Regent Shoe Manufacturing Co. v. Haaker

106 N.W. 595, 75 Neb. 426, 1906 Neb. LEXIS 400
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1906
DocketNo. 14,061
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 106 N.W. 595 (Regent Shoe Manufacturing Co. v. Haaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Regent Shoe Manufacturing Co. v. Haaker, 106 N.W. 595, 75 Neb. 426, 1906 Neb. LEXIS 400 (Neb. 1906).

Opinion

Oldham, C.

At and prior to the year 1897, the George Richardson Company was engaged, in the manufacture of men’s shoes at Dubuque, Iowa, and in May of that year the company began to brand or mark certain of its makes with the name of “Regent.” It subsequently sought to obtain the exclusive right to this term as a trade-mark, and to the .accomplishment of this end purchased a patent thereto from one Stephen E. Miller in the year 1900. After the purchase of the patent on this trade-mark, the Richard[428]*428son company claimed the exclusive right to the use of the term “Regent” in marking its shoes. It registered this name as a trade-mark under the laws of six of the western states, including Wisconsin, Colorado, Illinois, Minnesota, Michigan, and Iowa, in the months of July and August, 1903. At this time the Williams Shoe Company was engaged in the business of jobbing shoes in Omaha, and had been selling shoes marked “Regent” since its organization in 1902. Prior to that time its predecessor, the Williams-Hayward Shoe, Company, had likewise been selling shoes marked with this brand. In April, 1904, a new corporation was formed under the name of “Regent Shoe Manufacturing Company,” plaintiff in this cause of action, which bought out the rights of the Richardson company and the Williams Shoe Company. Under this new arrangement the entire plant of the Richardson Company at'Dubuque was moved to Omaha to engage in the manufacture and sale of men’s boots, shoes and rubbers. The articles of incorporation provided, among other things, that “the general nature of the business to be transacted shall be the manufacturing, buying, selling, handling and consigning, of shoes, shoe findings and rubber goods of all kinds and descriptions, both at wholesale and retail * * * and may do any and all such other acts and things as may be incidental to the main powers of the corporation.” In 1897 the defendants and cross-petitioners in this cause of action, Robert B. Haaker and Catherine Haaker, engaged in the retail business of selling men’s boots, shoes and rubbers on South Fifteenth street in Omaha, Nebraska, under the trade-name of “Regent Shoe Company.” Under this name they have advertised and built up a large and increasing trade in Omaha and vicinity. Their first stock of shoes were all branded “Regent.” Part of these were purchased from the George Richardson Company, and part from other manufacturers using the same mark. Afterwards the defendants distinguished the Regent shoe which they offered for sale by their own patented trade-mark, “Onimod.” In April, 1900, a contro[429]*429versy arose between the Richardson Company and the defendants as to the latter’s right to sell Regent shoes not of the manufacture of the Richardson Company; and, after the consolidation of the Richardson Company and the Williams Shoe Company and the organization and incorporation of the Regent Shoe Manufacturing Company, the present cause of action was instituted to restrain the defendants from the use of the trade mark “Regent” on shoes not purchased from and manufactured by the plaintiff. Defendants answered plaintiff’s petition; denying that plaintiff was entitled to the exclusive use of the trade-mark “Regent” by reason of its purchase of such right from the Richardson Company, assignee of Stephen E. Miller, it being alleged that the trade-mark “Regent” was in common use by manufacturers of boots and shoes throughout the United States long before it was attempted to be patented by Miller. Defendants also, by way of cross-petition, asked, in substance, that plaintiff be restrained from engaging in the business of selling shoes in Omaha and vicinity under the name of Regent Shoe Manufacturing Company, as such name was used by plaintiff in fraud of the good-will of defendants, and for the purpose of deceiving the public and unfairly obtaining trade from the defendants. The cross-bill also asked that the plaintiff be restrained from selling shoes to the firm of W. S. Striker Company, retailers, who, it was alleged, were conducting business and selling Regent shoes near defendants’ place of business, and in fraud of their rights, for the sole benefit of the plaintiff, the real owner of this retail store. On issues thus joined and after some testimony had been taken, which clearly established that the trade-mark “Regent” had been in common use before its pretended patent by S. E. Miller, plaintiff dismissed its cause of action, and the suit proceeded on the relief prayed for in the defendants’ cross-bill. At the close of the testimony the court found all the issues in favor of the defendants and entered a decree as prayed for in the cross-bill; and to reverse this decree the plaintiff has appealed to this court.

