Moorman v. Hoge

17 F. Cas. 715, 2 Sawy. 78, 4 Am. Law T. Rep. U.S. Cts. 217, 14 Int. Rev. Rec. 155, 1871 U.S. App. LEXIS 1742
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of California
DecidedOctober 21, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 17 F. Cas. 715 (Moorman v. Hoge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moorman v. Hoge, 17 F. Cas. 715, 2 Sawy. 78, 4 Am. Law T. Rep. U.S. Cts. 217, 14 Int. Rev. Rec. 155, 1871 U.S. App. LEXIS 1742 (circtdca 1871).

Opinion

SAWYER, Circuit Judge.

The complainants do not claim that there is any infringement upon that part of what they claim to be their trade-mark, which consists of the words and devices stamped upon the barrel. The claim is that there is an infringement by .the use of the barrel only. Is the plaintiff entitled to the exclusive use of a barrel of this peculiar form, construction and capacity, without regard to any mark or device impressed upon, or connected with it? Can a barrel of this description be appropriated as a trade-mark, or substantive part of a trademark, so as to exclude the rest of the world from using it in the same branch of business? If so, the complainants, in my judgment, are entitled to the relief sought, otherwise, not.

Complainants invoke the act of congress, of July 8, 1870. entitled. “An act to revise, consolidate and amend the statutes relating to patents and copy-rights.” 16 Stat. 19S. The seventy-seventh section provides, “That any person or firm domiciled in the United States * * *, and who are entitled to the exclusive use of any lawful trade-mark, or who intend to adopt, and use any trade-mark for exclusive use within the United States, may obtain protection for such lawful trade-mark by complying with the following requirements, to wit:” stating the conditions.

The seventy-eighth section provides that the party or firm, performing the statutory conditions, shall be entitled to use the trade-mark for thirty years, and that “no other person shall lawfully use the same trade-mark, or substantially the same, or so nearly resembling it as to be calculated to deceive upon substantially the same description of goods.” [717]*717The seventy-ninth section provides a remedy for violation of the right by imitation, etc., by an action for damages, and injunction. It, also, provides, that, “the commissioner of patents shall not receive and record, any proposed trade-mark which is not, and cannot become, a lawful trade-mark.” The eightieth section makes the certificate of the eommis-.sioner under seal of the patent office, “evidence in any suit in which such trade-mark shall be brought into controversy.”

It is not denied that the complainants have performed all the acts required by the act of congress to secure the protection contemplated, and that the certificate of the commissioner of patents was in form regularly issued. This being so, complainants insist, that the court can only look to the certificate, and the act of congress, to determine the question at issue; that the act of congress confers upon the commissioner jurisdiction to examine and determine whether the proposed .trademark is, or, can become a lawful trade-mark; whether it was first used and appropriated by the claimant, or is not identical with a trade-mark appropriated to the same class of goods, and belonging to a different party, or already registered, or, received for registration; and whether it does not so nearly resemble any trade-mark registered or filed for registry, as to be likely to deceive the public; and, that having jurisdiction to determine these matters, his determination is conclusive, and the questions are not open to examination in this court. Rubber Co. v. Goodyear, 9 Wall. [76 U. S.] 796, and Eureka Co. v. Bailey Co., 11 Wall. [78 U. S.] 492, are cited as sustaining the proposition.

I cannot assent to this view. The cases cited only go to the point, that a patent cannot be collaterally attacked on the ground that the extension and re-issue of the patents in question had been procured by fraud. It was held, that, if the patents themselves were to be avoided on the ground of fraud in their issue, the patents being otherwise good, it must be done by a direct proceeding in equity to vacate them. That is an entirely different question from the one now presented. The proceeding before the commissioner to obtain protection for a trad&mark under the act of congress, is purely ex parte; Other parties have no notice, actual or constructive. They have no opportunity to be heard, and their rights cannot be thus conclusively determined in a proceeding to which they are in no sense parties. The certificate of the commissioner of patents, I take it, can have no more conclusive effect as to tfife rights of third persons, than a patent issued under the patent laws by the same commissioner of patents. The commissioner in such cases is required to investigate the claim to the patent, and to determine whether the subject of the application is patentable; whether the applicant is the inventor; whether it. is new, and useful, etc. While the patent, is held to be prima facie evidence, that the machine is new and useful, it is nowhere held to be conclusive on these points, or upon the point whether the machine, or device, or article, is the proper subject of a patent. On the contrary, in every-day practice in the courts in patent cases, the very questions most frequently considered and determined, are. whether the thing patented is patentable; whether it is new, or useful, etc.; and, in the very cases cited to sustain complainants’ position, the court determined questions as to the patentability of the articles involved in the patent If the principle contended for could be maintained, there is not a barrel, or package of any kind in use in mercantile transactions, which could not be appropriated as a trade-mark, no matter how long, or how generally it had been in use, if a party could, in an ex parte application, by any representation, fraud, or other means, once procure it to be registered, and the certificate issued: for this would be conclusive upon all the world, upon the points that it could become a trade-mark, and that the applicant was the first to appropriate and use it, for that purpose.

This point, in my judgment, must be determined against the complainants.

This brings us to the great, and highly important question, whether a barrel of peculiar form and dimensions, without any marks, symbols, or devices of any kind impressed upon, or connected with it, can, in fact and in law, become a trade-mark, or a substantive part of a trade-mark, so as to invest the claimant with an exclusive right to use it. It will be observed that the statute, under which the claim is made, does not define the term, “trade-mark,” or say of what it shall consist The term is used as though its signification was already known in the law. It speaks of it as an already existing thing, and protects it as such. The thing to be protected must be an existing lawful “trade-mark,” or something that may then for the first time be adopted as a lawful trade-mark independent of the statute. There must be a lawful trade-mark adopted without reference to the statute, and then, by taking the prescribed steps, that trade-mark so already created and existing, may receive certain further protection under the statute. This is apparent from the language of the seventy-seventh section, which speaks of parties, “who are entitled to the exclusive use of any lawful trade-mark, or who intend to adopt and use any trade-mark for exclusive use.” etc., and, by the seventy-ninth section, which forbids- the commissioner to receive and record any proposed trade-mark which is not, and cannot become a lawful trade-mark. It does not say what shall constitute a lawful trade-mark. We must, therefore, go to the law of the land, outside this statute, to ascertain what is, or what may become a lawful trade-mark; for the statute leaves the definition of a trade-mark to the law, as it [718]*718before stood. The definition of a trade-mark, given by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 715, 2 Sawy. 78, 4 Am. Law T. Rep. U.S. Cts. 217, 14 Int. Rev. Rec. 155, 1871 U.S. App. LEXIS 1742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moorman-v-hoge-circtdca-1871.