L. Martin Co. v. L. Martin & Wilckes Co.

71 A. 409, 75 N.J. Eq. 39, 5 Buchanan 39, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 13
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 13, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 71 A. 409 (L. Martin Co. v. L. Martin & Wilckes Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
L. Martin Co. v. L. Martin & Wilckes Co., 71 A. 409, 75 N.J. Eq. 39, 5 Buchanan 39, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 13 (N.J. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Stevenson, Y. C.

The evidence in this 'case which is very voluminous, in my judgment establishes a plain case of fraud, and an equally plain violation cf the complainant’s rights in respect of its corporate name vested in it by virtue of the provisions of the eighth section of the Corporation act. P. L. 1896 p. 280 § 8. An appeal having been taken from the decree of this court a statement of the "reasons’’ therefor becomes necessary.

Inasmuch, however, as fee complainant’s right to injunctive relief, which manifestly was the principal relief for which its [41]*41bill was filed, has become an academic question by reason of the abandonment by the defendant of its corporate name, and the substitution of a corporate name which seems to distinguish it and its business from the complainant and the complainant’s business, suGh statement peed not be so extensive as otherwise might be deemed necessary. Apart from the question of costs, however, the issue still in litigation between the parties seems to relate solely to the liability of the defendant to account for the damages or diversion of profits which the decree adjudges that the complainant suffered as the result of the defendant’s wrong. Of course, the defendant is not liable to account for profits or to pay damages to the complainant unless the defendant’s conduct which caused such loss was fraudulent or otherwise illegal. The appeal, therefore, necessarily involves the review of the main issue decided by this court in favor of the complainant establishing the complainant’s right to injunctive relief. Nevertheless, in view of the enormous mass of testimony, including exhibits, the probative force of which sometimes can only be determined when presented to the eye, I shall not enter upon an elaborate discussion of the evidence; an outline of the facts will, I think, be sufficient for the purposes of this statement.

On the 10th day of January, 1906, the complainant, The L. Martin Company, and the defendant corporation, then bearing the corporate name of Weglin & Wilckes Manufacturing Company, were two corporations created under the General Corporation act of New Jersey, and actively and competitively engaged in the manufacture and sale of lampblack throughout the United' States. Both parties were large manufacturers and dealers in an article (lampblack) proved to be used in large quantities and in a very great variety of businesses. A large portion of the output of each concern is sold in bulk without any special label other than perhaps a brand on the bag. This branch of the trade seems to be carried on directly between the lampblack manufacturer and certain classes of large dealers who buy without regard to any special label, and who do not seem to be liable to make any mistake as to the identity of the manufacturer whose goods they buy. Another large portion of the product is put [42]*42into a great variety of packages of various sizes under different brands and labels, upon which packages the name of the manufacturer is printed, and is distributed widely throughout the country and sold for a great variety of purposes.

It appears that from the year 1849 the historic name Luther Martin has been intimately associated with the lampblack business. From that date continuously until the present time the Luther Martins—three of them, father, son and grandson—have been widely known as lampblack manufacturers, under the name of L. Martin & Company, which name has been printed and stamped upon packages of lampblack offered for sale at retail in the market. Although the American manufacturers of lampblack were to a large extent enumerated and described in the testimony, I do not recall that the name “Martin” appeared in any form in connection with any one of them besides the parties to this suit.

In 1886 the original Luther Martin died and his two sons, who were then his partners, and one of whom bore his name, continued the family lampblack business using the same firm name, L. Martin & Company. In 1900. Luther and Robert W. Martin, these two sons, who. were still carrying on the lampblack business under the firm name of L. Martin & Co., entered into a consolidation agreement with the Ebony Lampblack Company in pursuance of which the complainant corporation, The L. Martin Company, was created, and succeeded to the business and good will of both the constituent manufacturing concerns so consolidated. The complainant is thus the direct successor to the original firm of L. Martin & Company founded in 1849, and owns the good will of this old established Martin lampblack business.

The defendant, the L. Martin & Wilckes Company, was incorporated under our general act on the 14th day of March, 1901, by a number of German lampblack manufacturers whose names were Weglin or Wilckes. The name of the corporation as set forth in its certificate and with which it began to do apparently a large and successful business, was The Weglin & Wilckes Black Manufacturing Company. The prior history of the business of this company, which extended back, as I recall [43]*43the testimony, for a brief period, need not be.set forth. The Weglin and Wilekes concern soon after its incorporation became large manufacturers of lampblack in this country and sharp competitors of the complainant.

One fact is of great importance, I think, in getting a clear view of the situation of these two rival lampblack manufacturers in January, 1906. By that time the Martin family had to a large extent transferred their interest in The L. Martin Company to the original proprietors of the Ebony Lampblack Company or other persons. In February, .1905, Luther Martin, 3d, a young man about thirty-two years of age, after some jrears of employment in The L. Martin Company and service as a director, resigned as a director and quit his employment, and after apparently a faint effort to establish some sort of a lampblack business of his own, negotiated a contract of employment with the defendant corporation, The Weglin & Wilekes Black Manufacturing Company. The written contract of employment which was produced in evidence, bears date March 10th, 1904, and in it Luther Martin, 3d, is described as Luther Martin, and he signs his name in that way. According to the terms of this contract he was employed as manager in the manufacturing department and as salesman of the goods of the defendant -corporation “for a period of five years, commencing March 15th, 1904, and terminating March 15th, 1909, at a salary of $1,800 per annum, payable in equal weekly instalments.” Toung Mr. Martin expressly agrees to give his entire time, skill, &c., to the business of his employer, and agrees specially that he will manufacture and turn out black of the strength, color and fineness equal to the best black manufactured by any -other manufacturer “and fully equal in all other respects and in all qualities to the black now produced by the The L. Martin Company,” and he further agrees that said black shall be pure, straight lampblack, and that he will instruct the president of the party of the first part in methods of making the same. The contract further provided for setting aside for Mr. Martin $6,000 of the capital stock of the defendant, and that upon his faithfully carrying out the contract on his part such stock should be transferred to him at the end of the above-mentioned term of five years. Any [44]*44violation of the contract by- Mr. Martin effected a forfeiture of his right to the stock. The dividends on the stock were payable to Mr. Martin and were guaranteed not to be less than $350 per annum. In the event of Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 A. 409, 75 N.J. Eq. 39, 5 Buchanan 39, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-martin-co-v-l-martin-wilckes-co-njch-1908.