Liberty Oil Corp. v. Crowley, Milner & Co.

258 N.W. 241, 270 Mich. 187, 96 A.L.R. 645, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 669
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1935
DocketDocket No. 111, Calendar No. 38,058.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 258 N.W. 241 (Liberty Oil Corp. v. Crowley, Milner & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liberty Oil Corp. v. Crowley, Milner & Co., 258 N.W. 241, 270 Mich. 187, 96 A.L.R. 645, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 669 (Mich. 1935).

Opinion

Nelson Sharpe, J.

The plaintiff corporation was organized in 1918 by Emil Mettetal. He and his wife had all of the stock therein except one share held by his attorney, John P. Jordan. Its purpose was to engage in the sale of lubricating oils. It adopted the trade-mark “Liberty oils and greases,” with a representation of the statue of liberty placed thereon. The sales, with a few exceptions, were made in the counties north of Wayne, usually spoken of as “the thumb,” and on the personal solicitation of Mettetal. It did no refining. Orders were sent in to a number of different refining companies and shipments made direct to the customers in containers bearing plaintiff’s trade-mark.

The defendant is one of the large department stores in the city of Detroit. Some of its departments are conducted by parties having no interest in the corporation, under leasing arrangements therefor. Automobile accessories, which included lubricating oil, were handled by the Sterne-Jay Cor *189 poration of New York City. In February, 1931, a carload, consisting of 1,410 five-gallon cans of oil, bearing the brand or trade-mark “Liberty motor oil,” with a representation of the statue of liberty appearing thereon, was shipped by the Eadbill Oil Company of Philadelphia, on the order of the Sterne-Jay Corporation to the defendant’s store at Detroit. It was advertised by defendant and sales thereof made from its store. Neither the defendant nor the Sterne-Jay Corporation had any knowledge at that time that plaintiff was engaged in the sale of Liberty oils.

Mettetal testified that some customers called his attention to sales made by the defendant at a less price than that for which his corporation was selling it, and that he went to the store and purchased a can for himself. On May 16, 1931, plaintiff’s attorney wrote defendant that its action in simulating plaintiff’s trade-mark on its containers afforded ground for a suit for an injunction and damages, and suggested a possible adjustment of the matter. Defendant answered that it had no intention of infringing on any trade-name and that it would at once take up the matter with the people from whom it purchased its' oils. It referred the matter to the Eadbill Oil Company. Correspondence relative thereto was had between the attorney for this company and plaintiff’s attorney and an offer of settlement made, which was rejected.

On August 16, 1932, the plaintiff filed the bill of complaint herein, alleging that defendant had been, and was then, infringing its trade-name and trademark in the sale of oils to its great damage and loss, and prayed for an injunction to enjoin it from doing so and for a decree for the damages it had sustained thereby. Defendant’s answer contained a *190 denial of many of the allegations in the hill and of plaintiff’s right to the relief prayed for.

After the submission of proofs, the trial court found that plaintiff had a “prior right to the use of the word ‘Liberty’ and the ‘Statue of Liberty,’ in this locality, in connection with lubricating oil.” He found difficulty in assessing the damages, but finally fixed them at $750, and entered a decree therefor, and in it enjoined the defendant from selling or offering for sale any lubricating oil bearing such trade-mark, as prayed for in the bill of complaint. The defendant has appealed therefrom, and the plaintiff by cross-appeal insists that the award of damages to it should be increased to $9,250.

The defendant contends:

“1. No injunction should issue.

“2. Plaintiff is not entitled to damages or profits. “3. Plaintiff is guilty of laches.”

There has been much litigation in this country over the right of a party to be protected in the use of a trade-mark. The subject is considered and discussed in 63 C. J., p. 300 et seq., 26 R. C. L., p. 826 et seq., and Nims on Unfair Competition and TradeMarks (3d Ed.), and the decisions of the courts are reviewed at some length therein.

The plaintiff had adopted and used its trade-mark for a number of years on the containers in which its oil was sold. There can be no question under the proofs submitted that the resemblance between it and that used by the defendant on its containers was so marked that purchasers from defendant were deceived thereby. By priority of adoption and actual use plaintiff acquired the exclusive right to use it in connection with its sale of Liberty oil in Detroit and its vicinity, and its right to relief “is based upon the principles of common business in *191 tegrity.” Good Housekeeping Shop v. Smitter, 254 Mich. 592.

“The single question in this connection is whether the trade designation adopted by them is sufficiently similar to that of the plaintiff to be likely to confuse or mislead those using ordinary discrimination.” W. B. Manfg. Co. v. Rubenstein, 236 Mass. 215, 219 (128 N. E. 21, 11 A. L. R. 1283).

In Dayton v. Imperial Sales & Parts Co., 195 Mich. 397, 406, this court said:

‘ ‘ The generally recognized and customarily granted relief in cases of this kind, and that to which plaintiffs are reasonably entitled where the offense is established, is restraint from further use of the imitating name.”

The injunction was properly granted.

To what damages, if any, is the plaintiff entitled? The estimate of its counsel is based upon the claim that defendant’s representative admitted that it had sold 12 carloads of Liberty oil bearing the trade-mark referred to. It seems clear that any admission thus made referred to all classes of oil which was sold in defendant’s place of business under its arrangement with the Sterne-Jay Corporation, and that but one carload, consisting of 1,410 five-gallon cans of Liberty oil, was received by it, of which all but three cans had been sold.

It is undisputed that, up to the time when the defendant was notified by plaintiff’s attorney that it was simulating plaintiff’s trade-mark on its cans of Liberty oil, it had no notice or knowledge that the plaintiff was selling oil in the containers on which its trade-mark appeared.

The plaintiff maintained no office, in the sense in which that term is generally used, in the city of Detroit. For several years it had a lock box in the *192 postoffice, and used a part of the basement of the house in which Mr. and Mrs. Mettetal were living for a workroom. Mettetal testified:

“Whetn this storm struck Detroit, these hard times and everything, I went up to my cottage up north. I have a hunting cottage up there — so then I moved my office over with the Perry Printing Company, 5075 G-rand River. That was about two or three years ago; and then Mr. Perry moved it over on 2614 West Warren and I went over with him, and that is where I am now — been there for the last year or so. In that office I have a desk, typewriter and printing, my booklets, samples of oil, and all my files and things like that. My name is not on the door nor is the Liberty Oil Corporation name on the door. Mr. Perry has Ms name there, so I did not put anything on the door, but I have it inside on my desk.”

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Bluebook (online)
258 N.W. 241, 270 Mich. 187, 96 A.L.R. 645, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liberty-oil-corp-v-crowley-milner-co-mich-1935.