Johnson Gas Appliance Co. v. Reliable Gas Products Co.

10 N.W.2d 23, 233 Iowa 641
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 15, 1943
DocketNo. 46184.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 10 N.W.2d 23 (Johnson Gas Appliance Co. v. Reliable Gas Products Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson Gas Appliance Co. v. Reliable Gas Products Co., 10 N.W.2d 23, 233 Iowa 641 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

*642 Mulroney, J.

The Johnson Gas Appliance Company, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, alleged in its petition that for twenty-five years it had manufactured a bench soldering furnace and spent large sums of money in developing, manufacturing, advertising, and selling said product and “that the size, shape, curved hood, color, appearance and design of the legs, have become distinguishing features associated in the minds of the public with the Plaintiff as its maker.” The petition then alleged that the defendant partnership was composed of Revel M. Sayers and Mabel L. Sayers, husband and wife, and that Mabel L. Sayers was formerly office manager and secretary of the manager of the plaintiff company; that upon severing her connection with the plaintiff company about three years before suit; the defendant partnership ‘ ‘ designed, manufactured, and sold throughout the United States, and especially within and throughout the State of Iowa, a Bench Furnace substantially identical in size, shape, color and general appearance with the same type of curved hood and the same type of legs as is manufactured and sold by the Plaintiff.”

Plaintiff further alleged that Mrs. Sayers took the names and addresses of plaintiff’s customers with her when she left plaintiff’s employ, and the petition prayed for an injunction restraining the defendants from continuing the manufacture, distribution, and sale of products similar in size, appearance, or design, with hood shaped to resemble that used by plaintiff or with legs resembling those used by plaintiff in the manufacture and sale of its bench furnace, and further that plaintiff be awarded $5,000 damages.

The answer of the defendant partnership was a general denial. The trial court held plaintiff failed to introduce sufficient evidence to establish its cause of action and dismissed the petition. .

It is enough to- state that the evidence did not establish the allegation that plaintiff’s customer lists were pirated by defendants, and counsel for plaintiff in their written brief and argument simply contend that the facts show that defendants imitated plaintiff’s product to such an extent as to deceive the buying public generally, and the similarity of appearance *643 was such that it either did, or was likely to, deceive the ordinary and casual buyer. Without conceding the correctness of the rule of law contained in counsel’s contention, we will confine our discussion of the evidence to that part of the testimony showing the similarity in appearance of the two bench-soldering furnaces.

A bench-soldering f urna ce is a gas furnace, weighing fifteen to twenty-five pounds, used to heat soldering irons. Both furnaces have similar legs and both have similar curved hoods over the flame used to turn the flame back over the soldering' irons. The selling agent for plaintiff testified that “from an outward look it would take a person that was closely acquainted with the furnaces manufactured by the plaintiff and the defendant to tell them apart.” But this same witness testified that the name of Johnson Gas. Appliance Company appears on the hood of plaintiff’s furnace and the name of Reliable Gas Products Company, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, appears on the bench of defendants’ furnace; that the name of Johnson Natural Gas was stamped on the burner and valve of plaintiff’s furnace and the name of Reliable Gas Products Company, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, was stamped on the burner tube of defendants’ furnace; that the handle on plaintiff’s furnace is small and round and the handle on defendants’ furnace is flat and heavy; that there is some difference in the way the pilot-light tubing is attached to the manifold in the two furnaces. It also appeared in the testimony that plaintiff’s furnace is black, while the defendants’ furnace is painted an aluminum color and had been so painted for more than a year and a half before the suit was brought.

Such evidence is not a sufficient showing of similarity of appearance. Indeed, it would seem that the difference in color would alone be a sufficient distinguishing characteristic. In the ease of Champion Spark Plug Co. v. A. R. Mosler & Co., D. C., N. Y., 233 F. 112, 116, the relief granted by the court in an unfair-competition ease was a court order that the color of defendant’s spark plug be changed. The court was of the opinion that after the color change “not even a careless buyer would be misled.”

But the evidence shows, and we are told in argument, that these furnaces are not usually sold from stock by salesmen, and *644 the prospective customer sees nothing but the black-and-white cut or picture of the furnace he buys; that in .many instances the customer buys from a black-and-white picture printed or pasted in a catalog.of a distributor. Of course, in such pictures the distinction in color is not apparent, and it is true there is a strong resemblance between the pictures and advertising cuts of the two furnaces. A mail-order purchase made in response to the manufacturer’s own advertisement would certainly negative any idea of deception. No purchaser would think he was buying plaintiff’s furnace if he purchased by mail from the defendant. There is no similarity in name sufficient to invoke the doctrine of Lytle v. Smith, 204 Iowa 619, 215 N. W. 668, or Atlas Assurance Co. v. Atlas Insurance Co., 138 Iowa 228, 112 N. W. 232, 114 N. W. 609, 15 L. R. A., N. S., 625, 328 Am. St. Rep. 189.

There was no evidence concerning the manner in which a dealer would display the cut or pictures of the furnace in his catalog. One witness testified that he purchased defendants’ furnace from a hardware dealer after selecting it from the hardware dealer’s catalog. This catalog displayed thousands of articles sold by the hardware dealer, but this. witness did not testify that he was deceived when the Reliable Furnace arrived in response to his order-. In fact, he said he “never paid much attention to the appearance. They all look like one another to me.”

Even if the cut in the dealer’s catalog were not accompanied by the manufacturer’s name, it would afford no basis for the injunctive relief. The manufacturer who sells to retailers has done all that his competitor can demand when he distinguishes his goods from those of another manufacturer. The competitor cannot found an injunctive right against such manufacturer upon the sole ground that retailers may, or do, palm off his goods as those of the competing manufacturer. See Philadelphia Dairy Prod. Co. v. Quaker City Ice Cream Co., 306 Pa. 164, 159 A. 3, 84 A. L. R. 466.

It is apparent that the curved hood is functional and used to turn the flame back over the soldering iron to utilize what would otherwise be waste heat. At one time plaintiff owned a patent on this hood which had expired. Plaintiff may not *645 monopolize the functional parts of an unpatented article. Lennox Furnace Co. v. Wrot Iron Heater Co., 181 Iowa 1331, 160 N. W. 356, 165 N. W. 395. The evidence showed that at least one other bench-furnace manufacturer used a similar curved hood.

There is no evidence that defendants or their representatives made any claim or representation that its furnaces were the furnaces of the plaintiff company, nor any evidence that defendants ever represented that they were the agents of the plaintiff company.

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.W.2d 23, 233 Iowa 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-gas-appliance-co-v-reliable-gas-products-co-iowa-1943.