Maas & Waldstein Co. v. American Paint Corp.

178 F. Supp. 498, 124 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 207, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2545
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedNovember 18, 1959
DocketCiv. No. 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 178 F. Supp. 498 (Maas & Waldstein Co. v. American Paint Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maas & Waldstein Co. v. American Paint Corp., 178 F. Supp. 498, 124 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 207, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2545 (mnd 1959).

Opinion

DONOVAN, District Judge.

Plaintiffs brought this action1 against defendant for damages and an injunction alleging trade-mark infringement and unfair competition by defendant’s use of the mark Fiexitone, and by amended complaint allege ownership and use of the trade-mark Plextone since 1949, and United States Registration No. 547,-125, dated August 28, 1951, for the mark Plextone and that they have placed the statutory notice ® on labels bearing the mark Plextone. Defendant by answer to amended complaint admits its adoption and use of the trade-mark Fiexitone since 1952.

Plaintiffs contend that the two trademarks cover products of “the same or similar descriptive properties” sold and marketed by the parties to the instant case and that defendant adopted its “mark with the knowledge and intent to cause confusion in trade * * * or to deceive purchasers.”

Defendant contends that the trademarks involved herein are descriptive of entirely different properties and characteristics and that plaintiffs’ trade-mark as such is not entitled to registration under the laws of the United States.

The facts (thoroughly explored by pretrial preparation) are based on a trial transcript of 420 pages. They are presented by officers of the parties to the instant case.

It is undisputed that plaintiffs’ trademark is registered 2, and that since 1949 they sold their products on a national scale and outside the United States under their claimed trade-mark. The defendant does business on a much more modest scale than plaintiffs, being confined more or less to Minnesota and a few neighboring states and employing nine to twelve salesmen for that purpose. It has a factory salesroom at its plant in Duluth, Minnesota, where its trade may call and pick up materials purchased by them. Defendant’s salesmen have twenty-five color cards in their sales kit, together with their book of full line colors under cellophane. Defendant distributed printed material to its trade reading in part, “Easily applied with brush, roller or spray.” Defendant’s industrial field differs from that of plaintiffs and is more or less limited to products having to do with steel fabricating, shipbuilding, highway departments and projects of like nature. The bulk of defendant’s paint line is oil base, alkyds and linseed oil, and is identified by a trade-mark or description of the product in the container. It also has a general line of marine products.

Fiexitone is in single colors. Plextone is in multicolors with discrete particles.3 The name Plextone, as used by customers and even by a witness for the defendant, is at times mispronounced or misspelled. Despite inaccuracy in the file jacket (Exhibit 5), plaintiffs claim Plextone is sold not only in multicolors but also in mono-colors.

Essentially, the foregoing is a fair summary of the facts of the case at bar.

Is there such similarity of trade-marks between plaintiffs’ Plextone and defendant’s Fiexitone as to cause confusion in the minds of potential purchasers? Is defendant’s use of its symbol as a trade-mark likely to impress the purchasers or customers that plaintiffs’ goods emanated from defendant, or vice versa? Does the record of the instant case support plaintiffs’ claim of indulgence by defendant in misleading and unfair competition? Applying the yardstick of the rule against practiced deceit by a dealer and reasonable anticipation of its effect on the purchasing public, to the facts and evidence of the instant case, can it be concluded that defendant has by its conduct infringed plaintiffs’ registered trade-mark and unfairly competed with its owner?

The foregoing queries give rise to issues of fact, for the law of trade-marks [501]*501and trade-mark infringement is but a part of the law of unfair competition. It is elementary that the function of a trade-mark is to identify ownership of the article to which it is affixed, and hence is a symbol of good will. Registration of trade-marks confers nothing more than procedural advantages without enlarging the registrant’s substantive rights.4 Plaintiffs’ mark Plextone was registered August 28, 1951 5, and there is no dispute about its validity, “in connection with the goods or services specified in the certificate [of registration], subject to any conditions and limitations stated therein.” The latter quotation, taken from the “Lanham Trade-Mark Act,” of necessity limits the field to which the trade-mark extends, by the nature of the goods or products specified in said certificate of registration.6

Plaintiffs’ first application for registration was refused on August 7, 1950. Plaintiffs then applied to amend. This application to amend was filed on January 15, 1951. It was refused because of prior registration by U. S. Gypsum Company for the trade-mark Textone. Plaintiffs, on January 25, 1951, then filed a supplement to the amending application and the trade-mark Plextone was registered. The exclusive right to use the mark is limited to use on the class described in the application. Whatever was not claimed is not included in or protected by the trade-mark.7 Even if plaintiffs’ mark were entitled to protection throughout the field of protective coatings, the evidence does not demonstrate any confusing similarity between the marks that would warrant a finding of infringement. Based upon what has been said above, it is my considered opinion that plaintiffs’ trade-mark was not infringed by defendant.8

The Court will next consider plaintiffs’ additional contention having to do with unfair competition. It is well-established law that the manufacturer of particular goods is entitled to protection of the reputation they have acquired against unfair dealing, whether there be a technical trade-mark or not. The essence of such allegation of wrong done plaintiffs consists of a theory that defendant palms off its product for that of plaintiffs by defendant’s use of a similar mark, which in the instant case is Flexitone. The evidence of the instant case furnishes no demonstrable likelihood of defendant’s misleading the purchasing public to believe it is obtaining a Plextone product when it is buying a Flexitone product.

The law of Minnesota condemns deceit whereby one’s patronage is directed from him to the wrongdoer “by the latter’s palming off his goods as those of the former or, as it is sometimes said, by pirating or filching the other’s trade. * * * Conversely, where there is no deceit there is no unfair competition, as where the defendant sells his goods as his own and not as those of the plaintiff.” 9 The exercise of ordinary care by a purchaser of defendant’s product would obviate all possibility of confusing it with plaintiffs’. This is pointed out by the Minnesota Supreme Court, quoting the applicable federal authority demonstrating that the trail of nonliability has [502]*502been blazed by the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals as follows:

“ ‘ * * * One who so names and dresses his product that a purchaser who exercises ordinary care to ascertain the sources'of its manufacture can readily learn that fact by a reasonable examination of the boxes or wrappers that cover it has fairly discharged his duty to the public and to his rivals, and is guiltless of that deceit which is an indispensable element of unfair competition.’ [Allen B. Wrisley Co. v. Iowa Soap Co., 8 Cir., 122 P. 796, 798.]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 F. Supp. 498, 124 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 207, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maas-waldstein-co-v-american-paint-corp-mnd-1959.