Keebler Weyl Baking Co. v. J. S. Ivins' Son, Inc.

7 F. Supp. 211, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1594
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 10, 1934
Docket7651
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 7 F. Supp. 211 (Keebler Weyl Baking Co. v. J. S. Ivins' Son, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keebler Weyl Baking Co. v. J. S. Ivins' Son, Inc., 7 F. Supp. 211, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1594 (E.D. Pa. 1934).

Opinion

KIRKPATRICK, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity based upon alleged trade-mark infringement and unfair competition.

Both the plaintiff and the defendant are manufacturers of crackers, biscuits, cookies, and similar products, and both have their offices and plants in Philadelphia. Since a date prior to 1930-, the plaintiff has been selling its products in Eastern Pennsylvania (including Harrisburg), New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, and Florida and the de *212 fendant has competed with it in that territory or at least in a considerable part of it.

In the latter part of 1930', the plaintiff developed a new type of soda cracker, deeply scored, so that it conld be broken into halves of a convenient shape, and of slightly stronger texture than the ordinary kind, so that it could be spread with jam, cheese, and butter without breaking it. It is a good product, attractive, but not particularly unique or strikingly novel. For it the plaintiff adopted the name “Club Cracker.”

The defendant’s infringement of the trade-mark may be taken as conceded. It uses the name “Club Cracker,” sells a product which is practically identical with the plaintiff’s, and sells it in the same territory.

The plaintiff’s trade-mark is not registered but the right arises from adoption and user as follows:

(a) Beginning December 11, 1930, the plaintiff sold the cracker in bulk in marked containers — at first in fourteen ounce tin cans or pails painted bright green with the words “Club Crackers” in white in large letters upon the can, and later in eight to ten-pound drums marked with a label upon which the words were printed. On January 30, 1932, the plaintiff began to sell it also in paste-board cartons having a distinctive design in two shades of green and yellow and prominently marked with the words “Club Crackers.”

(b) The plaintiff advertised the cracker, featuring the name and a picture of the pail, from January 27 to February 13, 1931, in Philadelphia and Florida. From January 14, 1932, until the filing of the bill in June, 1933, and thereafter, the plaintiff advertised very extensively, featuring pictures of the new carton and the name, throughout its entire territory by newspaper advertisements, circulars, and billboards, spending in all more than $45,000 as follows: 1931 — $2,-000; 1932 — $26,000; 1933 — $17,000.

The plaintiff’s cracker “caught on” rapidly and has had a very satisfactory sales record.

The defendant’s ease consists of an attack upon the plaintiff’s right.

Three questions are involved:

I. Are the words “Club Crackers” susceptible of appropriation as a trademark?

• The defendant argues that they are not because they are descriptive and were never used by the plaintiff as a trade-mark, but solely as a grade mark to designate a particular kind or type of cracker.

I do not see how it can be seriously contended that the word “club” is descriptive. It tells you nothing about any special characteristic of the product. It is, no doubt, remotely suggestive of excellence (upon the theory that better food is served in clubs than elsewhere) and possibly of exclusive clientele, but of nothing more. The crackers are not any more adapted to use or by clubs than they are at home, in hotels, restaurants, or dining cars or at picnics. They are not manufactured by clubs or exclusively for clubs, nor are they, so far as I know, indorsed or specially featured by clubs. There are many words, at least equally suggestive of quality which have been sustained as valid trade-marks. The word “club,” as a trademark for bottled cocktails, was sustained in Heublein v. Adams (C. C.) 125 F. 782, and, as a trade-mark for soda, by the British court of last resort in Cochrane v. MacNish & Son, App. Cas. 225 (1896). In Old Lexington Club Distillery Co. v. Kentucky Distilleries, etc., Co. (D. C.) 234 F. 464, the words “Old Lexington Club” as applied to whisky were held a valid trade-mark as against the objection that “Lexington” was geographical and “Club” descriptive of quality (there being no evidence of the latter fact). This case was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit at 247 F. 1005. The court below cited Thomas G. Carroll & Son Co. v. McIlvaine & Baldwin, Inc. (C. C.) 171 F. 125; Id. (C. C. A.) 183 F. 22 (“Maryland Club” for whisky).

But the defendant has a somewhat more specific objection. It is that, whether or riot the word is generic or descriptive generally, the plaintiff, in attaching it to a new type of cracker, used it in that sense. It is, of course, the law that a name, which is used solely to identify some particular type or grade of goods or to differentiate it from others of the same manufacturer, will not by such use become a trade-mark. Amoskeag Manufacturing Company v. Trainer, 101 U. S. 51, 25 L. Ed. 993. But it is equally well established that where the intention is to acquire a trade-mark, the mere fact that the name also serves to designate a particular kind, grade, or quality of article manufactured does not prevent the creation of a trade-mark right in it. Tillman & Bendel v. California Packing Corporation (C. C. A.) 63 F.(2d) 498, 504; Menendez v. Holt, 128 U. S. 514, 520, 521, 9 S. Ct. 143, 32 L. Ed. 526. The whole question depends upon the *213 user’s intention — not a private, undisclosed intention, of course, but an intention evidenced by what be does.

In tbe instant ease there was no use of the name by the plaintiff for its own convenience, prior to its taking steps to acquire it as a trade-mark, as there was in Norwine Coffee Company v. Chase & Sanborn (Cust. & Pat. App.) 58 F.(2d) 430, Autoline Oil Company v. Indian Refining Company (D. C.) 3 F.(2d) 457, and other cases holding fihat the mark was merely a grade mark. The plaintiff here had developed a new product. Naturally, the name served to distinguish it from its other products both for its own convenience and for its public sale; but the name was immediately advertised and advanced as a trade-mark with the indisputable intention of acquiring it as such. Whatever use it had as a grade mark was merely incidental.

II. Was the plaintiff the first appropriator of the word?

In dealing with this question it is necessary to have in mind the territory involved. Questions of priority of appropriation ara predicated on territorial limits. Hanover Star Milling Company v. Metcalf, 240 U. S. 403, 36 S. Ct. 357, 60 L. Ed. 713; United Drug Company v. Theodore Rectanus Company, 248 U. S. 90, 39 S. Ct. 48, 63 L. Ed. 141; Tillman & Bendel v. California Packing Company, supra. And in Jacobs v. Iodent Chemical Company, 41 F.(2d) 637, the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit held that these territorial limits were not necessarily state boundaries but were fixed by the actual field occupied.

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. Supp. 211, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keebler-weyl-baking-co-v-j-s-ivins-son-inc-paed-1934.