendant about 1920 and hearing its present corporate name stamped thereon, is the larger activity at present.

The first corporate name of defendant was. “Hudson Double Tire Company, Inc.,” secured by charter dated December .13, 1915; this name being changed to its present one, *454 “Hudson Tire Company, Inc.,” by amended charter filed the next year.

With the manufactured tires was instituted a new set of names, the various designations being “Hudson Super Cord,” “the New Hudson Cord,” and “Hudson Cord”; and it is to secure a discontinuance of the use of the triangle and the words “Hudson” and “Super” in connection with the output of defendant’s tires that this action is brought.

By way of recapitulation, it may be said that the president of the defendant company first used the word “Hudson” about 1906 or 1907, when he named his garage, located near the Hudson boulevard in Jersey City, Hudson county, the “Hudson Garage.”

In February, 1909, the Hudson Motor Car Company was incorporated, and in July of the same year it adopted the use of the word “Hudson” and the inverted triangle as its trade-mark, filing its application -for registration thereof on October 6, 1911.

In 1911 or 1912, after five years in the garage business, the president of the present-defendant company, before any incorporation was had, drifted into the making of tires, branding them the “Hudson” or “Hudson Double.”

On October 2, 1915, the plaintiff company adopted the trade-mark “Super Six” to describe its ears, filing its application for registration thereof on November 26, 1915.

On December 13, 1915, the defendant company, under the name-of “Hudson Double Tire Company, Inc.,” was incorporated.

In 1916 defendant’s charter was amended and the corporate name changed to “Hudson Tire Company, Inc.”'

On May 2, 1916, plaintiff company secured the registration of its “Super Six” trade-mark, and on August 8,1916, registration of its trade-mark “Hudson,” within the inverted triangle.

In 1919 or 1920, defendant company began to put out its own tires, as manufactured for it, and then adopted the word “Super” as a part of the tire name, and also used the inverted triangle.

It is thus to be seen that the first use of the word “Hudson” was in its application to the Jersey City garage, and the appropriateness of the term is clearly evident when its location is remembered. The plaintiff company had not come into existence, and neither was there any special feature or output of the garage business to which the name “Hudson” might have been attached in the sense of distinguishing it from other products of the same class. It was the ordinary garage business, and the word “Hudson” in connection therewith accomplished nothing more than to distinguish the place itself from other garages. Therefore no exception can be taken to Mr. Ehrlich’s original appropriation of the word “Hudson.”

In the year 1909, there came into existence the plaintiff company, given the right by the state of Michigan to adopt the title “Hudson Motor Car Company” and to manufacture automobiles under that name. Quite contrary to the designating function performed by the word “Hudson,” as applied to the Jersey City building, the primary use of the word “Hudson” in the Michigan incorporation has been to identify the product of the corporate business and to distinguish it from any other automobile made.

And, as marketability depends largely upon excellence of product, especially in the ease of commodities classified more or less as luxuries, it behooves a manufacturer to guard well his product, to the end, not only that everything, entering into such product shall merit his own approval as well as that of the public, but also’that the name of his product in its every part shall be held to a like standard of excellence. In no other way can a buying public, guided largely by titles and names in its purchases, be protected.

All this, it would appear, the plaintiff company has endeavored to do.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F.2d 453, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudson-motor-car-co-v-hudson-tire-co-njd-1927.