[430]*430At the outset of the opinion it might be well to say that two questions once involved, in this controversy are clearly established by the record and the admissions of the parties to the action. One is that the trade-mark “Regent” on shoes is a mark to which neither of these litigants has an exclusive privilege, and, so far as' the sale of shoes bearing this brand is concerned, neither has any right against the other which courts of conscience can recognize. The second proposition is that the cross-petitioners have clearly shown themselves entitled to the use of the trade-name of “Regent - Shoe Company” for the purpose of retailing boots, shoes and rubbers in the city of Omaha, Nebraska, and its immediate vicinity, and that, as incident to this right, they are entitled to protection against unfair competition in their particular line of business by the use of a namev so similar to their trade-name as to probably deceive the public in such a manner as to work a fraud on the good-will of the cross-petitioners. In Miskell v. Prokop, 58 Neb. 628, it was held that “a right to the exclusive use in a particular locality of a trade-name or sign may be acquired,” and further, that “a sign or trade-name is not an infringement of another, if ordinary attention of persons or customers would disclose the differences. Applying this rule to the use of the plaintiff’s name, “Regent Shoe Mfg. Co.,’ and defendants’ trade-name, “Regent Shoe Co.,” we could hardly think that ordinary attention of customers would likely disclose any difference between these two remarkably similar names. It is contended, however, by counsel for appellant -that the plaintiff Regent Shoe Manufacturing Company is not a retailer of boots, shoes and rubbers, but only a manufacturer and wholesale jobber of such goods, and consequently not in competition with defendants and cross-petitioners. This contention, in view of the testimony contained in the record, we are unable to concede. In the first place, the articles of incorporation of the plaintiff provide for selling at retail as well as at wholesale. In the second place, the testimony contained in the bill of exceptions shows that [431]*431plaintiff has actually been selling at retail. True, the evidence does not show that it has been largely engaged in the retail business, yet it does show that it does sell at retail. This proof, coupled Avith the provision in the articles of incorporation providing for such sales, we think sufficient to sustain the finding of the trial court that plaintiff had been selling in unfair competition with defendants and cross-petitioners as a retail dealer. While Ave think the evidence sufficient to sustain the decree of the district court restraining the plaintiff from selling shoes at retail in the city of Omaha and the immediate vicinity, yet we think this is as far as the restraining order should have gone.

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

Related

Ransdell v. Sixth Street Food Store of Lexington, Inc.
120 N.W.2d 290 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1963)
Ransdell v. SIXTH STREET FOOD STORE OF LEXINGTON.
120 N.W.2d 290 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1963)
Peterson & Co. v. Jay
63 N.W.2d 174 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1954)
Shepard v. Shepard
15 N.W.2d 195 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1944)
Skinner Mfg. Co. v. General Foods Sales Co.
52 F. Supp. 432 (D. Nebraska, 1943)
Riggs Optical Co. v. Riggs
270 N.W. 667 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1937)
Churchill Downs Distilling Co. v. Churchill Downs, Inc.
90 S.W.2d 1041 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1936)
Northwest Ready Roofing Co. v. Antes
219 N.W. 848 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1928)
Kinney-Rome Co. v. Federal Trade Commission
275 F. 665 (Seventh Circuit, 1921)
Coca-Cola Co. v. Brown
274 F. 481 (N.D. Georgia, 1921)
W. & H. WALKER, Inc. v. WALKER BROS.
271 F. 395 (First Circuit, 1921)
Aultz v. Zucht
209 S.W. 475 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1919)
Hilton v. Hilton
102 A. 16 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1917)
Ætna Mill & Elevator Co. v. Kramer Milling Co.
109 P. 692 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 N.W. 595, 75 Neb. 426, 1906 Neb. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/regent-shoe-manufacturing-co-v-haaker-neb-1906.