Krem-Ko Co. v. R. G. Miller & Sons, Inc.

68 F.2d 872, 21 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 96, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 5007
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 15, 1934
Docket21
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 68 F.2d 872 (Krem-Ko Co. v. R. G. Miller & Sons, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krem-Ko Co. v. R. G. Miller & Sons, Inc., 68 F.2d 872, 21 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 96, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 5007 (2d Cir. 1934).

Opinion

CHASE, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff makes a chocolate syrup v hieh is mixed with milk to make a chocolate drink called Krim-Ko. It has distributors who are allotted certain territory within which they provide dealers with Krim-Ko to sell to the public. The drink when ready for sale' by the distributors is placed by them in a wide-mouthed transparent glass bottle which is the subject of United States Design Patent No. 79,925, granted to the plaintiff on No'vember 19, 1929, as the assignor of George P. Gallagher who was its president. All Krim-Ko has since been 'distributed in the bottle of this patent. Though the plaintiff has another chocolate drink called “Five-O” which is made to sell at five cents a bottle, we are here concerned only with Krim-Ko which is made of a better grade of milk and is to be sold to the public at 10 cents a bottle. It requires a higher percentage of butter fat in the milk used and contains ingredients which make it unable to compete in price with a 5-eent chocolate drink.

The defendant, was the exclusive distributor for the plaintiff of Krim-Ko in the states of Rhode Island and Connecticut and the county of Hampden, in Massachusetts, from September 10, 1927, to September 30, 1931. It made and sold large quantities of Krim-Ko within its territory during this time, but in 1931 found that its business was decreasing, owing to competition from manufacturers of chocolate drinks which were sold to the public at 5 cents a bottle. It made known to the plaintiff its desire to terminate its connection as distributor and the agreement of Sep *873 tember 10, 1927, under which it became the plaintiff’s distributor was canceled by an agreement to that effect, dated September 30, 1931. On the latter date, the defendant had on hand about $20,000 worth of Kriin-Ko bottles which it had purchased to use as the distributor for the plaintiff. Nothing was said in the written agreement of September 30, 1931, in regard to the disposition to be made of these bottles. The plaintiff, however, orally offered to use its best efforts to enable'the defendant to dispose of them. So far as appears, however, nothing came of this offer.

Soon after the defendant ceased to be the plaintiff’s distributor it began to make and sell a chocolate drink called “Chocolate Highball” and one called “Dairo.” Both sold at retail for 5 cents a bottle and both were put in the Krim-Ko bottles the defendant had on hand. The only change in the container was the grinding off of the word “Krim-Ko” which appeared in a triangle on the faee of the bottle and the use of caps of a different color and inscription with which to seal the bottles. This conduct of the defendant led to the bringing of this action.

The design patent of the plaintiff covers a bottle, or similar article, in the general shape of the well known glass milk bottle. It is, however, proportionately somewhat longer; has vertical flutes which run from the bottom well up beyond the point where the bottle is narrowed to form the neck and end evenly just below a protruding flange which encircles the neck a short distance below the lip which is designed to hold the crimp of a cap in the form of a crown seal. Upon the faee of the bottle is an equilateral triangle having the apexes of its angles slightly rounded. It is placed with one of its sides parallel to the plane of the bottom of the bottle and above the apex of the opposite angle which was placed at a point a little more than half way from the top to the bottom of the bottle. Taken separately all of the elements of the bottle are old. But that alone dees not invalidate the design patent. Graff, Washbourne & Dunn v. Webster (C. C. A.) 195 F. 522. That there is but a simple grouping of these old elements does not negative invention either for simplicity may be tiro height of art. Of necessity, the lack of definite standards of comparison makes it difficult to characterize the inventive features necessary to a valid design patent (accept in terms of broad generalization. There must be originality which is born of the inventive faculty. Smith v. Whitman Saddle Co., 148 U. S. 678, 13 S. Ct. 768, 37 L. Ed. 606. Certainly the completed whole must rise above the commonplace. Strause Gas Iron Co. v. Wm. M. Crane Co. (C. C. A.) 235 F. 126. There must he more than mere meahanical skill. Steffens v. Steiner (C. C. A.) 232 F. 862. If it can fairly he thought that a routine designer of the ordinary knowledge and experience of a good workman at his trade would, in all likelihood, put together such a grouping of old elements just as a part of the usual work of the day whenever the desire so to do was present there is no invention; and that is the situation here.

Mr. Gallagher consulted with some of the employees of a glass company which manufactured bottles; gave them several bottles which had some of the features he desired to have embodied in the bottle he wanted made; told them generally what kind of a bottle he wanted; and the glass company then made up a wooden model for him to see. It later provided him wifh a drawing which showed the design he patented. All this seeins to ho no more than what a man, who wanted to have bottles made for a particular use by his company, would be apt to do in ordering the bottles of a manufacturer. At least, he made no nearer approach to inventive genius than wonld appear to be possessed by any competent business man who desired to have a bottle made in which to sell his company’s product to the public and was willing to take the time and trouble to have a few old features embodied in it.

The part of the plaintiff’s case which is grounded on the claim of unfair competition is not, of course, defeated by the holding that its design patent is invalid. During the time it was the plaintiff’s distributor in the territory mentioned, the defendant was active in disposing of Krim-Ko. It sold 18,216 cases in 1929, 31,349 cases in 1930, and 12,036 eases in 1931 up to the time its contract was canceled. It spent about $10,000 in advertising the product and featured the Krim-Ko bottle already described. But there is no finding and no sufficient evidence to warrant one that chocolate milk drinks and Krim-Ko were associated in the mind of the public in this territory as one. On the contrary, there were about a dozen other chocolate milk drinks in this territory selling under other distinctive trade-names and Krim-Ko was steadily losing ground in competition with them before the defendant took the field with its own products. The ■ record shows this loss of trade in Krim-Ko was not confined to the defendant’s territory but was *874 general and was due to its inability to compete with the cheaper chocolate milk drinks. Some of these cheaper drinks were sold in bottles slightly smaller than the standard Krim-Ko bottle. By using the Krim-Ko bottles it had on hand, the defendant had to sell more of its product per bottle than some competitors did but whether or not that would bring about sufficiently increased sales to offset any theoretical loss per sale does not appear. At any rate, the opportunity to use a $20,000 stock of bottles which would otherwise keep that amount of capital tied up, perhaps indefinitely, was at least a plausible excuse for putting out the new drinks in the old bottles and ample to justify the conclusion of the trial judge that the defendant was moved to do it for that purpose rather than by any fraudulent motive to palm its drinks off as Krim-Ko.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 F.2d 872, 21 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 96, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 5007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krem-ko-co-v-r-g-miller-sons-inc-ca2-1934.