International Silver Co. v. Oneida Community, Ltd.

73 F.2d 69, 23 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 65, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 2599
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 17, 1934
Docket330
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 73 F.2d 69 (International Silver Co. v. Oneida Community, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Silver Co. v. Oneida Community, Ltd., 73 F.2d 69, 23 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 65, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 2599 (2d Cir. 1934).

Opinions

AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judge.

This suit is to enjoin the use of the name “Rogers” on silver-plated fatware and other tableware, as well as to enjoin the use of various trade-marks and to restrain unfair competition.

Complainant claims to be the successor of the original Rogers firm that began business in 1847 and attained a high reputation in the manufacture of silver plate. We think this position cannot be sustained so far as it seeks exclusive rights derived from the three brothers, William, Simeon S., and Asa H. Rogers, who began business together in Connecticut in 1847 and established a high reputation as faithful craftsmen in making table silverware by an electroplating process. The three Rogers stayed together until 1856, when William left the corporation which the brothers had formed, known as Rogers Bros. Manufacturing Company. He then joined others in a corporation known as Rogers Smith & Co., which manufactured silver-plated ware under the mark “Rogers Smith & Co. A 1.” In 1862, Rogers Smith & Co. merged with the Rogers Bros. Manufacturing Company and under the marks “(Star) Rogers Bros. A 1,” “Rogers Brothers,” “Rogers Bros.,” and “Rogers Smith & Company” continued the business until the concern became insolvent in 1862 and the assets, other than the good will and trade-marks, were distributed by the Connecticut probate court. Shortly after the failure, a new corporation called Rogers Smith & Co. was organized (in which no one named Rogers was interested), which was sold out to Meriden Brittania Company in 1863. About November, 1862, the .original three Rogers brothers entered the employ of the Meriden Company without, however, obtaining any proprietary interest in that corporation. It was agreed that the company should not sell goods stamped with the name “Rogers” unless they bore the name or trade-marks of “Rogers Brothers.” The goods were marketed by the company under the name “1847 Rogers Bros. A 1.”

Asa H. and Simeon S. Rogers had left Rogers Bros. Manufacturing Company in 1858 and, before going into the employ of the Meriden Company, had established a business of their own at Waterbury, Conn., under the name of Rogers & Bro., using the trade-marks “Rogers & Brother A 1,” “(Star) Rogers & Brother A 1,” “(Star-) Rogers & Bro. A 1,” “(Star) R. & B.”

In 1864, William Rogers left the employ of the Meriden Company and went into that [71]*71of "William Rogers Manufacturing Company in Hartford, a partnership in which neither he nor any one named Rogers over owned an interest. His son "William Rogers, Jr., also associated himself with the concern. The trade-marks used by it were “(Anchor) William Rogers & Son AA,” “William Rogers & Son,” “1865 William Rogers Mfg. Co. AA,” “William Rogers Mfg. Co.,” “Rogers Nickel Silver,” “(Anchor) Rogers (Anchor)

In 1868, Yfilliam Rogers again entered the employ of the Meriden Company and his son went with him.

In 1871, Asa Rogers and one Watrous organized Rogers Cutlery Company.

In 1878, Simpson, Hall, Miller & Co. was formed at Wallingford and employed William Rogers, Jr. It used the mark “(Eagle) Wm. Rogers (Star).”

In 1868, Cephas, Gilbert, and Wilbur F. Rogers, all being unconnected with the old Rogers family, founded a, firm at Meriden under the name of C. Rogers & Bros. They used the trade-marks “C. Rogers & Bros.” and “C. Rogers & Bros. A 1.” It did not begin to manufacture silver plate until 1883.

In 1886, the Rogers & Hamilton Company was formed in Watorbnry, with which none of the Rogers brothers was connected. It did no-t manufacture silver plate, hut only hollow ware. Indeed, the original Rogers had all died; William Rogers in 1873, Simeon in 1874, and Asa hi 1876.

It will be seen that prior to 1394, when William A. Rogers, who is defendant’s predecessor, began business, the following concerns were in the business of manufacturing silver plate: Rogers & Bro., deriving title from Asa and Simeon Rogers in 1858; Meriden Brittania Company, deriving title from all three of the original brothers in 1862; William Rogers Manufacturing Company deriving title from William Rogers in 1865; Rogers Cutlery Company deriving title from Asa Rogers.

In addition to the foregoing, the following concerns: C. Rogers & Bros. (1868), Simpson, Hall, Miller & Co. (1878), and the Rogers & Hamilton Company (1886) — were in competition with the complainant’s predecessors in 1894 when William A. Rogers, defendant’s predecessor, entered the field.

In 1899, the complainant was organized and has purchased the business of the foregoing concerns. It seems plain that at that time the name “Rogers” did not designate any particular source of manufacture. The first four concerns could trace back to’the three brothers and possibly this was true of Simpson, Hall, Miller & Co. also, because of the connection with it of William Rogers, Jr., who had worked closely with his father in the William Rogers Manufacturing Company. But in Wm. Rogers Mfg. Co. v. Simpson, Hall, Miller & Co., 54 Conn. 527, 9 A. 395, 401, it was held that the William Rogers Manufacturing Company’ could not prevent Simpson, Hall, Miller & Co. from using the word “Rogers.” The court said in that decision that: “The plaintiff has no greater right to prevent the misleading of consumers in the matter of calling the goods of both ‘Rogers goods,’ than it has to prevent the same result in the matter of using identical names accompanied by differing symbols as stamps.” It was also held in a suit by Rogers & Brother v. C. Rogers et al., 53 Conn. 121, 1 A. 807, 5 A. 675, 55 Am. Rep. 78, that the former could not enjoin C. Rogers & Bros, from using the “name of ‘Rogers’ merely, upon their goods.” As regards Rogers & Hamilton Company, another interloper, there is no proof that any attempt was made to stop its sales of “Rogers” goods, or that any of the original Rogers concerns objected to its use of the name. Thus, when the complainant came into the field, there were at least two, and probably three, concerns which had been using the name for years, with no proof that their workmanship was equivalent to the high order of plate that had made the silver of William, Simeon S., and Asa H. Rogers famous, or that they claimed to derive their title from the original brothers.

In 1894, William A. Rogers, defendant’s predecessor, began selling silverware in New York. He started a fourth “Rogers” business in electroplated ware in competition with the companies deriving a commercial heirship from the three brothers and was followed in 1900 by a concern known as Simeon L. & George H. Rogers Company, organized under the laws of Maine, by two sons of Simeon S. Rogers, with a factory at Hai-tford, Conn.

In 1901, William A. Rogers incorporated his business and was engaged in substantial competition with the complainant in silver plate until the business was sold out to the defendant in 1929. It used the name “Rogers” as well as various special trademarks. In 1918, it had acquired the business of Simoon L. & George II. Rogers Company.

The complainant bought out all of the concerns that were competing with it when [72]*72it started! business, namely, Rogers & Bro., Meriden Brittania Company, Wm. Rogers Manufacturing Company, Rogers Cutlery Company, Rogers Smith & Co., Simpson, Hall, Miller & Co., and the Rogers &

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Bluebook (online)
73 F.2d 69, 23 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 65, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 2599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-silver-co-v-oneida-community-ltd-ca2-1934.