John H. Gates v. Gates Coal Co., Inc.

174 A. 3, 114 Pa. Super. 157, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 243
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 15, 1934
DocketAppeal 7
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 174 A. 3 (John H. Gates v. Gates Coal Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John H. Gates v. Gates Coal Co., Inc., 174 A. 3, 114 Pa. Super. 157, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 243 (Pa. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Parker., J.,

The defendant has appealed from a decree of the court below sustaining the principal averments of a bill filed by John H. Cates, trading as John H. Cates Coal Company, and issuing an injunction, the effect of which was to require Cates Coal Company, Inc., a Pennsylvania corporation, to change its name.

As the findings of fact by the chancellor are sustained by competent evidence, and as there is but one assignment of error as to findings of fact, and that not material to the question involved, we will state the facts as found. John H. Cates for twenty-two years had been actively engaged in conducting a retail coal business in Dauphin County with an office in Harrisburg. Until 1921 he was in partnership with his father, and thereafter was associated with his father’s legal representatives until 1924 when he acquired the interest of the estate of 'his father. Since that time *160 he has been the sole owner of the business and has traded under the name “John H. Gates Coal Company,” and since November; 1918, that name has been registered under the Fictitious Name Act of 1917. He has used a trademark, “Gates Clean Coal.” J. Warren Gates, a brother of the plaintiff, was employed in this business until 1924 when he embarked in the business of selling coal at wholesale in Pennsylvania and four or five other states. In November, 1931, J. Warren Gates became one of the incorporators of the “Gates Coal Company, Inc.,” being the principal stockholder and the owner of ninety-eight per cent of the stock. Since the incorporation, he has followed the same line of business at the same place. Only a small proportion, two per cent, of his sales were for performance in the County of Dauphin. This corporation has not engaged' in the retail coal business “and is not in competition with plaintiff’s business,” but by the terms of its charter is authorized to engage in a retail business. The plaintiff has not suffered any financial loss as a result of the organization of the defendant company and did not learn of its incorporation until after the charter was granted.

It is a well settled rule that no one shall, by imitation or unfair device, induce the public to believe that the goods he offers for sale are the goods of another and thereby appropriate to himself the value of a reputation which his rival has acquired for his own merchandise. This prohibition against unfair competition has extended to the use of a rival’s packages, names, insignia, or other distinctive title or mark: 26 it. C. L. 875. “There are two classes of cases involving judicial interference with the use of names, first, where the intent is to get an unfair and fraudulent share of another’s business, and second, where the effect of defendant’s action, irrespective of his intent, is to produce confusion in the public mind and con *161 sequent loss to the complainant. In both cases the courts of equity administer relief without regard to the existence of a technical trademark”: Amer. Clay Mfg. Co. v. Amer. Clay Mfg. Co., 198 Pa. 189, 193, 47 A. 936; North Cheshire, etc., v. Manchester Brewing Co., L. R. Appealed Cases 83.

The rule just stated is, however, frequently modified by an equally well settled principle giving one the benefit of the use of his own name. “Every man has an absolute right to use his own name in his own business, even though he may thereby interfere with or injure the business of another person bearing the same name, provided he does not resort to any artifice or contrivance for the purpose of producing the impression that the establishments are identical, or do anything calculated to mislead. Where the only confusion created is that which results from the similarity of the names the courts will not interfere. ' A person cannot make a trademark of his own name, and thus obtain a monopoly of it which will debar all other persons of the same name from using their own names in their own business”: Meneely v. Meneely, 62 N. Y. 427, 431. The right to use one’s own name is nevertheless subject to the proviso that he shall not resort to any artifice or contrivance for the purpose of producing the impression that the establishments are identical, or do anything calculated to mislead. Such inconvenience or loss as may result from an honest use of a person’s name in his business, by reason of its interference with the business of another having the same name is regarded as damnum absque injuria: Russia Cement Co. v. LePage, 147 Mass. 206, 208, 17 N. E. 304. It is also true that one may deprive himself of his right to use his own name by contract. These principles are quoted and approved in the case of Seligman v. Fenton, 286 Pa. 372, 133 A. 561, and *162 are applicable to the use of the family or surname alone.

There remains for consideration the right of an incorporator to use his own name as the whole or part of a corporate name. In the case of Howe Scale Co. v. Wyckoff, Seamans & Benedict, 198 U. S. 118, 136, Mr. Chief Justice Fullee thus answers the question: “But if every man has the right to use his name reasonably and honestly, in every way, we cannot perceive any practical distinction between the use of the name in a firm and its use in a corporation. It is dishonesty in the use that is condemned whether in a partnership or corporate name, and not the use itself ......We hold that, in the absence of contract, fraud, or estoppel, any man may use his own name, in all legitimate ways, and as the whole or a part of a corporate name.” In that case, one of the questions involved was the right to use the word “Bemington” as part of a corporate title and in trade insignia. Franklin Bemington was a son of one of the inventors of the Bemington typewriter and had followed that line of business. He had sold out his interest in a company in which he was originally concerned to the complainants and then embarked in business for himself. There is a strong resemblance between the facts in that case and those in the one we have for consideration. Also, see Donnell v. Herring-Hall-Marvin Safe Co., 208 U. S. 267, and 208 U. S. 554; Stix, Baer & Fuller Dry Goods Co. v. Amer. Piano Co., 211 Fed. 271; Lapoint Machine Tool Co. v. J. N. Lapoint Co., 115 Me. 472, 99 A. 348.

The case of White v. Trowbridge, 216 Pa. 11, 64 A. 862, is also pertinent. While the question there was with relation to the use of a surname, it did not directly concern the use of such name as part of a corporate title. There Trowbridge, the inventor of chocolate chips, sold his interest in a partnership, in> *163 eluding the “good will, rights, property, etc.,” and subsequently made the word “Trowbridge” an important part of his advertising. It was held that a retiring partner, in the absence of an agreement to the contrary, was not deprived of the right to use his own name in connection with the conduct of his business by reason of the fact that his surname was a portion of the trademark used by the partnership of which he had been formerly a member.

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Bluebook (online)
174 A. 3, 114 Pa. Super. 157, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-h-gates-v-gates-coal-co-inc-pasuperct-1934.