Ludlow Valve Mfg. Co. v. Pittsburgh Mfg. Co.

166 F. 26, 92 C.C.A. 60, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4832
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedNovember 19, 1908
DocketNo. 4
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 166 F. 26 (Ludlow Valve Mfg. Co. v. Pittsburgh Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ludlow Valve Mfg. Co. v. Pittsburgh Mfg. Co., 166 F. 26, 92 C.C.A. 60, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4832 (3d Cir. 1908).

Opinion

GRAY, Circuit Judge.

The appellant and complainant below filed its bill in the Circuit Court, seeking to restrain the appellee and defendant below from infringing complainant’s trade-mark, which consisted of the word “Ludlow,” as applied to valves, hydrants and other hydraulic appliances. The bill also alleged unfair competition, from which it also sought relief. The pertinent facts of the case are as follows:

The complainant is a corporation organized under the laws of New Jersey in 1891, and is the successor of a New York corporation of similar name, organized in 1806 by one Henry G. Ludlow, of Troy, N. Y., a gas engineer actively engaged in the construction of gas plants. Tn the year 1861, said Ludlow obtained a patent for an iron valve, for use in pipes conveying gas, the peculiar features of which were certain wedges in combination with sliding stop valves, sliding gate, and sluice valves. The wedges operated to bring the valve tight against its seat, after it had completed its closing movement, and to enable the valve to work free of its seat in its opening and closing movements, so as to minimize the friction between the face of the valve and the seat. For some time after its organization, the New York corporation confined its operations to the manufacture and sale of the valve invented by Ludlow, for both gas and water, and patented by him in 1861. Afterwards, and after its removal to Troy, the company began to manufacture many other kinds of valves, hydrants, and other apparatus, constantly increasing the variety of its product and embodying designs, mechanisms, patterns and devices of divergent character, for some, of which letters patent were obtained by Ludlow and other inventors, and others of which were never patented. The bill alleges that the office and factory of the New York corporation was in the city of Troy, as was and is the office of its successor, the complainant below; that it has there carried on a constantly increasing manufacture, and sold its product throughout the United States and Europe. That the New York corporation had adopted, and the complainant as its successor has continued to use as a trade-mark and trade-name, to denote the origin and source of manufacture of all its products, the word “Ludlow,” and designated all of its said prod[28]*28ucts indiscriminately by such trade-mark and trade-name, without regard to whether the article or device manufactured by it was pat-enlcd or embodied any patented or patentable invention, and without reference to any special type or form of construction applied to or embodied in such article. That the practice of the complainant has been to cast or stamp the name “Ludlow” upon every article manufactured by it, and when an article was patented, the word “patented” and the date thereof was stamped in addition to the word “Ludlow.” Complainant alleges that, by the practice and conduct thus briefly referred to, it has acquired a common-law trade-mark in the word “Lud-low”, as designating and signifying to the trade the source of manufacture of all its products, whether those which were originally patented or those which were unpatented, and that on or about January 29, 1895, for the purpose of further protecting its said trade-mark and trade-name, which it had prior thereto used in interstate and foreign commerce, the complainant registered the word “Ludlow” as its trade-mark, and on or about April 6, 1906, registered the same word as its trade-mark under Act Cong. Eeb. 20, 1905, c. 592, 33 Stat. 724 (U. S. Comp. St. Supp. 1907, p. 1008).

The answer of the defendant denies generally the allegations upon which the claim of a common-law trade-mark in the name “Ludlow” is founded, denies the existence of such a property right in said name, and avers that, by virtue of its peculiar patented devices for valves, the same became known as “Ludlow” patent valves, and that the word “Ludlow,” when applied to such valves and hydrants of complainant’s make, identified the generic name of certain types of patented valves or hydrants, and only in a subordinate sense indicated the source of manufacture, and that since the expiration of said patents, the type of valve known as the “Ludlow” valve has been open to the use and manufacture by all disposed to engage therein, and that said type of valves was still known and designated to the trade by the generic name of “Ludlow.” The testimony as to this question is somewhat conflicting, and there is much in the case to support the contention that complainant possesses in the word “Ludlow” a common-law trade-mark as to all their products, including the valves and hydrants in question. Other companies and manufacturers than the defendant have, since the expiration of the patents on these valves, respected the claim for the trade-mark name “Ludlow,” by manufacturing the same type of valves and hydrants without using said name. But it was in evidence also that much the larger percentage of articles manufactured by the complainant company consisted of these particular valves and hydrants, and that they were spoken of generally as “Ludlow” valves and “Ludlow” hydrants.

The learned judge of the court below, under these circumstances, having found that the peculiar features of the valves and gates in question gave to the valves and hydrants. of that type the generic name. “Ludlow,” felt constrained to declare that the right to make such patented valves and to call them “Ludlow” valves, under the case of Singer v. June, 163 U. S. 170, 16 Sup. Ct. 1002, 41 L. Ed. 118, became public, and the bill was accordingly dismissed. Assuming, [29]*29however, as we are disposed to do, the correctness of the view, that the word “Ludlow” had become generic as applied to valves and hydrants of the type in question, within the meaning of the decision in the Winger Case, we think the evidence discloses ground for finding the defendant guilty of unfair competition in the manner in which that name was used by it, whether stamped on its manufactured articles or in its advertisements and booklets relating to such articles, and put out to the trade by it. That the Ludlow Valve Manufacturing Company, notwithstanding the expiration of its patents, is still the largest producer of the articles designated by the name “Ludlow,” and has undoubtedly had for many years the name “Ludlow” associated with its product, as indicating She source of manufacture, as well as the type of valve, renders it peculiarly important that the defendant, in using the name “Ludlow” as a generic name to describe the type of its product, should so use it as to preclude a possibility of mistake by that portion of the public likely to be interested, as to the source or origin of its manufacture. In other words, te» so use the name as to avoid the unfair competition which the law frowns upon, and from which a court of equity will protect a complainant.

The power of courts of equity to restrain unfair competition, is a very beneficent one, and is founded upon a basis of sound business morality. The opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States, in the Singer Case, while recognizing the right to the use of the word “Singer,” as a generic description of the article, makes emphatic recognition of the duty of the court to require the name to be used in connection with such proper statements in advertisements, etc., as to guard against any possibility of deceiving the public as to the source of manufacture.

No arbitrary rules have ever been, nor ever can be, laid down by which courts of equity will furnish this protection. To establish such rules, would, like definitions in the law, furnish the means by which fraud could successfully accomplish its ends.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 F. 26, 92 C.C.A. 60, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4832, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ludlow-valve-mfg-co-v-pittsburgh-mfg-co-ca3-1908.