O K Bus & Baggage Co. v. O K Transfer & Storage Co.

1916 OK 844, 165 P. 136, 63 Okla. 311, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1398
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 10, 1916
Docket7099
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1916 OK 844 (O K Bus & Baggage Co. v. O K Transfer & Storage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O K Bus & Baggage Co. v. O K Transfer & Storage Co., 1916 OK 844, 165 P. 136, 63 Okla. 311, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1398 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

HARDY, J.

The “O K Transfer & Storage Company” instituted this action against the “O K Bus & Baggage Company” to enjoin it from certain alleged unfair competition with plaintiff in the transfer and storage business. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court. The petition alleges that during its corporate existence plaintiff had been engaged in Oklahoma City in the transfer and storage business, and conducting a business of warehouseman ; that it was not engaged in any bus or baggage business; that the defendant, O K Bus & Baggage Company, was using for advertising purposes the name and style of “O IC Bus & Baggage Company”; that recently it had engaged in the transfer and storage business in Oklahoma City, and that the advertisements used by them were very similar to the designation, style and name of advertising plaintiff uses; that plaintiff was located at 336 West First street, and defendant’s place of business was 300 West First street; that plaintiff had spent large sums of money in advertising, and its trade-name was extensively used and brought to the knowledge of the public, and plaintiff had acquired a valuable property interest in and to said trade-name, and its use and enjoyment by plaintiff was of great pecuniary value; that the defendant, well knowing the facts and the rights and privileges of plaintiff, secured by the use and adoption of its said trade-name, and with the intent upon the part of the defendant to appropriate • to itself the profits, benefits, and advantages thereof, has engaged in a similar line of mercantile business in close proximity to the established place of business of the plaintiff, and is wrongfully and deceitfully and unlawfully using and applying its name and style of business to defendant’s transfer and storage business, and by advertising the same concerning defendant’s said business consisting of signs, newspaper, telephone advertising, etc., or such approximations and simulations thereof as are calculated to deceive and do deceive patrons and customers of plaintiff, to a very large extent, and to plaintiff’s great injury and damage. The defendant, “O IC Bus & Baggage Company,” answering, admitted its incorporation, and its engagemenet in 'the bus and baggage business, and further alleged that the name “O K Bus & Baggage Company” is the name which relates to the description of the business conducted by defendant, and that plaintiff had never used said name for any designation of its origin or ownership, and has no rights in or to such name and no right to appropriate the same to its exclusive use, and no grounds upon which to claim infringement by defendant upon the name, designation, or advertising of plaintiff; and alleged that the name “O. K. Bus & Baggage Company” does not designate the origin or ownership of said defendant corporation.

After hearing the evidence, the court, being of the opinion that plaintiff had failed to sustain its allegation of money damages, withdrew the case from the jury, and upon consideration,, granted a perpetual injunction restraining defendant from the use of the letters “O K” in connection with its sign or signs, upon its warehouse, its place of business, and other places, and also upon the vehicles used by it in its business, and from its advertising; it being stated in the order that it was. not intended to enjoin the defendant from advertising or conducting its business in a lawful manner, but only to enjoin the defendant from the use of the letters “O K” in connection with its business and advertising. Exceptions were duly saved, and defendant appealed.

It its judgment the court found:

“That plaintiff had sustained by the evidence all the material allegations of its petition with relation to the equitable features and injunction prayed for.”

Defendant relies upon section 6741, Rev. Laws 1910, which is as follows:

*313 “One wlio produces or deals in a particular thing, or conducts a particular business, may appropriate to his exclusive use, as a trade-mark, any form, symbol or name which has not been so appropriated by another, to designate the origin or ownership thereof; but he cannot exclusively appropriate any designation, or part of a designation, which relates only to the name, quality, or the description of the thing or business, or the place where the thing is produced, or the business is carried on.”

And counsel contend that the letters “0 K” have no relation either to the origin or ownership of the plaintiff’s business, and therefore, under the section of the statute above quoted, plaintiff has no exclusive right to the use thereof; that said letters are applied to almost every class of business, and defendant has an equal right to the use thereof.

The general doctrine of law as to trademarks and symbols or signs which may be used in the prosecution of one’s business, and the protection which the courts will afford to those who originally appropriate them, do not appear to he questioned. Every one is at liberty to affix to a product of his own manufacture any symbol or device not previously appropriated, which will distinguish the article from others of the same general nature, and thus to secure the benefits of increased sales which may accrue by reason of any particular excellence he may have given to the article so designated. The symbol or device thus becomes a sign to the public of the origin of the goods to which it is attached, and an assurance that they are the genuine article of the person first appropriating the symbol; and the use thereof often becomes of great value in preventing the sale of a different or inferior article for the original product. It thus becomes his trade-mark, and he is entitled to protection in its exclusive use by the imposition of damages for its- wrongful appropriation by another, or by restraining others from applying it to their goods, and requiring them to account for profits made by the sale of goodá marked with it. Amoskeag Mfg. Co. v. David Trainer et al., 101 U. S. 51, 25 L. Ed. 993. However, under this rule, one cannot claim protection for the exclusive use of a trade-name which would give him a monopoly in the sale of any goods other than those of his own. Neither can a generic name or a name descriptive of an article of trade, of its qualities, ingredients, or characteristics, be employed as a trade-mark, and the exclusive use of it be entitled to legal protection. Canal Co. v. Clark, 13 Wall. 311, 20 L. Ed. 581; Amoskeag Mfg. Co. v. Trainer et al., supra.

The plaintiff’s petition seeks protection for plaintiff in its business on the ground that the letters “O K” constitute a trade-name, and that the defendant has been guilty of an infringement thereof; and' also upon the ground that defendant has been guilty of unfair competition.

It may be, conceded that under the evidence plaintiff is not entitled to the exclusive use of the letters “O K” as a trade-mark within the law of that subject, and that it has no proprietary interest in the use thereof in connection with its. business.

There would still remain the question as to whether defendant under the findings of the court should be restrained from continuing that kind of competition which is denominated as unfair and condemned by the courts.

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Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 844, 165 P. 136, 63 Okla. 311, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/o-k-bus-baggage-co-v-o-k-transfer-storage-co-okla-1916.