P. E. Sharpless Co. v. Levin

1 Pa. D. & C. 279, 1921 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 98
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedOctober 24, 1921
DocketNo. 2323
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Pa. D. & C. 279 (P. E. Sharpless Co. v. Levin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
P. E. Sharpless Co. v. Levin, 1 Pa. D. & C. 279, 1921 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 98 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Monaghan, J.,

The plaintiff, P. E. Sharpless Company, a corporation, filed its bill in equity June 24, 1919, charging the defendants, Levin Brothers, with unfair competition in the sale of Neufchatel cheese, by means of an imitative and deceptive label; the defendants filed an answer denying the unfair competition. A replication was duly filed and the cause was heard on bill, answer, replication and proofs. After the close of the plaintiff’s case the defendants offered no testimony.

The prayers of the bill are that the defendants and each of them, and their servants, agents and employees, be restrained from any further use in unfair competition of their label (Exhibit “B”), or any substantially similar thereto, now used by them in fraudulent imitation of plaintiff’s label (Exhibit “A”), or in any other manner imitating, substantially, the mode of packing so-called “Neufchatel” cheese in cylindrical packages of tin-foil with the aforesaid label printed thereon in blue ink; that defendants be decreed to account; general relief.

Findings of fact.

1. The plaintiff corporation is the successor in business of P. E. Sharpless & Co. and its predecessors, and is now and has been, since its incorporation in 1904, engaged in the business of producing, manufacturing and selling dairy products, including, since 1907, a grade or type of soft or uncured cheese, made from whole milk and packaged and sold by it under the name or title of “Neufchatel Style,” and by the general trade as “Neufchatel.” Said product has always been made and packaged by the plaintiff corporation at Concordville, Pennsylvania.

2. Soft or uncured cheese, when made from whole milk, as distinguished from skim milk, contains a relatively larger percentage of butter fat, and is, for that reason, commercially identified and graded in the general trade as “Neufchatel.”

3. The nutritive value and keeping quality of soft, uncured cheese, made from milk, depend upon its greater or less percentage of butter fat content.

4. The plaintiff has established a large business in the product in question, and has acquired a reputation for its good quality, which it maintains at a high standard of butter fat content.

5. The defendants, since 1913, sell at their establishment, No. 115 Pine Street, Philadelphia, a soft or uncured cheese, packaged and labeled as Neuf-chatel style.

6. Both plaintiff and the defendants package their products in small cylindrical rolls, of substantially the same size, enclosed in tin-foil wrapping, on which is printed in blue ink a rectangular-shaped label the length of the roll, the label purporting to indicate the character of the contents. The respective labels of the two parties, as they appear on the cheese packages produced in evidence, are correctly shown (except as to the blue color of the printing) in the photographic Exhibits “A” and “B” annexed to the bill of complaint.

7. Plaintiff’s tin-foil wrapper, including the label printed thereon, has been the same as shown in Exhibit “A” since 1907, except that in March, 1913, it adopted and used thereon and since the word “Pesco” in substitution for a pictorial representation of a cow in the same place on the label. In all other respects the plaintiff’s original and the modified label (Exhibit “A”) were [281]*281identical. The modified label (Exhibit “A”) is not in substantial variation of the original label used by plaintiff from 1907 until 1918.

8. Plaintiff’s tin-foil wrappers, including the label printed thereon, were made for it by Lehmaier, Schwartz & Co., No. 211 East Twenty-second Street, New York City. Defendants’ tin-foil wrappers, with the label printed thereon, were obtained by them from the same person and place.

9. Plaintiff was the first and continues to be the only user of the descriptive title “Neufchatel Style,” except and until the defendants entered the field, about 1913, and used the same words on their label until the present.

10. The cheese product of the plaintiff, sold under its original label of 1907 and the modified label of March, 1913, averages 20.70 per cent, butter fat content. The cheese product sold by the defendants under their label since 1913 is of approximately 11.16 per cent, butter fat content.

11. Plaintiff’s label on its product, Neufchatel cheese, by the year 1913 had become so associated with it that the public, from its label, whether in the original or modified form, identified it as the product of the plaintiff.

12. The plaintiff sells its said cheese product mainly to jobbers at wholesale, with occasional sales to retailers and consumers, and has a large jobbing trade for it in the southeastern section of the City of Philadelphia.

13. The retail sales to consumers, of the products of both parties litigant, in the southeastern section of Philadelphia are largely to Jewish and Polish consumers, many of whom are incapable of reading.

14. Plaintiff’s sales of its said cheese so wrapped and labeled (Exhibit “A”) has materially decreased since the defendants entered the market with their cheese product wrapped and labeled as shown in Exhibit “B.”

15. Several jobbers or storekeepers who formerly bought and still purchase from the plaintiff its cheese product so wrapped and labeled (Exhibit “A”) now buy from defendants their product so labeled (Exhibit “B”), and at a price much below plaintiff’s price, though retailing it to consumers at the same price in some instances.

16. The sole features of exact non-identity in the respective labels of the parties litigant are: On plaintiff’s labels is printed “P. E. Sharpless Co.” at the extreme top; in the centre appears the capital letters forming the word “Pesco” on the present or modified label (in the original label appeared a picture of a cow occupying the same relative position as the word Pesco), with the words “Trade Mark” in smaller type beneath, and the words “At Coneordville” preceding the abbreviation “Pa.” On the defendants’ label, at the extreme top is printed “Guernsey Brand;” the word “Cremo” in the centre, in capital letters, with a few short printer’s decorative lines beneath the word; a scroll appears in the upper portion of the label to the left of the centre.

17. The words “P. E. Sharpless Co.” and “Guernsey Brand” are in a relatively inconspicuous place on the respective labels. “Guernsey Brand” is suggestive of the picture of the cow, contained in plaintiff’s original label, and at the same time this inscription on the defendants’ label visually fills in the same space occupied by “P. E. Sharpless Co.” in plaintiff’s original and modified labels. Each inscription contains thirteen letters, and the type used in each label is of very nearly the same size, and when observed at a short distance therefrom are of somewhat similar appearance.

18. The words “Cremo” on the defendants’ label and the picture of the cow on the plaintiff’s original label, side by side, are not the same; but at a distance, or when the respective products labeled with the original label of the plaintiff and the word “Cremo” of the defendants, respectively, are inter[282]*282spersed in a box in which the products are packed, the difference can be detected only upon close examination.

The words “Pesco” in the plaintiff’s modified label, and “Cremo” on the defendants’ label, each consists of the same number of letters and the same terminal letter, occupying the same relative position on each label.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Pa. D. & C. 279, 1921 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-e-sharpless-co-v-levin-pactcomplphilad-1921.