Manhattan Medicine Co. v. Wood

108 U.S. 218, 2 S. Ct. 436, 27 L. Ed. 706, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 1027
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 2, 1883
Docket66
StatusPublished
Cited by149 cases

This text of 108 U.S. 218 (Manhattan Medicine Co. v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manhattan Medicine Co. v. Wood, 108 U.S. 218, 2 S. Ct. 436, 27 L. Ed. 706, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 1027 (1883).

Opinion

Me. Justice Field

delivered the opinion of the court. After reciting the facts as stated above, he said:

*222 In the view we take of the ease, , it will not be necessary to consider the first defence mentioned, nor the second, so far as to determine whether the right to use the words mentioned as a trade-mark was forfeited absolutely by the assignor’s misrepresentations as to the manufacture of the article. It is sufficient for the disposition of the case, that the misrepresentation has been cóntinued by the complainant. A court of equity will extend no aid to sustain a claim to a trade-mark of an article which is put forth with h misrepresentation to the public as to the manufacturer of the article, and as to the place where it is manufactured, both of which particulars were originally circumstances to guide the purchaser of the medicine.

It is admitted that whatever value the medicine possesses was given to if by its original manufacturer, Moses Atwood. He lived in Georgetown, Massachusetts. He manufactured the medicine there. He sold it with the designation that it was his preparation, “ Atwbod’s Vegetable Physical Jaundice Bitters,” and was manufactured there by him. As the medicine was tried and proved to be useful, it was sought for under that designation, and that purchasers might not be misled, it was always accompanied with a label, showing by whom and at what place it was prepared. These statements were deemed important in promoting the use of the article and its sale, or they would not have been continued by the assignees of the original inventor. And yet they could not be used with any honest purpose when both statements had ceased to be true. It is not honest to state that a medicine is manufactured by Moses AtwOod, of Georgetown, Massachusetts, when it is manufactured by the Manhattan Medicine Company in the city of New York.

Any one has an unquestionable right to affix to articles manufactured by him a mark or device not previously appropriated, to distinguish them from articles of the same general character manufactured or sold by others. He may thus notify the public of the origin* of the article and secure to himself the benefits of any particular excellence it may possess from the manner or materials of its manufacture. His trademark is both a sign óf the quality of the article and an assur- *223 . anee to the public that it is the genuine product of his manufacture. It thus often becomes of great value to him, and in -its exclusive use the court will protect him against attempts of others to pass off. their products upon the public as his. This-protection is afforded not only as a matter of justice to him, but to prevent imposition upon the public. Manufacturing Co. v. Trainer, 101 U. S. 51.

The object of the trade-mark being to indicate, by its meaning or association, the origin or ownership of the article, it would seem that when a right to its usé is transferred to others, either biy act of the original manufacturer or by' operation of law, the fact of transfer should be stated in connection with its use; otherwise a deception would be practised upon the public, and the very fraud accomplished, to prevent which courts of equity interfere to protect the exclusive right of the original manufacturer. If one affix to goods of his own manufacture signs or marks which indicate that they are the manufacture of others, he is deceiving the public and attempting to pass upon them goods as possessing a quality and merit which another’s skill has given to similar articles, and which his own manufacture does not possess in the estimation of purchasers. To put forth a statement, therefore., in the fqrm of a circular or label attached to an article, that it is manufactured in a particular place, by a person whose manufacture there had acquired a great reputation, when, in fact, it is manufactured by a different person at a different placé, is á fraud upon the public which no court of equity- will countenance.

This doctrine is illustrated and, asserted in the case of ThLeather Cloth Company (limited) v. The American Leather Cloth Company (limited), which was elaborately considered by Lord Chancellor Westbury, and afterwards in the House of Lords on appeal from his decree. 4 DeG. J. & S. 137, and 11 House of Lords’ Cases, 523.

In that case, an injunction was asked to restrain the defendant from using a trade-mark to designate leather cloth manufactured by it, which trade-mark the complainant claimed to own. The article known as leather cloth was an American invention, and was originally manufactured by J. R. & C. P. *224 Crockett, at Newark, New Jersey. Agents of theirs sold the article in England as “ Crockett’s Leather Cloth.” Afterwards a company was formed entitled “ The Crockett International Leather Cloth Company,” and the business previously carried on by the Crocketts was transferred to this company, which carried on business at Newark, in America, as a chartered company, and at West Hain, in England, as a partnership. In 1856, one Dodge took out a patent in England for tanning leather cloth and transferred it to this company. In 1857 the complainant company was incorporated, and the international company sold and assigned to it the business carried on at West Ham, together with the letters patent,, and full authority to use the trade-mark which had been previously used by it in England. A small part of the leather cloth-manufactured by the complainant company was tanned or patented. It, however, used a label which represented that the articles stamped with it were the goods of the Crockett International' Leather Cloth Company; that they were manufactured by J. R. & C. P. Crockett; that they were tanned, leather cloth; that they were patented by a patent obtained in 1856, and were made either in the United States or at West Ham, in England. Each of these statements or representations was untrue so far as. they applied to the goods made and sold by the complainant.

The1 defendant having used on goods manufactured by it a mark having some resemblance to that, used by the complainant, the latter brought suit'to enjoin the use. Yice-Chancellor Wood granted the injunction, but on appeal to the- Lord Chancellor the decree was reverséd and the bill dismissed. In giving his .decision the Lord Chancellor said that the exclusive right to use a trade-mark with respect to a vendible commodity is rightly called property; that the jurisdiction of the court in the protection of trade-marks rests upon property, and that the court interferes by injunction because that is.the only mode by which property pf that description can be effectually protected. But, he added:

“ When' the owner of the trade-mark' applies for an injunction to restrain the defendant from injuring his property by making *225

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 U.S. 218, 2 S. Ct. 436, 27 L. Ed. 706, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 1027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manhattan-medicine-co-v-wood-scotus-1883.