Nielsen v. American Oil Company

203 F. Supp. 473
CourtDistrict Court, D. Utah
DecidedMarch 19, 1962
DocketCiv. A. C-15-61
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 203 F. Supp. 473 (Nielsen v. American Oil Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nielsen v. American Oil Company, 203 F. Supp. 473 (D. Utah 1962).

Opinion

RITTER, Chief Judge.

In this action each party seeks, by means of an injunction against the other, to obtain the exclusive right to use the name “American Oil Company” in the business of marketing petroleum products, automotive products, and accessories in Cache County, Utah. The action originated with the filing of the complaint in the District Court of Cache County, Utah, and was duly removed to this Court where defendant The American Oil Company filed an original and an amended answer and counterclaim. The Utah Oil Refining Company, a Delaware corporation, was also named as a defendant but, by virtue of its merger with The American Oil Company on December 30, 1960, was no longer in existence when the complaint was filed.

From 1936 to the present time, plaintiff has been engaged in the business of selling petroleum products at wholesale and retail principally in Cache County. Since 1953, plaintiff has operated as an individual proprietorship trading as “Glenn G. Nielsen Company,” and since December 31, 1958, has also engaged in the oil business as a corporation, Nielsen Oil Company, Inc., of which he is president and principal stockholder.

During the period May, 1953, until January, 1957, plaintiff was a bulk plant agent of defendant’s predecessor, Utah Oil Refining Company, in Wendover, Utah, operating this companyis bulk plant and selling its products on commission to Utoco (Utah Oil Refining Company) service stations in that vicinity, two of which were operated by plaintiff as a dealer. Substantial sales were made at these service stations on credit extended to motorists who presented credit cards carrying defendant’s trade name and trademarks.

On September 16, 1955, plaintiff filed with the County Clerk of Cache County,. Utah, an “Affidavit of Persons Doing' Business Under Assumed Name” for a. business to be operated in Logan, Utah, under the name “American Oil Company” in anticipation of a gasoline business-to be operated by him.

Plaintiff testified that prior to filing his assumed name affidavit, he had some general knowledge of defendant, its trade-name and its trademark “Amoco” from items which he had read in trade publications.

In August, 1960, plaintiff erected on a lot he was purchasing south of Logan,. Utah, a large sign reading “Another American Oil Co. Station Is Being Built. Here To Better Serve You.” On September 23, 1960, plaintiff commenced and thereafter made wholesale sales of gasoline and fuel oil under the name “American Oil Co.” having a total value of $12,-302.61. Plaintiff’s invoices for such sales carried the trade name “American Oil Company” and the designation “Amoco.” (Since the institution of this suit, plaintiff has abandoned any claim to the word “Amoco.”)

After commencement of this suit, plaintiff, on July 1, 1961, opened a service station on his property south of Logan, under the name “American Oil Company.” Since that time he has been selling gasoline and other petroleum products at retail to motorists, including customers using such products for interstate travel between Utah and points outside of ■ Utah, in direct competition with retail service stations in Cache County, Utah, selling defendant’s trademarked products. The gasoline and oil sold by plaintiff at wholesale and retail were shipped to his supplier in Utah from points outside of Utah.

The business of the defendant, The American Oil Company, was begun in 1910 as an individual proprietorship under that name in Baltimore, Maryland. This proprietorship expanded its marketing under the trademarks “American” and “Amoco” (an abbreviation of “American Oil Company”) throughout all or *475 parts of six middle Atlantic States and the District of Columbia. Defendant was incorporated on January 3, 1922, ■under the laws of Maryland, at which time it acquired all of the assets and ■business of the former proprietorship including the trade name and the trademarks. Shortly after its incorporation, ■defendant joined a corporate family of interstate major oil companies, of which the parent company has been the Standard Oil Company, an Indiana corporation.

From 1932 until December 30, 1960, when the two companies were merged, ■defendant was an affiliate of the Utah •Oil Refining Company, which sold petroleum products throughout Utah, Idaho, Nevada, Washington, Oregon, and to .■some extent, Arizona.

By 1933, defendant increased its marketing territory for its trademarked products to include eleven additional east ■coast states. Subsequently, defendant’s marketing area for its trademarked petroleum products gradually expanded to 'Texas, Kentucky, Alabama, Tennessee, Arkansas and Louisiana, and, for the sale of certain trademarked lubrication products to New Mexico, Arizona and ■California. Throughout its entire history, defendant has used its trade name and its trademark “American” in sales of large quantities of products including gasoline, kerosene, motor oil, and grease, and, from 1916 on, defendant has also extended its trademark “Amoco” to large quantities of gasoline, motor oil, grease, anti-freeze, automobile tires and tubes, batteries and battery equipment, fan belts, boiler burner units, cleaning solvents, oil filter cartridges, brake fluid, soaps, lighter fluid and many industrial petroleum products.

In September and October, 1953, defendant registered its trademark “American” in the United States Patent Office under the Trademark Act of 1946 (Lan-ham Act) for gasoline, kerosene, lubricating oil, soluble oil, lubricating greases and quenching oil. Defendant has duly filed affidavits pursuant to Sections 8 and 15 of the Trademark Act of 1946, 15 U.S.C.A. §§ 1058, 1065 in regard to these registrations. Defendant likewise registered the trademark “Amoco” on January 14, 1958, for gasoline, motor fuel, naphtha, lubricating oils and greases, flushing oil and heating oil. Defendant, for many years past also owned other registrations of the trademark “Amoco” for a wide variety of products under the Trademark Act of 1905.

In 1952, defendant formulated a plan and intent to expand the marketing territory for its trademarked products directly and by related company licensees, throughout the entire United States. In furtherance of this plan, defendant subsequently registered its trademarks in all of the states under applicable state trademark statutes, including Utah, where its trademarks “American” and “Amoco” were duly registered on February 19, 1953. Also, defendant subsequently qualified as a foreign corporation to transact business in all of the states, including Utah.

As early as 1932, and for a few years thereafter, defendant made sales of gasoline in drums under its “Amoco” trademark in Utah in connection with automobile speed test runs being conducted on the Bonneville Salt Flats. Beginning in 1953, defendant each year made a few sporadic sales in Utah of lubricating oils and greases in containers bearing its trademarks “Amoco” and “American” which it shipped by common carrier from points outside the state to purchasers within the state. Beginning in July, 1960, defendant’s related company and licensee, Utah Oil Refining Company, throughout its five state marketing territory including Utah and Cache County, sold “American” fuel oils and motor oils at wholesale and retail.

Since 1953, defendant has advertised under its trade name and used its trademark “Amoco” in magazine and trade publications having substantial circulation in the State of Utah.

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