Lerner Stores Corporation v. Lerner

162 F.2d 160, 73 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 524, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3835
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 6, 1947
Docket11347
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 162 F.2d 160 (Lerner Stores Corporation v. Lerner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lerner Stores Corporation v. Lerner, 162 F.2d 160, 73 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 524, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3835 (9th Cir. 1947).

Opinion

ORR, Circuit Judge.

Appellant seeks to enjoin appellee from using the name “Lerner” in ihe title of his store in San Jose, alleging that by such use of said name appellee is indulging in unfair competition.

Appellant, at the time of the commencement of this action, was operating 181 stores located in 41 states and the District of Columbia. Each store is designated as “Lerner Shops” by a sign extending across the front, and printed on price tags, boxes, hags and sales slips. The stores are not advertised in newspapers, magazines, or over the radio. The historical background of appellant, as disclosed by the evidence, may be summarized as establishing that its business is profitable, has expanded from city to city and is confirming so to expand.

The evidence tends to establish that it is appellant’s practice to open new stores in populous cities, followed by stores in surrounding communities. Appellant operates two stores in San Francisco and one in Oakland. It had taken a lease on certain property in San Jose with the intention of erecting a store building thereon but was prevented from so doing by war conditions. However, appellant does plan to erect a new building and open a store as soon as building restrictions will permit.

Mr. Magee, a vice-president of appellant Company, testified that communities such as San Jose arc within the trading area of San Francisco and that the appellant Company had built up a nucleus of business in San Jose and surrounding communities which justified the opening of a new store in that city. His conclusion was based upon a purported 263 exchange and refund transactions during an eight month period with persons residing in the so-called San Francisco peninsula area which extends from San Mateo to and including San Jose. These exchange transactions constitute from 6 to 7 per cent of the total. Thirteen of the patrons who made exchanges were from San Jose from which appellant deduces that its Market Street store has about 324 transactions per year with residents of San Jose.

Appellee, Wilfred A. Lerner, during May 1944, ran a series of advertisements in the morning and evening newspapers of San Jose advising that he was opening a store to be known as “Lcrner’s”, and after the store had been in operation for approximately one week appellee ran an advertisement in the same papers expressing appreciation for the acceptance of the new store and closed the advertisement with the words, “as always — Lerner’s”. This was appellee’s first venture in the sale of feminine v/earing apparel at retail and his first business to be established in San Jose.

Approximately six weeks after appellee, opened his store appellant wrote him a letter protesting his use of the name “Lerner’s” and appellee immediately set about making additions to the name so as to avoid confusion in the minds of the customers. Appellee used a continuous script type for his advertising and store front modeled on *162 his own handwriting, which style of lettering differed in every material respect from the arrangement, lettering and text of appellant’s store front, and the advertising used by appellee was so arranged as to convey to the public the information that he dealt in merchandise of a generally higher quality and price than “Lerner Shops”. Appellee also dropped the apostrophe S (’s), added his given name “Wilfred” and the words “Home Owned”.

The underlying questions are: Did the use of the name “Lerner”, by appellee, lead the public to understand that his goods were the goods of appellant “Lerner Shops” ?

Was “Lerner Shops” already established in San Jose in the sense that it had a substantial nucleus of business there? If so, was its established business of such volume that appellee could reasonably be said to have understood that confusion would result and that he intended to profit thereby, and did appellee’s business actually encroach upon that of appellant? Further, were the precautions taken by appellee sufficient to prevent any such confusion or mistake? 1

The trial court found against appellant on each of these controlling questions. Unless the findings of the trial court are clearly erroneous, we are required to affirm the judgment notwithstanding contrary evidence appears but was not adopted by the trial court. We do not understand appellant to dispute this settled principle but, on the contrary, to complain that the court failed to consider evidence free of conflict, a consideration of which would have compelled different findings and a judgment in appellant’s favor.

The situation as it existed subsequent to the time appellee made the changes ir< -the name of his store is controlling; that is, subsequent to the time appellee added his given name, “Wilfred", and the words “Home Owned”, because that is the sole condition against which injunctive relief could operate. Appellant discounts the value, if any, of the said changes.

First: Appellant complains of the failure to find, (1) that its stores are known and referred to as “Lerner’s”; (2) that appellant had established a valuable reputation and good will; (3) that appellant had established a valuable nucleus of trade with residents of San Jose and adjacent communities ; and (4) that it was only the intervention of the war which postponed the necessary construction to enable appellant to open its San Jose store. 2

As to (1) and (2) the findings made by the court are sufficiently comprehensive to encompass the entire case and reflect the evidence on all material matters. The court found that appellee was the first in the field in San Jose and that no ordinarily observant person would confuse the two stores. This finding renders immaterial the specific findings requested by appellant relative to the manner in which its stores were referred to and the reputation it sustained. 3

The uncontradicted evidence which appellant offered in support' of these requested specific findings seems so weak and inconclusive that the trial court was justified in ignoring it. This evidence consisted of a survey in the course of which interviewers stopped people in front of one of appellant’s stores in San Francisco and asked them in what manner they spoke of “Lerner Shops”. Obviously the results of such a survey are of little value in determining what knowledge residents of San Jose had of “Lerner Shops” and of how they spoke of such shops, if at all. Such evidence certainly does not reflect any familiarity by San Jose residents with the character of goods carried or prices charged in said, “Lerner Shops”. This evidence could not support a finding that residents of San Jose referred to appellant as “Lerner’s”.

As to (3), the manner in which appellant arrived at its conclusion as to the amount of business transacted by it with the resi *163 dents of San Jose has heretofore been referred to.

That evidence fails to establish that a substantial number of people come from San Jose to San Francisco for the specific purposes of shopping at appellant’s stores.

In order to strengthen its contention as to the business it transacted in San Jose appellant introduced evidence of business transactions with residents of Palo Alto, San Mateo and Burlingame.

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Bluebook (online)
162 F.2d 160, 73 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 524, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lerner-stores-corporation-v-lerner-ca9-1947.