Leidersdorf v. Flint

15 F. Cas. 260, 8 Biss. 327, 11 Chi. Leg. News 66, 24 Int. Rev. Rec. 373, 7 Cent. Law J. 405, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1912
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin
DecidedNovember 12, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 F. Cas. 260 (Leidersdorf v. Flint) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leidersdorf v. Flint, 15 F. Cas. 260, 8 Biss. 327, 11 Chi. Leg. News 66, 24 Int. Rev. Rec. 373, 7 Cent. Law J. 405, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1912 (circtedwi 1878).

Opinion

DYER. District Judge.

This is a bill for an injunction to restrain an alleged infringement by defendant of complainant’s trade mark, used upon packages of tobacco and registered according to act of congress. Both complainant and defendant are citizens of Wisconsin, and the bill is based upon that provision of section 4942, Rev. St., which gives to the party aggrieved by the wrongful use of his trade mark, a remedy by injunction, according to the course of equity', in any court having jurisdiction over the person guilty of such wrongful use, and is filed upon the theory that this court has jurisdiction to entertain such a bill, though both parties are citizens of the same state. The bill is demurred to, on the ground that the court has no jurisdiction, and the demurrer raises the question of the constitutional power of congress to legislate upon the subject of trade marks. The question is of great importance, and appears to be new, since, with the exception of Duwell v. Bohmer [Case No. 4,213], we were referred upon the argument to no reported case in which it has been determined.

The statutory provisions relating to trade marks are contained in title 60. Rev. St., which is entitled “Patents, Trade Marks and Copyrights.” They authorize the registration of trade marks, impose restrictions upon such registration, and confer certain remedies for the protection of the rights of parties who have complied with the requirements of the statute. The remedies thus given are mentioned in section 4.942. which provides that “any person who shall repro[261]*261duce, counterfeit, copy or imitate any recorded trade mark, and affix the same to goods of substantially the same descriptive properties and qualities as those referred to in the registration, shall be liable to an action on the case for damages for such wrongful use of such trade mark, at the suit of the owner thereof; and the party aggrieved shall also have his remedy, according to the course of equity, to enjoin the wrongful use of his trade mark, and to recover compensation therefor in any eourt having jurisdiction over the person guilty of such wrongful use.”

The only clause in the constitution from which it can be well claimed congress derives its power to legislate upon the subject is article 1, § 8, cl. 8, which authorizes congress “to promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times, to authors and inventors, the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries.” If the power in question is given by this clause of the constitution, then, inasmuch as by section 629, Rev. St., the circuit courts are invested with original jurisdiction of all suits at law or in equity arising under the patent or copyright laws of the United States, and in view of the act of congress of March 8, 1875 [18 Stat. 470], which confers jurisdiction in all civil causes arising under any law of the United States, where the amount in dispute exceeds $500, and of the provisions of section 4942, Rev. St., above referred to, there is ground for claiming that the courts of the United States have jurisdiction in suits which involve the right to trade marks without regard to the citizenship of parties.

But, in contending that the power to legislate upon the subject of trade marks is derived from the constitutional provision before cited, it must be necessarily assumed that the maker of a trade mark is an author or inventor, and that a trade mark is a writing or discovery within the meaning of that clause.

Argument can hardly be needed to demonstrate that a law regulating trade marks is not, in any just sense, a copyright law. The general meaning of the term copyright, is an author’s exclusive right of property in the work which he produces. It includes the right of the citizen who is an- author of any book or writing, any literary, dramatic or musical composition, any engraving, painting, drawing, map, chart or print, and of models or designs intended as works of art. It is something which appertains to authors who, by their writings and designs, promote the advancement of literature, science and the useful arts. An author, by standard definition is “one who produces, creates or brings into being; the beginner, former or first mover of anything; hence, the efficient cause of a thing. The term is appropriately applied to one who composes or writes a book” or writing, “and in a more general sense to one whose occupation is to compose and write books” or writings.

So, too, invention implies originality. Originality, not mere mechanical dexterity, is the test of invention. Blake v. Stafford [Case No. 1,504]. It is the “finding out, the contriving, the creating of something which did not exist, and was not known before, and which can be made useful and advantageous in the pursuits of life, or which can add to the enjoyments of mankind.” Conover v. Roach [Case No. 3,125]; Ransom v. Mayor of New York [Id. 11,573]. To entitle one to the character of an inventor, he must himself have conceived the idea embodied in his improvement. It must be the product of his own mind and genius. Pitts v. Hall [Id. 11,192].

The dissimilar characteristics of trade marks, and copyrights, and inventions for which patents may be granted, have been pointed out or illustrated in various adjudicated cases. A trade mark has been very well defined as one’s commercial signature to his goods. It may consist of a name, symbol, figure, letter, form or device, if adopted and used by a manufacturer or merchant in order to designate the goods he manufactures or sells, to distinguish the same from those manufactured or sold by another, so that the goods may be known in the market as his, and to enable him to secure such profits as result from his reputation for skill, industry and fidelity. McLean v. Fleming, 96 U. S. 245; Upton, Trade Marks, 9; Taylor v. Carpenter, 2 Sandf. Ch. 604.

The basis of a trade mark right is primarily the encouragement of trade. As the court, in discussing the subject, say in Partridge v. Menck, 2 Barb. Ch. 101, the question in such a case is not whether a person was the original inventor or proprietor of the article made by him and upon which he puts his trade mark, nor whether the article made and sold by another under his trade mark is an article of the same quality or value. But the court proceeds upon the ground, that the complainant has a valuable interest in the good will of his trade or business, and that having appropriated to himself a particular label or sign or trade mark, indicating that the article is manufactured or sold by him or by his authority, or that he carries on his business at a particular place, he is entitled to protection against any other person who pirates upon the good will of his customers or of the patrons of his trade or business, by sailing under his flag without his authority or consent.

The name, word, mark, device, or symbol constituting a trade mark may be devoid of novelty, originality, and of anything partaking of the nature of invention. As the supreme court say in Canal Co. v. Clark, 13 Wall. [80 U. S.] 322, “undoubtedly words or devices may be adopted as trade marks, which are not original inventions of him who adopts them. Property in a trade mark, or rather in the use of a trade mark or name, has very little [262]*262analogy to that which exists in copyrights, or in patents for inventions. Words in common use, with some exceptions, may be adopted, if at the time of their adoption, they were not employed to designate the same, or like articles of production.” So in McLean v.

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 260, 8 Biss. 327, 11 Chi. Leg. News 66, 24 Int. Rev. Rec. 373, 7 Cent. Law J. 405, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leidersdorf-v-flint-circtedwi-1878.