Lichtenstein v. Levin

27 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 337, 1927 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1393
CourtSandusky County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedAugust 17, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 337 (Lichtenstein v. Levin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Sandusky County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lichtenstein v. Levin, 27 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 337, 1927 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1393 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

Overmyer, J.

This cause was submitted to the court on the petition of the plaintiff and the answer of the defendant — a general denial — and the evidence, and is an action brought by plaintiff to enjoin the defendant from pursuing a course of conduct alleged to amount to “unfair competition” in trade.

The plaintiff for the past six years has conducted a store on West State street in Fremont, under the trade name, “The Army Store,” selling a general line of workmen’s clothing and merchandise, and the defendant since March 1, 1927, having a similar store and similar merchandise, immediately adjacent to the store of plaintiff, which he designated the “Cut Price Army Store.” Plaintiff’s store front has been painted an “Ox blood red” for several years, and the defendant’s store front has been painted an “Ox blood red,” this being done contemporaneous with his leasing of the room last March.

The plaintiff alleges in his petition the foregoing and other facts, and further alleges that the defendant has used every possible means to imitate the physical appearance of plaintiff’s store, in name, color scheme, merchandise, window signs, street signs, and advertising, aryj fur[338]*338ther alleges that the defendant’s clerks and employees took advantage of the mistakes of customers who came into the defendant’s store thinking they were in plaintiff’s store, by giving false answers as to the whereabouts of “Sam,” which is plaintiff’s name, and selling goods to such persons who were in the store by mistake, thereby '••deceiving such customers and the public. He also alleges that the conduct of the defendant in all these particulars was designedly and intentionally had and done for the purpose of securing some of plaintiff’s trade by deceiving .the public and the trade by making them believe by artifice and confusion that they were buying at the plaintiff’s store when in fact they were buying in defendant’s store, and that this course of conduct constitutes unfair competition in trade.

The court find from the evidence that the plaintiff used the name “The Army Store” as a trade name from the beginning of his business about six years ago; that he used this name on his windows and door panels and elsewhere; that several years ago he painted his store front ox-blood red to distinguish it from other fronts on the same street; that he secured permission of city authorities to erect a vertical sign above and over the sidewalk in front of his place of business with the words “The Army Store” thereon, the 'word “The” being on a horizontal board at the top, and the words “Army Store” on a vertical board below it; that the plaintiff spent five or six thousand dollars in advertising his place of business •and merchandise during the past six years under the name “The Army Store” and frequently referring to it as the store with the “red front”; that the evidence discloses that customers by mistake entered the store of defendant, ' thinking they were entering the store of plaintiff, and made purchases while under that impression; that when defendant ordered his signs for the sidewalk and storefront he ordered the painter to paint them the same color and design as plaintiff’s; that he ordered the painter to put the words “Cut-price” in smaller letters than the ■yvords “Army Store”; that the defendant ordered and [339]*339authorized the color of his store front to be of the same color as that of plaintiff; that the employes of defendant did tell customers that the plaintiff, “Sam,” was .out and “would be back soon,” etc. These facts are proven by the evidence.

What is “unfair competition”? Ruling Case Law, Vol. 26, at page 875, defines the term as follows:

“Unfair competition ordinarily consists in the simulation by one person, for the purpose of deceiving the. public, of the name, symbols, or devices employed by a business rival, or the substitution of the goods or wares of one person for those of another, thus falsely inducing the purchase of his wares and thereby obtaining for himself the benefits properly belonging to his competitor.”

The court has examined many cases on the subject of trade marks, trade names, and unfair competition, and in all of them the intent with which the thing has been done is a very important, in fact, practically the controlling element, and the courts hold that where the simulation is decided and apparent, and the result thereof is that people are deceived, the intent will be presumed. The courts further hold without exception that in cases of unfair competition it is not a single act, a single name, or a single simulation that would furnish grounds for equitable relief, but it is the combination of things, a general course of conduct, imitation in name, color- of building, character of merchandise, signs, advertising, etc., that such combination of imitations could not be accidental but must be by design, and that it is the effect of such combination that produces the result against which a plaintiff complains and against which he is entitled to-relief.

In an early Ohio case, decided in 1898, and reported in 8 Ohio Dec., 485, where the facts were somewhat similar to the facts here, the court say:

“I am satisfied from the evidence that the above mentioned acts of defendant were done with the intention of misleading the public into the belief that the business of the defendant was the business of the plaintiff. It also appears in evidence that people seeking the store of plaintiff have been misled by the appearance of the store [340]*340of defendant to believe that it was the store of the plaintiff and have made purchases therefrom while under that impression; that the clerks in the store of the defendant have given the' impression to persons entering such store while in search of the store of plaintiff, that they were in plaintiff’s store,” etc.

The court say further:

“There have grown up recently a class of cases which would be classed under ‘Unfair competition’ and which has called so strongly for the interference of a court of equity that the courts have interfered, not upon the ground that there has been any interference with the right of a trade mark, but upon the ground that to permit the defendant to pursue his business rivalry in the manner in which it was done was a fraud upon the rights of the plaintiff.”

In the same case the court say that the principle upon which the courts afford relief is that “No man shall be permitted to sell his goods as the goods of another, and that where one tradesman resorts to the use of any artifice or contrivance for the purpose of representing his goods or his business as the goods or business of a rival tradesman, thereby deceiving the people by causing them to trade with him when they intended to and would have otherwise traded with his rival, a fraud is committed which a court of equity will not allow to thrive, and equity will not concern itself about the means by which the fraud is done,” and the court cites a number of cases in support of this view. (See Ruling Case Law, Vol. 26, page 881.)

One of the cases cited is Weinstock v. Marks,

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Bluebook (online)
27 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 337, 1927 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lichtenstein-v-levin-ohctcomplsandus-1927.