S. C. Johnson & Son, Inc. v. Phil J. Johnson and Hugh H. Johnson, D.B.A. Johnson Products Co.

266 F.2d 129, 121 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 63, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5459
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 30, 1959
Docket13314_1
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 266 F.2d 129 (S. C. Johnson & Son, Inc. v. Phil J. Johnson and Hugh H. Johnson, D.B.A. Johnson Products Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. C. Johnson & Son, Inc. v. Phil J. Johnson and Hugh H. Johnson, D.B.A. Johnson Products Co., 266 F.2d 129, 121 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 63, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5459 (6th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

McALLISTER, Circuit Judge.

Appellant, S. C. Johnson & Son, Inc., filed its complaint, claiming that appellees, Phil J. Johnson and Hugh H. Johnson, doing business as Johnson Products Co., had infringed its common law trademarks, “Johnson’s” and “Johnson,” as well as its registered trademarks of the same names, under federal law. The district court entered a judgment denying injunctive relief, and dismissing the complaint, from which appeal was taken.

The predecessor company of appellant, S. C. Johnson & Son, Inc., began using the trademarks, “Johnson’s” and “Johnson,” as early as 1888 for waxes, floor cleaners, varnish removers, wood dyes, and wood fillers, and extended the use of the trademark to floor waxing appliers— or heavily weighted floor waxing brushes • — shortly before 1900. In addition to the above mentioned products, appellant company, during its existence, has continuously increased the number and name of the commodities manufactured and sold by it, as well as the products purchased from others and sold and distributed by appellant under its label of “Johnson’s” or “Johnson,” to include such items as insecticides for garden use, a roach and ant killer, a moth-proofing compound, additional types of wax appliers, automobile wax, insect repellents, industrial coolants and lubricants, cleansing products, furniture polishes, waxes for citrus fruits and vegetables, a substance used in repairing porcelain, and a cleaning material used in laundering.

The background of appellees’ company and the beginning of its use of the family name of Johnson is pertinent.

Appellees, Phil J. Johnson and Hugh H. Johnson, brothers, of Memphis, Tennessee, in 1944, decided to buy an old factory in Selmer, Tennessee, which had been closed for some time. This factory had been engaged in the manufacture of corn brooms and mops, and was equipped with machinery to make brooms and mops. With the exception of a piece or two of additional equipment, the same machinery can make both brooms and mops, the principal equipment being the winding machines. Phil Johnson had some previous experience in the mop business — cutting mops. His father had also sold roofing mops, a type of mop later manufactured by appellees. Phil J. Johnson testified that he preferred going into business for himself instead of working for others, and that the broom and mop business was “one of the businesses a person can go into with limited capital. And another reason was, in 1944, any kind of new operation was difficult to enter, due to the fact that the war was on still, and you could not buy machinery.” The two Johnson brothers thereupon formed a partnership under the name of Johnson Products Company, of Memphis, Tennessee, purchased the closed factory, and commenced the manufacture of brooms and mops.

Appellees manufacture and sell corn brooms and common cotton wet mops and wet mopheads; and they advertise, describe, and label the wet mop sold by them as a “Johnson Mop.” On each of the wet mops manufactured and sold by appellees, a label is placed around the *132 mophead, which contains the following language:

“Mfgd. By
• JOHNSON PRODUCTS COMPANY ‘Finest Wet Mops and Wet Mop-heads’
MEMPHIS, TENN. FROM THE LAND OF COTTON
Always Ask For A
JOHNSONWET MOP
The Best Available for Washing Your Floors
Nationally known JOHNSON MOPS are often priced as low or lower than many mops of inferior quality.
YOU BE THE JUDGE
The strong durable yarns used in JOHNSON PRODUCTS COMPANY Mops make them long lasting, and save you money. Examine and compare this mop. You will immediately SEE and FEEL the DIFFERENCE.
A trial will convince you. Your satisfaction fully guaranteed. JOHNSON PRODUCTS COMPANY Made only in Memphis, Tenn. 'Famous for Quality’ ”

Each mop handle carries a label which contains (with the exception of the particular brand name) the following language :

“Ask for a Nationally Known JOHNSON MOP FLOOR MASTER Brand
It pays to Buy a Johnson Mop Famous for Quality
10 OUNCE NO. IS
Manufactured by JOHNSON PRODUCTS COMPANY 801 Poplar Ave., Memphis, Tenn.”

Each broom manufactured and sold by appellees carries a label on its handle, of which the following is typical:

“Ask for a Thrifty ECONO-MIZER BROOM
JOHNSON PRODUCTS CO.
Quality Brooms and Mops MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE”

In its complaint, appellant company, in addition to claiming that appellees infringe appellant’s common law and statutory trademark, set forth that appellees’ appliances, “sold under the trademark ‘JOHNSON’ for cleaning floors and other surfaces, being in the nature of long-handled brooms and mops for use in wet or dry form on floors and other surfaces in homes and industrial establishments, are goods of the same general character and are used for the same general purposes as [appellant’s] cleaning appliances such as its mops, brushes, brooms, dusters and cleaning and polishing cloths sold under the trademarks ‘JOHNSON’ and/or ‘JOHNSON’S’ and are competing goods”; that both appellant’s and appellees’ “cleaning appliances” of the nature herein described, both bearing the trademarks above mentioned, are sold in coincident geographical areas, in the same retail trade channels, and from the same store displays within such retail trade channels, thus enhancing the likelihood of confusion, mistake, or deception of purchasers as to the source of origin of appellees’ goods, to appellant’s irreparable damage; that appellees published misleading statements inducing purchasers to believe that appellees’ goods are “nationally known,” and that they “emanate from or are in some way connected with” appellant Johnson, to the damage of appellant; that appellees’ acts have directly or indirectly resulted in the palming off of appellees’ goods as the goods of appellant, thereby competing unfairly with appellant and causing deception, mistake, or confusion of purchasers as to the source of origin of appellees’ goods to appellant’s irreparable damage, through loss or dilution of appellant’s good will in the trademarks, “Johnson” and “Johnson’s.”

Appellant does not manufacture or sell common wet mops, wet mopheads, or corn brooms — or, for that matter, mops or brooms of any kind.

Appellant sells and recommends for use in applying cleaning and waxing substances to floors, only three implements: (1) a “Glo-Coater Wax Applier,” which *133 it first sold during the year ending June 30, 1949; (2) the “Beautiflor Wax Applier,” first sold during the year ending June 30, 1954; and (3) the “Heavy Duty Wax Applier,” which had been sold for six or seven years prior to the judgment of the district court in this case, entered on April 30, 1957. All of the above described implements were first sold by appellant to the public, subsequent to the sale by appellees of their mops and brooms, which commenced in 1944.

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Bluebook (online)
266 F.2d 129, 121 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 63, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-c-johnson-son-inc-v-phil-j-johnson-and-hugh-h-johnson-dba-ca6-1959.