Pennsylvania Rubber Co. v. Dreadnaught Tire & Rubber Co.

225 F. 138, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1232
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJuly 24, 1915
DocketNo. 330
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 225 F. 138 (Pennsylvania Rubber Co. v. Dreadnaught Tire & Rubber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania Rubber Co. v. Dreadnaught Tire & Rubber Co., 225 F. 138, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1232 (D. Del. 1915).

Opinion

BRADFORD, District Judge.

The Pennsylvania Rubber Company, a corporation of Pennsylvania, has brought its bill against the Dreadnaught Tire 8f Rubber Company, of Delaware, charging the defendant with unfair competition in trade, and praying for an injunction and an accounting. The bill avers, in substance, among other things, that the complainant has long been a manufacturer of rubber tires for vellido wheels; that, among other thing's, it produces anti-skid tires for automobile service of a peculiar style and calls them Vacuum Cup tires; that such tires are and have long been widely and favorably known as Vacuum Cup tires or Vacuum Cup Tread tires; that the complainant's trade in such rubber tires is large and valuable to it; that ¡he name Vacuum Cup is and long has been established in the tub-be; tire industry as the name oi the complainant’s product only; that its rights therein and connected therewith have been universally recognized and respected; that the defendant recently and since the acquisition by the complainant of its rights above referred to has put upon the market anti-skid automobile tires of substantially the same peculiar style as the complainant’s above referred to, and marked and advertised and is marking and advertising them as Vacuum Tread tires; that the effect of such action on the. part of the defendant is to lead the purchasing public to believe that such tires so called, marked and advertised, are the product of the complainant; that the defendant’s agents [140]*140and retail dealers in the defendant’s tires have sold the same as and for the complainant’s Vacuum Cup tires; that the defendant’s intention in adopting the words Vacuum Tread as and for its tires has been and is to take advantage of the reputation acquired by the complainant in its manufacture and sale of Vacuum Cup tires, and thereby to represent its tires as the tires made by the complainant; that the complainant has given the defendant written notice of its rights in the premises and requested that defendant’s acts herein complained of cease; and that while the defendant has acknowledged the receipt of such notice the acts complained of continue. The complainant prays that the defendant, its officers, etc., be enjoined from selling or offering for sale any vehicle tires under the name Vacuum Tread or under any other name so nearly resembling the name Vacuum Cup as to cause confusion in trade and from selling vehicle tires of the defendant’s manufacture in response to orders for Vacuum Cup tires or for tires under any name so closely resembling the name Vacuum Cup as to cause such confusion; 'that damages be awarded to the complainant to be computed by a master ; and that an account thereof be taken. The defendant in its answer denies that the tires made by it are of substantially the same peculiar style as the complainant’s tires, or that the purchasing public is being misled in the premises either by the style of the tire or the words used descriptively of them or otherwise, or that the defendant’s agents and’ dealers with its knowledge or consent have sold its tires as and for the tires of the complainant, but on the contrary avers that the defendant’s tires are of a pattern, color, design and style so different from those of the complainant as to be easily and readily distinguishable from them; that the color of the complainant’s tires is brown while that of the defendant’s is light gray; that the defendant’s tires are marked, advertised and sold as “Dreadnaught Vacuum Tread Tires”; that they are sold at a lower price than the complainant’s tires and are better than them; that while the complainant’s tires are guaranteed to give but 4,500 miles of service those of the defendant are guaranteed to give 5,000 miles of service; that the intention of the defendant has been to distinguish its tires from any other tire and to build up a separate trade and a valuable good will, founded upon a superior tire at a lower price; that the use oh the word “Vacuum” is not new but has been used descriptively when applied to the various makes of tires wherein the principle of a vacuum or suction is used to- prevent skidding; that the word “Tread” is a term universally applied to that portion of a pneumatic tire which comes in contact with the roadway; that automobile tires are known to the purchasing public by the name of the manufacturer thereon and not by the terms descriptive of their various rough treads; that the defendant’s tires are advertised and marked in large letters of distinctive design “Dreadnaught”; that the complainant advertises tires bearing the monogram “V C” together with the words “Oil-Proof, Vacuum Cup, Non-Skid,” while the defendant’s tires bear the words and are advertised as “Dreadnaught Vacuum Tread” tires, the word “Dreadnaught” always appearing prominently and conspicuously; and that the defendant is in good faith engaged in the manufacture and sale of automobile tires in Baltimore, [141]*141and the sale of the same throughout the country, and is employing in the said industry large numbers of men.

f 1 ] It is somewhat remarkable that, while the counsel for the complainant, both in their oral argument and in their printed brief, have strenuously insisted that the evidence presents a case of infringement of a common law trade-mark consisting of the words “Vacuum Cup,” as well as that of unfair competition in trade, the term “trade-mark” does not once occur in the bill, and from beginning to end there is not the slightest suggestion in it that the words “Vacuum Cup” denote anything of the kind. Thej case made by the bill and denied by the answer is one of unfair competition in trade pure and simple. The hill does not attempt to set forth the essential elements or prerequisites of a trade-mark. There is not even any allegation that the complainant was the first to adopt and exclusively appropriate the words “Vacuum Cup” in connection with rubber anti-skid tires, or in any other conned ion. The bill evidently was prepared diverso intuitu, and the claim now made of a trade-mark consisting of the words “Vacuum Cup” strongly impresses this court as an afterthought. There are several facts which confirm this impression. A short time prior to the institution of this suit and as a preliminary to it the counsel for the complainant wrote to the defendant, August 3, 1914:

‘•(>ur client, Pennsylvania Rubber Company, lays before us the information that you are advertising and selling tires under the phrase ‘Vacuum Tread.’ We write to give you notice that the Pennsylvania Company considers the Xihrase ‘Vacuum Tread’ such a. near resemblance to the xihrase ‘Vacuum Cup’ as to be calculated to deceive, and that they will not countenance other advertisement and sale of tires under the name ‘Vacuum Tread.’ ”

If the counsel for the complainant understood or had been informed that the defendant in using the words “vacuum tread” was infringing any supposed trade-mark right of the complainant in or to the words “vacuum cup” in connection with the manufacture and sale of the complainant’s product, it seems unaccountable that in the above letter, written shortly before the filing of the bill and intended to complain of the alleged grievance or wrong suffered by the complainant at the hands of the defendant, there should not have been the slightest reference to trade-mark infringement, and that the communication should have had reference exclusively to unfair competition in trade.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 F. 138, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-rubber-co-v-dreadnaught-tire-rubber-co-ded-1915.