Kilmer v. Dr. Kilmer & Co.

175 A.D. 670, 162 N.Y.S. 617, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9050

This text of 175 A.D. 670 (Kilmer v. Dr. Kilmer & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kilmer v. Dr. Kilmer & Co., 175 A.D. 670, 162 N.Y.S. 617, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9050 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Kellogg, P. J.:

By the judgment under review the defendant is restrained from opening certain mail intended for the plaintiff, and from using the name of the plaintiff in certain ways in its business. Prior to March 14, 1892, the plaintiff and his brother Jonas were partners in manufacturing, advertising and putting upon the market certain patent or proprietary medicines under the name of Dr. Kilmer & Co., the plaintiff being the doctor in the firm. On that day he sold to his brother his interest in the firm business and property, and the defendant has succeeded to the rights of the brother therein. The contract of sale, in describing the property sold, provides that it shall include “ all the trade-marks and copyrights, labels and wrappers, circulars and pamphlets of the now firm of ` Dr. Kilmer & Co.; ’ also the firm name `Dr. Kilmer & Co.,’ and the good will of said firm.” The contract, however, provided that the plaintiff as an individual is the owner of ```Dr. Kilmer’s Medicated Inhalation Compound,’ which consists of one bottle A. B., one bottle B. B., one package D. H. M., one Inhaler;” also of “ ‘ Infallible Treatment, ’ which consists of white positive drops, yellow negative drops, dry herbal compound, generative application.” Also “Cancer & Tumor Syrup, Cancer & Tumor Dissolvent, Cancer & Tumor Injection;” also “what is called Female Swelled Neck Cure,” all of which were advertised in the Invalid’s Guide to Health published by the firm and were to be published by its successor, who should continue [672]*672to prepare, advertise and put upon the market said articles, paying to the plaintiff twenty-five per cent of the amount received therefor. The plaintiff agreed not to engage in the sale or manufacture of any patent or proprietary medicine and not to permit the use of his name therein. It was also agreed, in the 8th subdivision, that the Invalid’s Guide to Health should be continued by Dr. Kilmer & Co., and was to contain a portrait of the plaintiff not smaller than the one then used, with the same printing matter under it, except it might be in larger type, and a cut of the plaintiff making an examination of the throat with the laryngoscope, together with the printed matter below the same in substantially the same manner as theretofore, and the paragraph then continued: “The balance of the matter that may be contained in the said future Guides, except as to the four classes of Private and Special Remedies of Dr. S. Andral Kilmer as aforesaid to be entirely at the discretion of Jonas M. Kilmer or his successors or rather Dr. Kilmer & Co., but not to contain the name of Dr. S. Andral Kilmer in any place therein where it does not now appear without the written consent of S. Andral Kilmer and to contain nothing injurious to any Sanitarium or Mineral Water in which the said S. Andral Kilmer may be interested. The said ‘ Invalid’s Guide to Health ’ shall hereafter be sent out with said medicines by said J. M. Kilmer or ‘Dr. Kilmer & Co.’ substantially as it has heretofore been done by said firm. ”

The plaintiff, as the contract shows, proposed to continue his private practice and to carry on one or more sanitariums and to sell mineral water. The contract also provided as to the distribution of the mail, but the parties had in mind that some confusion, on account of similarity of name, might arise in the future, and fixed with great definiteness the rights of the parties to mail thereafter received, and provided that in case the defendant received mail which was directed to or belonged to the plaintiff, it should deliver or mail it to him within twenty-four hours if the mail is important as to time and in thirty-six hours if not important as to time. Particular notice was given to the postmaster as to the manner in which mail should be delivered.

March 18, 1901, the parties made a supplemental agreement [673]*673modifying the former agreement between them. By it the plaintiff sold to the defendant the proprietary remedies which had been reserved to him by the former contract, and the agreement continues: “(2) Said S. Andral Kilmer hereby absolves and releases said Jonas M. Kilmer from all future obligation and liability or duty imposed upon or undertaken by said Jonas M. Kilmer under and pursuant to the provisions of the Eighth paragraph of said contract of March 14th’ 1892, except that no advertisement or publication printed or circulated by said Jonas M. Kilmer or said Dr. Kilmer & Co. shall contain anything injurious to any sanitarium or mineral water in which S. Andral Kilmer may be interested.”

The plaintiff, in carrying on the several sanitariums and mineral water business and his private practice, was receiving such mail at the Binghamton office, and for the last seven and one-half years the defendant has received, assorted, answered or attended to ■ on an average about 1,000 separate pieces of mail each day. Defendant’s mail is delivered to it by the post office authorities, and in the mail so delivered 165 letters have been received and opened by it, which it promptly turned over to the plaintiff pursuant to the contract, of which 36 were in fact addressed to the defendant. So that in seven and one-half years, while opening between two and three million pieces of mail delivered to it by the post office authorities, the defendant has erroneously opened 129 letters. There is an entire absence of any suggestion in the evidence that these letters were opened in bad faith or for any ulterior purpose, or that the defendant in handling or assorting the mail delivered to it has not exercised reasonable care to prevent mistakes. The evidence establishes the entire good faith of the defendant and that it has at all times been solicitous to live up to the agreement with reference to the mail and that any errors were unintentional mistakes and apparently were unavoidable in handling by various employees the great mass of mail the defendant receives. The mistakes as to this mail first occurred at the post office, and the error there, made the mistakes by the defendant possible if not probable. As we have stated, the contract definitely fixes the rights of the parties to all mail received, and the lists furnished the postmaster [674]*674make his duty plain. There never has been between the parties any dispute as to the right to any particular parcel of mail and none exists. The plaintiff cannot engage in the patent medicine business and his name cannot be employed in that business. The defendant is not in the sanitarium business, or in the mineral water business, and there is no reason why the defendant should seek to read the plaintiff’s mail. If an injunction had fixed the rights of the parties it could not make the plaintiff’s right to his mail more secure, and if some of his mail which the postmaster erroneously delivered to the defendant had been by innocent mistake opened by some of its' employees, contrary to its direction and intentions, no punishment could follow for such a technical violation. So that an injunction can do no possible good and adds nothing to the sanctity of the contract existing between the parties. It does, however, change and interferes with the contract existing between the parties, and is mischievous and of no practical value. It was, therefore, erroneously granted. It seems that the action, so far as it relates to the mail matter, was not brought to redress a wrong or to prevent a threatened wrong, but was evidently intended for some ulterior purpose. The same seems equally true as to the other matters complained of.

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Related

Dr. David Kennedy Corpn. v. . Kennedy
59 N.E. 133 (New York Court of Appeals, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 A.D. 670, 162 N.Y.S. 617, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9050, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kilmer-v-dr-kilmer-co-nyappdiv-1916.