Reddy-Kilowatt, Inc. v. Mid-Carolina Electric Cooperative, Inc.

142 F. Supp. 851, 110 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 25, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3214
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. South Carolina
DecidedJune 15, 1956
DocketNo. 3794
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 142 F. Supp. 851 (Reddy-Kilowatt, Inc. v. Mid-Carolina Electric Cooperative, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reddy-Kilowatt, Inc. v. Mid-Carolina Electric Cooperative, Inc., 142 F. Supp. 851, 110 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 25, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3214 (southcarolinaed 1956).

Opinion

HARRY E. WATKINS, District Judge.

This is an action for injunction and damages based upon alleged infringement of trade mark and service mark, and unfair competition. Plaintiff’s mark or symbol is an animated, personalized, humanized character called “Reddy Kilowatt”, symbolizing electricity. It is used only by privately owned public utility companies in a system of advertising electrical service and promoting the use of electric power as the public servant. It is used in advertisements to dramatize the many services which electricity can perform by showing Reddy Kilowatt performing such services with or without electricity, or delivering the promotional message of the sponsor, sometimes to promote sales and often to promote public relations. In this action plaintiff challenges the right of defendant, National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, (hereinafter called Association) and its member cooperatives to advertise their services and to promote their public re-[853]*853Nations through the use of an animated, personalized, humanized, character called "“Willie Wiredhand”. The question is whether the two characters, as used, are confusingly similar.

Findings of Fact.

Plaintiff is a Delaware corporation, incorporated June 26,1953, a few weeks before this action was filed. Upon incorporation, it took over the business previously conducted by Ashton B. Collins, who sometimes did business as Reddy Kilowatt Service. Collins owns 80'% of the stock of plaintiff and the remaining 20% is owned jointly by 109 privately owned power companies who are licensees of plaintiff. The business of plaintiff is the same as the business of its predecessor, Ashton B, Collins. Since January 1, 1934, when Collins secured his first licensee until the business was transferred to plaintiff, Collins was engaged in the business of preparing, furnishing and distributing advertising, public relations and promotional material to privately owned power companies who were his licensees.

The central figure around which this material was built was the fanciful character, Reddy Kilowatt, which was and is used for the purposes mentioned above, and is also used to identify the services of plaintiff's business to its licensees, and to identify the licensees to the public in the territory of their operations. The material is prepared in New York and sent to the licensees in the various states where they operate. A vast amount of material is submitted to the licensees to use or not use as they wish, including a so-called “Reddy Kilowatt Mat Service” which shows proofs of mats that are available to the licensees and which they could order for use in their advertising; a magazine called “Reddy News” containing reproductions of advertisements of licensees, and other advertisements proposed by plaintiff; news items and articles of interest to licensees. Some of the material is addressed to the general public as distinguished from the customers of licensees. Such advertising by the licensees covers a wide area.

Plaintiff charged as a service fee to its licensees one cent for each connected meter per year. At the trial Collins estimated that his licensees had about twenty-nine million connected meters, which indicated a gross income from this source of $290,000 per year. At the time of trial plaintiff’s staff of employees consisted of 21 persons.

On January 2,1934, Collins secured his first licensee, Philadelphia Electric Company. At the time of trial plaintiff had 188 licensees in the United States and 38 in foreign countries. Plaintiff and its predecessor consistently have refused to grant licenses or furnish Reddy Kilowatt material to municipally owned electric systems, public utility districts or electric cooperatives such as those financed by loans from the Rural Electric Administration. All requests for such services by such electric distributors have been refused. Plaintiff and its predecessor did business only with privately owned electric light and power companies.

Defendant Association was organized in 1942 and incorporated in the District of Columbia by a group of leaders of the rural electrification program from several states who had gathered in Washington to appear before Congressional Committees. The purpose of the organization was to render to rural electric cooperatives which had been financed under the provisions of the Federal Rural Electrification Act of 1935, services which they individually could not afford or could not otherwise provide. It is a federation of rural electric systems or cooperatives throughout the United States in all states of the union except New Hampshire and Rhode Island. At the end of December, 1955, there were 928 members, including 891 operating systems, 33 statewide associations and 4 regional associations. There are approximately 3,700,000 individual members of the operating cooperatives. Dues are paid by the cooperatives at the rate of 10 cents per connected meter per year. The association helps the rural electric systems achieve efficiency and stability. Of the rural electric cooperatives in this country over 90i% [854]*854are members of the association. Defendant Mid-Carolina is one such rural electric cooperative, having its principal office in Lexington, S. C. It was organized pursuant to the State Electric Cooperative Act of South Carolina, with funds borrowed from the Rural Electrification Administration in Washington. It was organized by farmers who did not have electric service and could not get it in any other manner. It has 4,120 members and 1,038 miles of rural electric lines in four counties in South Carolina. None of the members is located in any incorporated town. The association prepares its promotional material in Washington, D. C., and sends it to its member systems in the various states. The plaintiff and defendants are all engaged in interstate commerce. About 15% of the total power distributed by the member cooperatives is generated by the members themselves, more than 50% is purchased from privately owned public utilities, and the remainder is purchased from agencies of the Federal Government. A small quantity of power is purchased from municipally owned systems and state agencies.

Long prior to the adoption of Reddy Kilowatt by Collins, animated characters had been in common and widespread use as trade marks, and in advertising, promotion and public relations work for all kinds of products and services. Exhibits D-W; D-X; D-DD and D-EE are collections of such materials. Exhibit D-X is a collection of 258 registrations of animated characters granted by the U. S. Patent Office, illustrating the wide use of such characters as trade marks for a great variety of products and services. The fanciful, animated, humanized character made up from mechanical or electrical parts for use in advertising and promotional work did not originate with Collins. See Exhibit D-EE showing the following: Saturday Evening Post June 10, 1911, Hot Point, Miss Glad Iron and Miss Sad Iron, showing an animated electric iron; Saturday Evening Post (1920) French Battery & Carbon Co, showing Mr. Ray-O-Lite in connection with batteries. This character has a badge made up of jagged lines to simulate lightning or electricity. Other animated characters are there shown.

Prior to the date of Collins’ first license agreement on January 2, 1934, other animated characters were used as shown in Exhibit D-EE, including Planters Mr. Peanut, Ingram’s animated shaving cream jar and tube, Three Minute animated oat kernels and animated characters by Arkansas Power & Light Company, named “The Kilo-Watts”.

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142 F. Supp. 851, 110 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 25, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reddy-kilowatt-inc-v-mid-carolina-electric-cooperative-inc-southcarolinaed-1956.