Krieger v. Colby

106 F. Supp. 124, 95 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 4, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3963
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedJune 19, 1952
Docket13202
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 106 F. Supp. 124 (Krieger v. Colby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krieger v. Colby, 106 F. Supp. 124, 95 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 4, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3963 (S.D. Cal. 1952).

Opinion

WESTOVER, District Judge.

The defendant Maurice Colby does business in his own name and under fictitious names. He is the owner and operator of J. J. MacIntyre Sporting Goods Company and of Hollywood Athletic Company.

Defendant Colby’s daughter married Eugene Roberts. Eugene 'Roberts and his wife organized Fluorescent Fabrics, Inc., of which corporation Eugene Roberts is president. It appears, however, that this *126 was a corporation in name only, as no meetings were held subsequent to the organization meeting, and no stock was issued. Roberts operated the corporation as his own business under the name of Fluorescent Fabrics, Inc., and so far as the record shows he made all decisions without consulting any supposed stockholder or corporation officer.

The defendants, Maurice Colby, jj. J-MacIntyre Sporting Goods Company, Hollywood Athletic Company and Fluorescent Fabrics, Inc., had and maintained their offices in the same office .building, on the same floor, and in the same area. Other than names appearing on the door, there was little to indicate, to one entering the space occupied by the defendants, where the quarters of one company ended and the premises of another began. There are no private offices. Defendant Colby testified that he did not have a private office and did not even have a desk. However, he had a table and used every desk or any desk he wanted to for his activities.

Plaintiff Rose Krieger designed a cap which, to a considerable degree, resembled a rabbit’s head and face. She filed application for a design patent on what she termed a “Hep Cap.” The patent was subsequently granted to her. D-16Z-965. She had a number of the caps made as samples and employed one, Oscar Schumann, to contact the trade relative to sale, and distribution of the cap.

Schumann called upon defendant Colby and talked with him about the cap. The conversation took place in the space occupied by the premises of Colby, J. J. Mac-Intyre Sporting Goods Company, Hollywood Athletic Company and Fluorescent Fabrics, Inc. Schumann’s conversation was with Colby individually. Pie left several of the caps with Colby as samples.

Subsequent to Schumann’s visit, one of the caps came into the possession of Eugene Roberts. Colby denies that he turned the cap over to Roberts but suggests that Roberts might have picked up one of the caps or may have seen one of them lying around Colby’s place of business. Colby also denies that he suggested to Roberts that they take on the manufacture and sale of the caps.

After this action was filed Colby’s deposition was taken, in which he admits that he called Universal Pictures to ascertain whether or not they could obtain the right to use the word “Harvey” on a cap. He was informed that permission would have to be obtained from the agent of the writer of the play, “Harvey,” and that the agent was in New York; that the studio had no authority to give a license for the use of the name “Harvey.” At the time of trial Colby “could not remember” having made such a telephone call to the studio.

Subsequent to the telephone call Eugene Roberts “had to go to New York on other business.” While in New York he had a cap designed. He says that he did not take with him to New York one of plaintiff’s “Hep Caps” but that he described to a cap maker in New York how he wished a cap made and obtained samples thereof. In New York he contacted the agent of “Harvey” and obtained a license to use the word “Harvey,” for which license he paid the sum of $1,000. Also, while there he had certain labels printed, on which appeared the term “Harvey Cap.” The tags also had printed upon them “patented and copyrighted.”

When Eugene Roberts returned to Los Angeles he had caps made in accordance with the sample he had “designed” while in New York, which caps in all material respects were identical with plaintiff’s “Hep Cap” with the exception of a slight difference in the length of the ears and the manner in which the ears were inserted in the cap. Eugene Roberts or Fluorescent Fabrics, Inc. caused the caps to be manufactured, distributed and sold.

When plaintiff learned that defendants were manufacturing and selling a cap which was a duplicate of her design, she went to see the defendant Colby in his offices. She protested to Colby about the use of her design and accused him of infringing her patent. Plaintiff gives the following resume of her conversation with Colby:

“He says to me, ‘You know that there have been • many designs- made *127 and many copies.’ and he did do some copying from different designs and he was sued by many people and his brother is one of the biggest lawyers in Los Angeles * * *
"Q. (by Mr. Holland): This is what he told you? A. Yes; and he also told me that Gantner Swimming suit sued him and Mr. Colby won that case and he also showed us a tie that had the patent on it. and that was copied and he had just went ahead and did it because he knew that this was a beginner that designed that tie and that he will not — if he will come up to his office, then he will make some kind of arrangements but it will be under his terms, so the fellow did come up, the one that owned the design from that tie, and he said, ‘What are you going to do about it ?’ and so Mr. Colby said, ‘I will give you a penny — ’ I don’t remember whether it was a cent per tie or one percent on the sales.
* * * * * *
“And he also showed us some trunks from fluorescent material, that this was copied, too.
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“About my patent, he said that he flew to the East to get a permit from the one that wrote a story ‘Harvey’ and he is going to use that, that name, so I told him I didn’t care if he used that name ‘but you can not use my design.’1 So Mr. Colby said, ‘Do you have the patent? Did you bring it in?’ and I said ‘no’ so Mr. Colby said that he can check on patents very easily so I gave him the filing number of my patent and I said, ‘You can-go ahead and check’ and Mr. Colby marked, it down.
* * * * * *
“* * * I told Mr. Colby that I have 500 caps and he asked me where I got them from and I said, ‘From Ben Cap Company.’ and then he asked me how much did I pay and I told him, ‘$5.50 per dozen.’ and he even asked me whether I would sell them to him and so, anyway, I said, ‘No, because I don’t want to make any kind of a deal.’ * * * * * . *
“Well, Mr. Colby said that he will go ahead with that item and I can go ahead and do whatever I please.
“ * * * Mr. Colby said he is going to check whether I have a patent or I don’t have a patent and if I have a patent he is going to do something and possibly he will sign up with his terms and I don’t c.are to make any kind, sign up—
* * * * * *
“ * * * Mr. Colby said that he is going to continue with this cap like that because he has done things like that before and he will do it again and he knows beginners don’t have any money and so on, and he has been sued by big companies before and he won the case.”1

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Bluebook (online)
106 F. Supp. 124, 95 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 4, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krieger-v-colby-casd-1952.