Lorillard v. Pride

28 F. 434, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2300
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 28 F. 434 (Lorillard v. Pride) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lorillard v. Pride, 28 F. 434, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2300 (uscirct 1886).

Opinion

Blodgett, J.

The bill in this case avers that complainants are the most extensive manufacturers of tobacco in the United States; that they have been engaged in said business for many years; that their goods are sold throughout the United States, and in foreign countries; that during the year 1874 they adopted as a trado-mark for their plug tobacco a tag or piece of tin, and called their tobacco “Tin Tag Tobacco,” and that they have been successful in establishing the tin tag as a badge of identification or mark for their goods, and the term “Tin Tag Tobacco” as a designation by which their goods bearing that mark are bought and sold; that the adoption of the tin tag as a trade-mark for their goods was original with them; that prior to such adoption it had never been used as a mark for plug tobacco; that they have now, and have had since the year 1874, the right to its exclusive use as a trado-mark for their plug tobacco; that the same is now, and has been since 1874, known to the public as their trado-mark, and whenever and wherever a piece of tin is seen affixed to a plug of tobacco it means the tobacco of complainants; that the use of their said trade-mark, to wit, a piece or tag of tin,, has been continuous from the date of its adoption as aforesaid. Complainants aver that they have the exclusive right to employ a tin tag, whatever its appearance, color, or shape, and state that they bring this bill for the purpose of establishing and maintaining their exclusive right to the use of tho piece of tin of any shape as a trade-mark for plug tobacco, and to prevent the use upon plug tobacco not made by them of pieces of tin which would causé said tobacco to be sold in the market as “Tin Tag Tobacco” or “Tin Tag Plug.” The bill further charges that the defendant, in fraud of complainants’ rights, has, since the adoption of complainants’ said trade-mark, sold large numbers of plugs or pieces of chewing tobacco not made by complainants, to which have been affixed pieces of tin of various shapes,— [436]*436such as star-shaped,or circular and rectangular,pieces of tin; and that by so placing on the market and selling plug tobacco, with pieces of tin affixed thereto, defendant has fraudulently violated and infringed upon complainants’ trade-mark, intending by so marking such plug tobacco with a piece of tin to make the public believe that the tobacco so sold by him was the manufacture of complainants. The bill prays an accounting by the defendant of the profits made by him upon the sale of tobacco marked with pieces of tin or tin tags, and that the defendant be forever enjoined and restrained from in any manner using tin tags in connection with the sale of plug tobacco, or anything that would cause any plug tobacco not made by complainants to be sold as and for “Tin Tag Tobacco.”

The answer of defendant, in substance, admits that complainants, in 1874, and from that time to the commencement of the suit, had practiced the marking of their plug tobacco by tin tags affixed in some manner to a plug of tobacco; but avers that said tags carried also letters or marks impressed or embossed upon the same, — such as “Lorillard,” “P. Lorillard & Co.,” “Climax,” “Bullion,” etc.; and that it is by means of these names that complainants’ tobbacco is known and sold in the market, and not by the exclusive and single designation of “Tin Tag Tobacco;” and that the piece of tin alone does not constitute complainants’ trade-mark, or designate their goods. .The answer further denies that complainants have or ever had the exclusive right to the use of a piece of tin, irrespective of its appearance, color, or shape, as a trade-mark, or badge of identification, upon their tobacco; and charges that, long prior to the adoption by complainants of their tin tags, Newdecker Bros., of Richmond, Virginia, had adopted a piece of tin carrying the words “Patent Process,” as a mark to distinguish it as a peculiar kind of plug tobacco manufactured by them. Defendant further charges that the tobacco sold by him was manufactured by the firm of Liggett & Myers, of St. Louis, Mo., and bore upon its tin tags evidence that it was so manufactured by Liggett & Myers, and that it in no way deceived, or tended to deceive, the public as to the origin or manufacture of said tobacco; but that, on the contrary, the purchasers and the publffi well knew that said firm was in the habit of stamping *or marking their tobacco with tin tags of peculiar shape, indicating that they were the manufacturers thereof.

It appears from the pleadings and proof that, some time in the .year 1874, Mr. Charles Seidler, one of the complainants’ firm, invented a mode of marking or distinguishing plug tobacco by imbedding into the surface of the plug a metal tag or label, and that he obtained a patent for said process on or about January 12, 1875; that this patent became the exclusive property of the complainants, and for several years the complainants insisted upon the validity of this patent, and asserted their exclusive right by virtue of this patent to mark their tobacco with tin tags, and thereby indicate its origin; [437]*437and that the use of the tin tag, and the designation of complainants’ goods by the word “Tin Tag,” originated from the attempt of complainants to enforce their exclusive right to the use of a metal tag under this patent, and not to the adoption of tin, or tho words “Tin Tag,” as a trade-mark.

It further appears that in June, 1876, complainants registered in the office of the commissioner of patents a trade-mark, consisting of a bright, metallic tag, preferably of a circular form, firmly affixed to one of the sides or faces of plugs of tobacco; and that in September, 1876, the firm of Liggett & Myers, of St. Louis, whose tobacco is sold by the defendant, also registered in the patent-office of the United States a trade-mark for plug tobacco, consisting of a bright metallic tag or label of circular outline, having a lustrous or metallic appearance, and provided at its centre with a circular aperture; and that they also, at the same timo, registered, as a trade-mark for plug tobacco, a bright, metallic tag or label, in the form of a five-point star, with a circular aperture at its center; that said Liggett & Myers, also, in November, 1876, registered in the patent-office, as a trade-mark for plug tobacco, a bright metallic tag, with rectangular outline, and a rectangular opening at its confer; and also that in December, 1876, complainants registered, as trade-marks for plug tobacco, tho fanciful or arbitrary words “Tin Tag Plug,” and also tho words “Tin Tag Tobacco.” It also appears that, from the time complainants began to mark their tobacco plugs with tin tags under and in pursuance of the Soidler patent, various other manufacturers, including Liggett & Myers, commenced the marking or labeling of their plug tobacco with tin tags of various forms; and that there is now, and has been for many years, upon the market brands of tobacco made by different manufacturers, marked or indicated by tin tags of very many different forms and colors, each of these colors or forms usually indicating the name of the manufacturer.

It will thus he seen that complainants’ claim to the exclusive right of using tin as a mark or indicia of their goods had not been acquiesced in by tho public, but that other manufacturers have used tin in some form for the purpose of indicating tobacco of their manufacture.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 F. 434, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lorillard-v-pride-uscirct-1886.