Lawrence v. P. E. Sharpless Co.

203 F. 762, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1773
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 17, 1913
DocketNo. 637
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 203 F. 762 (Lawrence v. P. E. Sharpless Co.) 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
Lawrence v. P. E. Sharpless Co., 203 F. 762, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1773 (E.D. Pa. 1913).

Opinion

THOMPSON, District Judge.

The complainants are in the business of making' and selling domestic Neufchátel cheese at Chester, Orange county. N. Y., where the business was established in August,-1862, by William A. Lawrence, who was the first person to make and, as late as 1875, was the only manufacturer of Neufchátel cheese in this country. The Neufchátel cheese made and sold in the business conducted by the complainants and their predecessors has had and has a favorable reputation, and has been and is widely sold in the state of New York and other states. In the year 1877 William A. Lawrence adopted as a trade-mark for Neufchátel and cream cheese the figure of a cow, side. view. On January 18, 1881, this label was registered in the United States Patent Office as a trade-mark, concerning which it was declared:.

"The essential feature of which is the arbitrarily selected figure of a cow,” and “the class of merchandise to which the trade-mark is appropriated is cheese, and the particular goods upon which I use my said trade-mark are Neufchátel packages of cheese put up in one-quarter of a pound rolls and twenty-live and fifty rolls in a box. T have been accustomed to print or stencil it in black ink upon the outside of each box in which said cheese is packed for transportation.”

During the early use of the trade-mark it was_, as stated in the application for registration, stenciled upon the outside of the box which contained the individual cheeses, wrapped in paper. About 1895 William A. Lawrence adopted as a package for his cheese a tin-foil wrapper, upon which was printed in blue ink in the center of a rectangular border the figure of a cow, with the word “Neufchátel” at the top, the word “trade-mark” and the words “Cream Cheese, Extra Quality,” below. On January 26, 1904, this design was registered as a trade-mark for Neufchátel cheese, and the statement set out:

•‘My trade-mark consists of the arbitrarily selected figure of a cow. This trade-mark lias been continuously used in my business since August, 1877. The class of merchandise to which this trade-mark is appropriated is dairy producís, and the particular description of goods comprised in such class upon which I use the said trade-mark is Neufchátel cheese. The trade-mark is usually produced directly upon ilie tin foil or wrappers for the cheese and is likewise produced directly in or upon the boxes or other receptacles containing a number of packages.”

On March 27, 1906, the design was again registered as a trademark by the firm of W. A. Lawrence & Son, the complainants, with the same description in the statement as in the registration of 1904. Since 1907 the complainants have used as a label upon their goods, printed in blue ink on a tin-foil wrapper, the same figure of a cow in a rectangular border, with the words “Reg. U. S.” on one side, “Pat. Oil.” on the other, above the figure the words “Cow Brand,” “Domestic,” and below the figure the words, “Neufchátel Cheese, Made in State of New York,” and they have used the latter label continuously since that date.

[764]*764■ The defendant and its predecessors have been engaged in the business of conducting a dairy for the production and sale of butter, cheese, and other dairy products since 1838, and during that time have used as a print upon their butter the figure of a cow (side view) surrounded by a circle, the words “P. E. Sharpless” in circular form above,, and a design of leaves above and grass below the figure of the cow. In 1907 the defendant, which had been for several years making and selling a domestic Neufchátel cheese, adopted as a label, printed in blue ink upon tin-foil wrappers, in which its cheese was packed, the figure of a cow in the center of a rectangular border in the same position as that upon the complainants’ label, with the words “Trade-mark” below it, “Neufchátel Cheese, P. E. Sharpless Co., Philadelphia, Pa.,” above, to the left, “Absolutely Pure,” to the right, “Eresh Daily,” below “Main Office, Philadelphia, Pa.” Subsequently the defendant adopted a label in the same shape, and printed in the same color of ink upon its tin-foil packages, with the following changes: Above the figure of the cow the words “P. E. Sharpless Co. Cheese.” To the left the words “Made Daily,” to the right, “At Concordville, Pa.,” and below the words “Neufchátel Style.” The Neufchátel cheese sold by the defendant with these labels has entered 'into competition with that sold by the complainants. The defendant justifies its use of the label by its prior and' continuous use of the figure of a cow impressed upon its molds of butter, and upon the ground that the complainants’ design is not a valid trade-mark for cheese, because the figure of a cow had been used by other manufacturers of cheese and manufacturers of butter and other dairy products before the complainants began its use, and that its use by the complainants has not been exclusive; as the figure of a cow had been used for cheese and other dairy products during the time the complainants claim to have been entitled to its use as a trade-mark.

[1] .The use of the figure of the cow upon the defendant’s prints of butter prior to its use by complainants for cheese would not, in my opinion, invalidate the complainants’ trade-mark, if the figure of a cow is a valid trade-mark for cheese or butter. While butter and cheese are both dairy products, they are in such distinctly different classes that neither can be said in any sense to enter into competition with the other.' Similar trade-marks put upon cheese as a product of one party could by no possibility deceive the purchaser intending to buy the butter of the other party, and vice versa. The defendant does not claim to have used its trade-mark of the side figure of a cow upon packages of cheese until after it had been for nearly 30 years in constant use on cheese by the complainants, and there is no proof that it was used by the defendant on cheese in such a manner as to give it any right thereto prior to the registration of the complainants’ trademark in 1906. There was some evidence that more than 50 years ago the defendant’s predecessor had impressed upon his molds of cottage cheese the same figure of a cow which he used upon his butter. There is no evidence of its continued use; and if continuous use in that manner would have constituted prior appropriation by the defendant the evidence is conclusive that it was abandoned many years before [765]*7651877, when the complainants first began to use it in stencil form upon their boxes containing packages of Neufchátel and cream cheese. It continued to be used by the defendant exclusively _ as a print upon, butter during tlie uninterrupted use by the complainants for nearly 30 years of their trade-mark upon cheese. The fact that the defendant was a maker and dealer in dairy products in general would not entitle it to appropriation of its trade-mark for butter to the whole field of dairy products, nor give it the right, as against its prior use upon cheese, to adopt it as a trade-mark for cheese. The defendant, in support of its claims of the use of the trade-mark prior to that of the complainants, has offered in evidence a trade-mark certificate showing a registration on October 10, 1882, by Mende Bros., of a trade-mark' for cheese. The trade-mark in question is described as follows in the statement in the application for registration:

“Our trade-mark consists of a pictorial representation of a cow.” “Tlie essential feature ® * * is the pictorial representation of a cow. This trade-mark we have used continuously in our business for sixteen years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
203 F. 762, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-p-e-sharpless-co-paed-1913.