McLean v. Fleming

96 U.S. 245, 24 L. Ed. 828, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 1659
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 29, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by544 cases

This text of 96 U.S. 245 (McLean v. Fleming) 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
McLean v. Fleming, 96 U.S. 245, 24 L. Ed. 828, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 1659 (1878).

Opinion

Mr... Justice Clifford

delivered the opinion of the court.

Protection- for lawful trade-marks may be obtained by individuals, firms, or corporations entitled to tbe samé, if. they -eomply with the requirements .prescribed by the act of Congress ; and tbe provision is, that a trade-mark, duly registered as required, shall remain in' force thirty years from the date of such registration, subject to an exception not necessary to be noticed. 16 Stat. 210; Rev. Stat., sects. 4937, 4941.

Exclusive ownership of a certain medicinal manufacture, known as. “Dr. C. McLane’s Liver-Pills,” and of tbe trademark used in advertising and vending tbe same, is claimed by tbe complainant; and tbe record shows that he, on the first day of June, 1872, filed in the Circuit Court . a bill of complaint against tbe respondent, charging that tbe respondent had unlawfully infringed tbe said trdde-mark; and be prayed for a decree that tbe respondent shall, render an account of the gains and profits made by tbe infringement, and for an injunction.

Service was made, and the respondent appeared and filed an answer. ; Proofs were taken; and;.the parties having been beard, tbe court entered a.decretal order in favor of the- complainant, and sent tbe cause to a master, to compute tbe amount of the gains and profits. Due report was made by tbe master, to which tbe respondent excepted; andthe-court overruled the exception, " confirmed the report of tbe master, and entered a final decree áqr the complainant, in the sum of $7,"399.85.

All matters in that court having been finally determined, tbe respondent appealed to' this court, .and assigns errors as follows: 1. That' tbe court erred in finding that tbe labels L and K, or either of them, infringed Exhibit F, as set forth in the decretal ■order. 2. That tbe court erred in finding that the complainant was entitled to. any damages, and in ordering the assessment thereof; and in allowing him costs. 3. That the court erred in-ordering an account of the sales of Exhibits L and K, prior to tbe 16th of October, 1871, the date of tbe first use of Exhibit H- *249 by tbe complainant. 4. That the court erred in overruling the respondent’s exception to the master’s report.

Medicines of the kind described were first prepared and sold by the physician whose name the pills bear, by putting the same in wooden boxes, labelled with the name of the inventor. For ten years, or more, he used the pills in his practice; but the evidence shows that, on the 19th of June, 1844, he sold the right to use the same to Jonathan Kidd, who, for a year or more, prepared and sold the pills under that agreement, when he formed a partnership with John Fleming, under the style of “Jonathan Kidd & Co.; ” which firm continued to prepare and sell the pills until March 29, 1858, when the senior partner died.

They (the firm) dealt largely in the business; and, as early as 1847, in order to designate the medicine as an article of their own manufacture, and to prevent imposition and fraud, they commenced putting the pills in wooden boxes, of uniform size, shape, and appearance, each box containing twenty-two pills, with the name of the original inventor stamped in red wax upon the cover of each box, around which they placed the red label or wrapper described in the bill of complaint. Beyond doubt, that label, with its devices, and the red seal on the box, constituted the trade-mark by which the firm made known to their customers and the public the genuine pills which they prepared and sold; the firm being at the time the owners of ■ the original recipe, and having the exclusive right to make and vend the pills.

Within a month subsequent to the death of the senior partner of the firm, his executors sold and conveyed all the interest of the decedent in the business to the surviving partner and the complainant, whereby they, under the firm name of “ Fleming Brothers,”' acquired not only the title to the recipe and the right to make and vend the pills, but also the.right to use the labels ' and tra.de-marks used by the former 'owners. Possessed of the whole interest, they (the firm, Fleming Brothers) prosecuted the business, with some changes in the individual partners, until July 1, 1865, when the present complainant sold out'his whole interest to his brother, John Fleming, who, as sole proprietor of what the firm owned, continued the business until the 2d *250 of November, 1870, -when he died, leaving a, last will and testament. ’

When that firm acquired the entiré interest, they immediately enlarged the business, and in the year 1855 they adopted the dark label, Exhibit F, which is fully and minutely described in the bill of complaint; and the complainant avers that it has since been used in the business, with no other substantial alterations than what are shown in Exhibit ED, mentioned in the decretal order.

Both parties agree that the complainant, by the will of his deceased brother, acquired all. the rights which the deceased had in the business; and the record shows that he has, since the probate' of the will on the 9th of November, 1870, been preparing and vending said pills, and using the labels and trademarks to designate their genuineness and to commend, their value and utility.

Evidence was introduced by the. respondent, whose name is James' H.' McLean, that he commenced -in 1849, iii.-St. Louis,-to ■manufacture his .own medicines.; that in 1851 he began to manufacture and sell liver-pills, under the name of “ Dr. McLean’s Universal Pills,” using first a type-printed label in red letters, which- was changed, in 1852, to a lithographed red label, called in the decretal order “ Exhibit L,” which was-used down to 1866, except that about 1863 he added to his name the initials “ J. H.,” so that the label read, “ Dr. J. H. McLean’s Universal Pills;” that in 1866 he changed his label'to the qne referred to.in the decretal order as “Exhibit K,” which he con-' tinued to use until May 21, 1872, when he adopted, a new label, the use of which does not infringe the trade-mark fif the complainant.

Governed by these facts as stated, the court will examine the first error assigned; which is, that the court erred in finding ■that the labels L and K infringed complainant’s Exhibit'H, as set forth in the decretal order. By the order, the respondent, James H. McLean, his agents, employés, and servants, are perpetually enjoined and restráined from using, or causing to be used, the words “Dr, J. H. McLean’s Universal Pills or Vegetable Liver Pills,” or the words “ Dr. McLean’s Universal Pills,” upon any label or wrapper for boxes or other pack *251 ages of pills resembling or in imitation of tbe labels, wrappers, or trade-mark of tbe complainant, described in bis bill of complaint as “ Exhibit H,” whether in style of engraving, printing, or lettering; and from vending or exposing for sale, or causing to be vended or exposed for sale, any article of pills having upon the boxes or other packages thereof any such •labels or wrappers so made in imitation of or resemblance to the said labels or wrappers of the complainant.

Equity gives relief in such a case, upon the ground that one man- is not allowed to offer his goods for sale, representing them to be the manufacture of another trader in the same commodity.

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Bluebook (online)
96 U.S. 245, 24 L. Ed. 828, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 1659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclean-v-fleming-scotus-1878.