Pepper v. Labrot

8 F. 29
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 8 F. 29 (Pepper v. Labrot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pepper v. Labrot, 8 F. 29 (circtdky 1881).

Opinion

Matthews,

Circuit Justice. This is a bill in equity filed October 23, 1880, the complainant being a citizen of the state of New York, and the defendants citizens of Kentucky.

. It is alleged that both parties are, and have been, engaged in the manufacture and sale of whisky. The complainant claims to be the originator, inventor, and owner of a certain trade-mark and brand for whisky make by him, consisting of the words “Old Oscar Pepper,” and also of an abbreviation thereof, consisting of the letters “O. 0. P.” He alleges that the said words and letters were and are a fanciful and arbitrary title and trade-mark and brand intended to designate and identify whisky of his manufacture, the use of which he began in 1874, continued since by branding and marking the words on each barrel, and using the letters as an abbreviation in correspondence and contracts concerning the article; the whisky so designated having acquired that name, and being well and favorably known thereby. He says that the said words and trade-mark were made up in fact of the family name of . the complainant, and embodied the name of his father, and had never before been so used. He avers that the whisky ;made by him, and so branded, marked, and known, was very carefully manufactured, and of excellent quality, and of great reputation in the market, commanding a ready sale at profitable prices, and was identified by said trade-mark as of the complainant’s make, whereby the said trade-nTark has became of great value to him. He alleges that the trade-mark, “Old Oscar Pepper,” was used by him by burning the same upon and into the heads of barrels containing whisky [31]*31made by him, in a form set out as an exhibit to the bill. A copy is bore set out as follows:

The same device on a smaller scale was printed upon the letter heads and bill heads and business cards used by him in correspondence, and other business, concerning his whisky; and was also attached to and pasted upon all small packages and samples of the whisky made by him, and' was used to identify, and was universally recognized as identifying, the whisky made by him.

On November 13, 1877, the complainant procured a certificate of the registration o„ said trade-mark under the laws of the United States.

The bill charges that the defendants have sought to appropriate the complainant’s trade-mark to their own use, and are using, upon barrels of whisky made by them, a similar device, a copy of which is exmbited. It is as follows:

It is alleged that this is done by the defendants with the wrongful [32]*32and fraudulent design to procure the custom and trade of persons who are or have been in the habit of buying, vending, or using the genuine whisky made by the complainant, and of illegally and fraudulently promoting the introduction and sale of the defendants’ own whisky, under the cover and reputation of the complainant’s trademark, and of inducing unsuspecting persons to purchase the whiskies of defendants as and for the genuine “Old Oscar Pepper” whisky, manufactured by the complainant. It is charged, also, that with like intent the defendants are using the same device and trade-mark upon their letter-heads, and business cards, and other papers and advertisements, and upon packages containing their whisky. It is also charged that this conduct of the defendants is injurious to the complainant in the sale of his whisky, and in the profits thereof, and that, by reason of the inferior quality of the whisky sold by defendants under such trade-mark, the reputation of the complainant’s whisky is greatly prejudiced and injured in the markets of the country, and a fraud and- deception practiced upon the public, many of whom are induced to purchase the defendants’ whisky, believing it to be the manufacture of the complainant.

The bill accordingly prays for an injunction and an account.

The defendants filed an answer in which they admit that they have been and are engaged in manufacturing and selling whisky, their distillery being in Woodford county, Kentucky, and long known and designated as the “Old Oscar Pepper Distillery.” They deny that the complainant is the originator or owner of the trade-mark or brand for whisky made by him, as claimed, and deny that the words “Old Oscar Pepper,” or the abbreviation of them, by the letters “O. 0. P.,” have ever been used as an arbitrary or fanciful title or trade-mark for whisky, or that they were ever so used by the complainant, and allege that they were never used by him except in connection with the word “distillery, ” and then only for the purpose of showing that the whisky in reference to which they were so used was manufactured at and was the product of the Old Oscar Pepper Distillery. The defendants claim that the use of the same by the complainant as a brand for their whisky, manufactured elsewhere, would be a fraud on the public, as well as on the defendants. They say that several years since the complainant became the owner of 33 acres of land in Woodford county, Kentucky, known as the land used by Oscar Pepper for distillery purposes, upon which there was a distillery, and machinery, warehouse, and other improvements; that said distillery, during the life-time of Oscar Pepper, the father [33]*33of the complainant, became famous because of the superior quality of the whisky there produced, which was attributed, by dealers in whisky, to the peculiar character and properties of the water used in the process of distillation; that in 1874 the complainant, in company with one E. J. Taylor, Jr., with whom he was associated in business, operated said distillery, and formally named it the “Old Oscar Pepper Distillery,” and procured a large number of iron signs to be made and distributed throughout the country, containing a correct drawing of the distillery and warehouse building, and an accurate ■view of the old Oscar Pepper homestead or dwelling, which drawing and view they surrounded with the words, in a circular form, above the same, “Old Oscar Pepper Distillery,” and below, in a straight line, “Woodford Co., Kentucky,” and thus, as is claimed, fixed and determined the name of said distillery. They also procured an iron brand to be made, and with it burnt into the head of each barrel of whisky, manufactured in said distillery, the words—

Old Oscar Pepper Distillery.
Hand-made Sour Mash.
James E. Pepper,
Proprietor,
Woodford Comity, Ky.,

—for the purpose, as is alleged, of identifying it as the product of the Old Oscar Pepper Distillery. It is also alleged that the complainant advertised his business in a circular, as follows:

“ Having put in the most thorough running order the old distillery premises of my father, the late Oscar Pepper, (now owned by mo,) I offer to the first-class trade of this country a hand-made, sonr-masli, pure copper whisky of perfect excellence. The celebrity attained by the whisky made by my fattier was aseribable to the excellent water used, (a very superior spring,) and the grain grown on the farm adjoining by himself, and to the process observed by J ames Crow, after his death by William F. Mitchell, his distillers. I am now running the distillery with the same distiller, the samo water, the same formulas, and grain grown upon the same farm.”

He also circulated a similar certificate from his distiller, Mitchell, who said:

“ I am employed by James E.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

The Children's Bootery v. Sutker
107 So. 345 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1926)
Bee Building Co. v. Peters Trust Co.
183 N.W. 302 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1921)
Sieward v. Denechaud
45 So. 561 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1908)
New York Dental Parlors v. Froon
1 Ill. Cir. Ct. 460 (Illinois Circuit Court, 1899)
Millbrae Co. v. Taylor
37 P. 235 (California Supreme Court, 1894)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 F. 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pepper-v-labrot-circtdky-1881.