Ramazzotti v. Banfi Products Corp.

52 Misc. 2d 593, 151 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 551, 276 N.Y.S.2d 413, 1966 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1409
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 52 Misc. 2d 593 (Ramazzotti v. Banfi Products Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ramazzotti v. Banfi Products Corp., 52 Misc. 2d 593, 151 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 551, 276 N.Y.S.2d 413, 1966 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1409 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1966).

Opinion

Morris E. Spector, J.

This is an action in equity for injunction and for damages, both compensatory and punitive. The action arises from a charge of violation by defendant of plaintiff’s rights in a trade-mark, and in other acts of unfair competition by defendant with plaintiff.

Plaintiff, a foreign corporation, was incorporated under the laws of the Kingdom of Italy. Plaintiff is the successor in interest to a precedent Italian organization. It is obvious that the operations of plaintiff were those of an Italian family which has been engaged, since 1815, in the compounding, manufacturing and selling of a liquid preparation. That preparation has been sold by plaintiff and its predecessor in Italy, and in many of the countries of Europe and South America. The preparation has become identified, in connection with plaintiff, as “ Amaro Felsina Bamazzotti ”. The preparation, the composition and preparation of which are not claimed to be the subject of letters patent or as proprietary matter, utilizes various herbs and minerals, with alcohol as one of the liquid ingredients in which the other ingredients are dissolved. This preparation was recognized as having medicinal advantages for relief of headaches, indigestion and general debility. The preparation, as sold by plaintiff in Italy and the other countries, had an alcoholic content of 60% by volume. There was no evidence that plaintiff had distributed the preparation in the United States and Canada before defendant came on the scene.

Defendant, a New York corporation, in or about 1922 sought from plaintiff or its predecessor the right to be the sole distributor, in North America and Puerto Bico, of the preparation. At that time," the Volstead Act was in force. Thus, the sale of a product with so high an alcoholic content was unlawful. An agreement was reached between plaintiff and defendant for the production of the preparation in such a manner as to abide by the law, and to be available for sale for medicinal purposes, but still to be sold under the goodwill of plaintiff. For this purpose, the alcoholic content was to be reduced to 39%, and [595]*595the concentrate, including the herbs, was to be supplied by plaintiff, and the product was to be sold under the aegis of the name of plaintiff, according to the formula required under the circumstances for proper sale under the then existing law. The product was compounded in Italy by and under the control of plaintiff, and then was shipped from there to defendant in the United States for sale by defendant under the goodwill of plaintiff’s name.

In 1926, plaintiff filed an application to register a trade-mark which was then being used by defendant upon the bottles of the preparation being merchandised by defendant in the United States. That application was in the name of plaintiff. Registration No. 236,435 was issued by the United States Patent Office to plaintiff on December 13, 1927. That registration is considered to be of minor significance in the determination here, except for other facts to which reference will be made.

Included in the matter shown in the drawings of that registration is the word “Amaro”. Also included in the matter shown in the drawings of that registration are the words “Felsina Ramazzotti”, and a design which appears to be a coat of arms, and other words. It is made clear that the word ‘ ‘ Amaro ’ ’ is Italian, and is admitted to mean ‘ ‘ bitter ’ ’. The registration bears the disclaimer: ‘ ‘ Without relinquishing or forfeiting any of its common-law rights, and solely for the purpose of trade-mark registration in the United States Patent Office, applicant disclaims the right to the exclusive use of the word ‘ Amaro ’, apart from the trade-mark as shown in the drawing ”.

In 1938 when war was imminent in Europe two things took place which are considered to be significant here. First, the parties apparently considered that it was possible that plaintiff might become an alien enemy by reason of the impending war, and that the rights in the registered trade-mark might be taken over by the United States Government. Plaintiff and defendant entered into what was intended to be a trust agreement, not recorded, by which defendant was to become the legal owner of the registration, but only as trustee for plaintiff until the clouds of war had dissipated, at which time the understanding made it clear that the rights in the registration and in the trade-mark were to be those of plaintiff as if the assignment, the agreement, had never existed.

Also, there was considered to be the possibility that the source of supply for defendant of the concentrate, including the herbs, would be cut off if hostilities went to that point. Thus, as the evidence shows, defendant purchased from plaintiff a large [596]*596amount, indeed 10 times the amount previously consumed by defendant in any annual period, of the herbs and other ingredients for the compounding of the preparation, so that defendant would be in a position, for the duration of such hostilities, to remain in business. That was in 1938.

Defendant, from 1938 to the end of hostilities, continued to bottle the preparation according to the formula under which plaintiff had theretofore bottled the preparation for defendant. Then, after the war, the relationship between plaintiff and defendant was resumed.

Plaintiff, at the end of the 20-year period, renewed trade-mark registration No. 236,435 for another term of 20 years. This renewal, as the original registration, was in the name of plaintiff. No mention obviously was made of the assignment which had been made back in 1938. Defendant, at that time, or during the entire period until the termination of the relationship between plaintiff and defendant to which reference will be made, never asserted any claim against the registration, or the renewal of the registration, or the rights of plaintiff in that registration and the trade-mark.

The relationship between plaintiff and defendant had continued throughout this time without any form of written agreement, as such, except correspondence. The relationship between plaintiff and defendant obviously had been that in which defendant had been distributor for plaintiff up to the time of the war. After the war, the relationship between the parties was formalized by" an agreement, in a letter of ratification from defendant to plaintiff, by which Banfi (defendant) acknowledged its relationship to plaintiff as a licensee. In that letter from defendant to plaintiff, dated October 29, 1946, defendant wrote: “Banfi firm engages itself to report to Ramazzotti (for all pertinent purposes) any circumstances which might compromise the protection of the patent and trade-mark of Amaro Felsina Ramazzotti and to cooperate for restraining counterfeits, trademark, imitations, illegal use of the name, trade frauds or disloyal acts of competition damaging to the product, applying to the Ramazzotti firm for such mandates and powers of attorney needed for taking action ’ ’. There was the further provision: ‘ ‘ The Banfi firm engages itself to assist, in the sense of cooperating with personnel which the Ramazzotti firm might eventually despatch for inspection on the spot its working procedures, or for possible verifications or controls in connection with rights under this contract.”

Defendant thus had established itself in the relationship of a licensee of plaintiff. As to this, defendant has raised questions [597]*597as to “ supervision and control”, as to the origin of the dress of the package in which the preparation was sold by defendant, and even as to the ownership of the trade-mark.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Misc. 2d 593, 151 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 551, 276 N.Y.S.2d 413, 1966 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramazzotti-v-banfi-products-corp-nysupct-1966.