Juan F. Portuondo Cigar Manufacturing Co. v. Vicente Portuondo Cigar Manufacturing Co.

70 A. 968, 222 Pa. 116, 1908 Pa. LEXIS 664
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 23, 1908
DocketAppeals, Nos. 306 and 307
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 70 A. 968 (Juan F. Portuondo Cigar Manufacturing Co. v. Vicente Portuondo Cigar Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Juan F. Portuondo Cigar Manufacturing Co. v. Vicente Portuondo Cigar Manufacturing Co., 70 A. 968, 222 Pa. 116, 1908 Pa. LEXIS 664 (Pa. 1908).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Stewart,

Neither party to this controversy is satisfied with the result reached in the court below, and as a consequence we have here two appeals from the same decree. We shall consider first that of the defendants in the proceeding below. Separate reference to each of the seventy-seven assignments of error would be impracticable. Fortunately the case does not require it. More than three-fourths of them relate to the findings of fact by the court, and the complaint with respect to each is, that it is not supported by the evidence. Following closely the line indicated by each assignment we have very carefully examined the evidence in the case. From the specific findings, seventy-one in number, the learned court reached the general conclusion that there was on the part of Vicente Portuondo a studied effort to imitate the markings, labels and general method of dressing his goods, that had been pursued by Juan F. Portuondo, with a view to profit on the magic that had already been given to the name of Portuondo by his brother; and that his course of dealing was such as constituted what is known in law as unfair trade competition, coupled with an infringement of the business name, and in some instances infringement of trade-marks to such extent as to entitle the plaintiff to relief. This general finding can be understood and applied only as certain facts connected with the history of the case are made known. Juan F. Portuondo engaged in the manufacture of cigars in the city of Philadelphia as early as 1869. In 1885 in order that his product might be distinguished from that of other cigar manufacturers, he adopted certain labels which being duly registered became his peculiar trade-marks, and these he used upon the goods made in his establishment. The cigars manufactured by him came to be known to the trade throughout the United States as La Flor de Portuondo, after one of the adopted trade-marks, or Portuondo cigars, and are so generally referred to by the purchasing public. In January, 1893, the Juan F. Portuondo Cigar Manufacturing Company, plaintiff having been incorporated, Juan F. Portuondo assigned to [131]*131it the manufacturing business conducted by him, together with all the rights therein, including trade-marks, copyright labels and everything else connected therewith. Up to the time of his death in 1906 Juan F. Portuondo was president of this company, and owned a very large majority of stock interest therein. The company has continued uninterruptedly to the present in the business for which it was organized. Yicente Portuondo, a brother of Juan F. Portuondo, had been employed by the latter in his factory up to 1900, when, quitting his employment there, he engaged in the cigar business with a partner under the trade name of Yicente Portuondo. Four years later, in 1904, Yicente Portuondo filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy and, having been adjudged a bankrupt, his property passed to the trustee. Within three days thereafter, by agreement in writing, he sold to the individual appellants for the use of the Yicente Portuondo Cigar Manufacturing Company the other appellant, a corporation to be formed later, and which was duly incorporated under the laws of New Jersey, April 28, 1904, the right to use the name Yicente Portuondo in the title of the proposed corporation. In May, 1904, defendant corporation purchased from the receiver in bankruptcy the entire stock and fixtures, including the labels and stationery of the business of Yicente Portuondo. The bill filed in the case charged an improper and illegal use by defendants of labels on their manufactured goods which infringed upon trade-marks of the plaintiffs, an improper use of the name Portuondo, and a general course of unfair trade on their part towards the plaintiff, resulting in great loss to the latter.

It may be conceded that some of the specific facts found by the court are fairly disputable; but none are without support in the evidence, certainly none which might be regarded as material. The findings with respect to those disputable are not open to review, except as manifest error is shown, and that is not the case with respect to any of them. Were these to be passed by without consideration, there would be still enough facts in the case clearly established to sustain the final conclusion of the court as above stated. The trade-marks, labels and indices employed by Yicente Portuondo speak for themselves. They were not a servile and exact reproduction of those used by Juan F. Portuondo, of whom the plaintiffs are [132]*132the successors in right, but they bear such resemblance that it is impossible to reach any other conclusion than that they were designed from them, with not too much variation to prevent them from being accredited by the unobservant and unwary as the proper marks and labels of Juan F. Portuondo, intended to identify the goods of his own special manufacture, and with just enough variation to distinguish one from the other when comparison was made between them. Except as both were exposed to one at the same time, so that opportunity for comparison was afforded, either could readily be taken for the other. This was not accidental, could not have been, but was evidently the result of careful and studied effort. It is wholly immaterial in this connection that the labels and marks used by the defendants were the same that had been devised and used by Vicente Portuondo. The fact that he had not been enjoined from using them conferred no right upon appellants to use them. They were- as much infringement under his use as under theirs.

That the course of dealing pursued by Vicente Portuondo and the defendant company, in the manufacture and sale of their goods, was unfair trade competition, coupled with infringement of business name and trade-marks, is made equally evident. This finding is not dependent upon any fact open to question. The appropriation of name, the use of simulated labels, marks and designs, would in themselves be sufficient to warrant this finding; but it has far more to rest upon. The advertisements and circulars addressed to the trade by the defendants, in which claims are made calculated to create the belief that the cigars manufactured by the defendant company are the original, if not the only, Portuondo cigars, furnish convincing proof that however excellent in quality defendants’ manufactured product was, for their general acceptance in the market defendants depended far more upon the Portuondo association than upon the excellence of the goods. Value was given the name Portuondo in association with cigars, and the trade-marks and labels adopted by Juan F. Portuondo were used to distinguish cigars of his manufacture from others in the general market. The general rule is that anything done by a rival in the same business by imitation or otherwise, designed or calculated to mislead the public in the belief that in [133]*133buying the product offered by him for sale, they were buying the product of another’s manufacture, would be in fraud on that other’s rights, and would afford just ground for equitable interference. That is the case here. "With respect to the measure of relief afforded the plaintiff by the restraining decree of the court, the defendants in the bill have no ground for complaint. It deprives them of nothing that they are entitled to; it simply protects the plaintiff company in the exclusive enjoyment of what it has shown itself to lawfully own.

The exceptions in this appeal, No. 397, January Term, 1907, are overruled.

We come now to consider the appeal of the plaintiff company.

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Bluebook (online)
70 A. 968, 222 Pa. 116, 1908 Pa. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/juan-f-portuondo-cigar-manufacturing-co-v-vicente-portuondo-cigar-pa-1908.