Q-Tips, Inc. v. Johnson & Johnson

108 F. Supp. 845, 95 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 264, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2378
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedNovember 20, 1952
DocketCiv. A. 10415, 28449
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 108 F. Supp. 845 (Q-Tips, Inc. v. Johnson & Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Q-Tips, Inc. v. Johnson & Johnson, 108 F. Supp. 845, 95 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 264, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2378 (D.N.J. 1952).

Opinion

FORMAN, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff, Q-Tips, Inc., a New York corporation, instituted two suits against defendant, Johnson & Johnson, a New Jersey corporation. The complaint in Civil Action No. 10,415 alleged infringement of plaintiff’s Patent No. 1,921,604 of August 8, 1933, 1 relating to a machine for manu--factoring medical swabs (hereinafter referred to as cotton tipped applicators or applicators) by defendant’s making, selling, and using a similar cotton tipped applicator machine. Plaintiff demanded an injunction and damages.

Johnson & Johnson’s answer denied infringement and urged invalidity of the patent in view of the prior art, lack of invention, non-eomplian'ce with the patent statutes with respect to describing and claiming the alleged improvement, and failure of the Patent Office to cite and properly apply the most relevant art. In addition, the answer alleged misuse of the patent and also certain grounds of unfair competition including false patent marking of the unpat-ented goods with respect to which the parties compete, interference with defendant’s stick supply and advertising to the trade in such a manner as to cause defendant’s customers to believe defendant was infringing a product-patent. A counterclaim alleged that Q-Tips, Inc., had attempted unlawfully to restrain trade and commerce and to secure for itself an unlawful monopoly of the business of selling cotton tipped applicators. Defendant demanded that the complaint be dismissed, that Q-Tips, Inc.’s patent be adjudged invalid and not infringed and that an injunction issue restraining it from, prosecuting any claim for infringement of. the patent or from doing other enumerated acts involving Johnson & Johnson or its privies •and that it pay treble damages.

Q-Tips, Inc., brought its second suit (Civil Action No. 284-49) under the United States trade-mark laws, alleging as a first cause of action that since prior to January 1, 1926, it had engaged in the “manufacture and sale of swabs for use as medical applicators, in baby care, for cosmetic purposes and many other usesthat the swabs consist of sanitary absorbent cotton attached to on'e or both ends of small sticks of wood and are packaged and sold under the trade-mark “Q-Tips”, for which a certificate of registration had been issued on July 9, 1934, under serial no. 309256 and that Johnson & Johnson subsequent to November of 1948 has infringed upon its trade-mark rights by using in commerce the name “Cotton Tips” in connection with the sale of applicators for the same purposes as those of Q-Tips, Inc., and in competition therewith.

For a second count Q-Tips, Inc., complained that Johnson & Johnson' by its use of the name “'Cotton Tips” and the appearance of its packages caused confusion upon *849 the part of the buying public and unfairly competes with the Q-Tips product.

Q-Tips, Inc., prayed for an' injunction to restrain Johnson & Johnson from using the name “Cotton Tips”; from infringing upon its trade-mark “Q-Tips”; from unfairly competing with it in' the use of the name “Cotton Tips” or in any other name having the dominant word “tips” in it or in using a package having the dress and appearance of its package and from continuing its campaign of “wilful and malicious dilution of the distinctiveness and value of plaintiff’s trade-mark by using and inducing others to use-the word ‘tips’ as a'term generically descriptive of swabs .or applicators.” It also sought an accounting.

Subsequent to the filing of the original complaint Q-Tips, Inc., filed an amended and supplementary complaint incorporating the first two counts as originally filed, and adding a third cause of action in which it ■ alleged that Johnson & Johnson had formulated a plan or scheme, wilfully and maliciously, to destroy the value of the plaintiff’s trade-mark “Q-Tips” in furtherance of which it embarked upon a campaign to create for the word “tips” a new meaning which it had never theretofore had, namely, swab or applicator. It alleged that Johnson & Johnson: designed to cause the word “tips” to become accepted as the principal generic term for the article described, thus diluting the value and distinctiveness of plaintiff’s trade-mark “Q-Tips”. It prayed • for damages (compensatory and punitive) on account of the infringement and a judgment that damages should be trebled.

Johnson & Johnson filed an answer to the amended and supplementary complaint in' which it denied the: validity and infringement of the trade-mark "Q-Tips” or that by the use of the words “Cotton Tips” or the appearance of its packages it has unfairly competed with Q-Tips, Inc., and sought to create for the word “tips” a new meaning designed to dilute or destroy the value and distinctiveness of the trade-mark of Q-Tips, Inc. It averred that its use of the words “cotton” and “tips” individually or together in the form of “Cotton Tips” is a use other than as a trade-mark, of a term or device which is descriptive of and used fairly and in' good faith only to describe to users a product manufactured and sold by it which consisted “of a small stick of which one or both tips are provided with absorbent cotton.”

The answer also alleged that the term “cotton tips” has been used by manufacturers for years to describe such goods without objection by plaintiff; that because of plaintiff’s conduct the word “Tips” in “Q-Tips” has never had any significance as an indication of origin and that “tips” has been used by the trade and public to indicate such goods; that the term “Q-Tips” has become the common descriptive name of a product on which a product patent has expired; that as a result of plaintiff’s abandonment of the alleged trade-mark “Q-Tips”, said mark has lost its significance as an indication of origin and has been used by the trade and public as the generic name of such product; that'plaintiff has used the term' “Q-Tips” exclusively in connection with this type of product so that the term now means to the public a certain type of applicator that may be made by any manufacturer ; that plaintiff has engaged in false patent marking and an attempt to secure a monopoly as noted in! connection with the patent suit; and that when plaintiff adopted the mark “Q-Tips”, the use of the word “tip” or “tips” by its predecessors and others had been such as to already have diluted any value, or distinctiveness in ‘said mark on cotton tipped applicators, and since then', and long before defendant began- to use the term “Cotton Tips”, plaintiff by acts of commission and omission continued to dilute and destroy any alleged value and distinctiveness of the mark.

A counterclaim was entered similar to that filed with the answer in the patent suit. The defendant sought judgment dismissing the complaint, adjudicating that the mark “Q-Tips” is invalid, that plaintiff’s registration of “Q-Tips” be cancelled, that the plaintiff be enjoined from prosecuting the patent suit, that plaintiff be'enjoined from engaging in restraint of trade and unfair competition with respect to defendant, and that the defendant be awarded treble damages, costs and attorneys’ fees in con *850 sequence of plaintiff’s monopolistic and unfair practices.

Defendant moved for summary judgment in the patent case grounded on • the contention that plaintiff was barred from suing on its patent having misused it by licensing applicator making machinery embodying the alleged invention of Patent No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 F. Supp. 845, 95 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 264, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/q-tips-inc-v-johnson-johnson-njd-1952.