Nestor Johnson Manufacturing Co. v. Alfred Johnson Skate Co.

144 N.E. 787, 313 Ill. 106
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1924
DocketNo. 15634
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 144 N.E. 787 (Nestor Johnson Manufacturing Co. v. Alfred Johnson Skate Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nestor Johnson Manufacturing Co. v. Alfred Johnson Skate Co., 144 N.E. 787, 313 Ill. 106 (Ill. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Nestor Johnson Manufacturing Company filed a bill on September 18, 1919, in the superior court of Cook county to restrain the Alfred Johnson Skate Company and Julian T. Fitzgerald, Alfred Johnson and Gustav E. Schmidt from certain acts and conduct in connection with the manufacture and sale of skates, which were alleged to be wrongful, to constitute unfair competition'with the complainant and to be productive of irreparable damage to it, and for an accounting. Answers and replications were filed and the cause was referred to a master in chancery, who heard the evidence and reported it with his findings of fact, and recommended that the relief prayed for be granted, except that no recommendation was made as to an accounting. Objections by the complainant and defendants, respectively, were overruled, and the court entered a decree dismissing the bill as to the individual defendants and restraining the Alfred Johnson Skate Company, “first, from using in the advertising, disposition, distribution or sale of tubular ice skates, upon any skate, box, container, letter-head, catalogue, literature, sign, advertising matter or otherwise, or verbally, the word ‘Johnson’ in its secondary sense as hereinbefore defined, in the description or partial description of, or as the name or part of the name of, a tubular ice skate; second, from using in the advertising, disposition, distribution or sale of tubular ice skates, upon any skate, box, container, letter-head, catalogue, literature, sign, advertising matter or otherwise, the name ‘Alfred Johnson Skate Company’ in print, script or writing in any form without the four words of said name set forth in equal prominence and in the same character and size of type, script or writing, and without adding thereto in type, script or writing of the same character, and not less than two-thirds the size of the said type, script or writing by which the said name ‘Alfred Johnson Skate Company’ is displayed, the words, ‘Not connected with the original Nestor Johnson Manufacturing Company.’ ” The decree also awarded an accounting against the Alfred Johnson Skate Company for all profits that accrued to it from the use of the trade name “Johnson” in its secondary sense as defined in the decree, applied to tubular ice skates made, sold or delivered by the Alfred Johnson Skate Company at any time subsequent to the date of service of summons. The Alfred Johnson Skate Company appealed to the Appellate Court for the First District. The complainant assigned cross-errors on the dismissal of the individual defendants and the failure to restrain the use of the word “Johnson” in the corporate name of the Alfred Johnson Skate Company. The Appellate Court reversed the decree and remanded the cause, with directions to dismiss the bill for want of equity, and the Nestor Johnson Manufacturing Company having obtained a certificate of importance has appealed.

The bill alleged that Nestor Johnson more than twenty-five years ago in Chicago was a skater of great skill and ability, favorably known among the skaters of the United States, and was the originator of a skate known and called “tubular ice skate,” of which he was known among the skating profession and the skating public of the United States as the designer and originator; that he then commenced the manufacture and sale of such skates in Chicago and continued such manufacture and sale until 1912, when he sold his business, and all rights to his trade-marks, trade name and good will, to the complainant, which has since continued the business; that he had built up a large and valuable business and created a great demand for his skates, which by reason of his large personal acquaintance and his reputation as a skater and as the originator of tubular ice skates became known to the wholesale and retail trade and to the skating public as “Johnson skates,” and when used to designate skates, the word “Johnson” had for many years been known by skaters and the skating public to designate a tubular ice skate sold first by Nestor Johnson and later by the complainant; and Nestor Johnson and his successor, the complainant, have spent Jarge sums of money in advertising and creating a demand for Johnson skates. The bill alleged that Julian T. Fitzgerald, one of the defendants, had been employed for a number of years by Nestor Johnson, and later by the complainant, in different positions; that a part of the time he was sales manager and conducted all of the advertising of the complainant and learned its method of making skates and of advertising them, and was in intimate touch with all, and became personally acquainted with a great many, of the principal customers of the complainant; that Alfred Johnson, another of the defendants, is a brother of Nestor Johnson, and was employed first by Nestor Johnson and later by the complainant for a period of sixteen years, in which employment he learned' the business of making tubular ice skates and acquired an intimate knowledge of the business methods of the complainant; that Gustav E. Schmidt, the third of the individual defendants, was employed by Nestor Johnson and the complainant for a period of eight years, being in charge of manufacturing dies, tempering metal for skates, and employed in other parts of the business, and learned from his employment the business of making tubular ice skates; that the three men quit their employment on March 1, 1917, having previously planned to form the Alfred Johnson Skate Company with the fraudulent intent of defrauding the complainant and appropriating its good name, good will and business, and that they caused the Alfred Johnson Skate Company to be incorporated, and it began the manufacture and sale of tubular ice skates, advertising them to the public as the Alfred Johnson skates. The bill then sets forth in great detail the acts of the defendants in the conduct of their business calculated and intended to deceive the customers of the complainant and the public, and lead them to believe that the skates manufactured and sold by the Alfred Johnson Skate Company were the product of the complainant, and to lead them to deal with the latter company supposing that they were dealing with the complainant and that the skates purchased of the Alfred Johnson Skate Company were the product of the complainant; • and it is alleged that by these acts the public was deceived and was caused to purchase the product of the Alfred Johnson Skate Company for that of the complainant.

The answer denied that Nestor Johnson was the originator of tubular ice skates, and averred that before he made them they were associated with John S. Johnson, a champion ice skater between 1890 and 1900, who used such skates in his racing, and with Arthur Johnson, of New York, who made and sold them as Johnson skates.

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Bluebook (online)
144 N.E. 787, 313 Ill. 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nestor-johnson-manufacturing-co-v-alfred-johnson-skate-co-ill-1924.