Saurage v. Community Stores of Louisiana, Inc.

119 So. 873, 167 La. 560, 1929 La. LEXIS 1656
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 2, 1929
DocketNo. 29053.
StatusPublished

This text of 119 So. 873 (Saurage v. Community Stores of Louisiana, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saurage v. Community Stores of Louisiana, Inc., 119 So. 873, 167 La. 560, 1929 La. LEXIS 1656 (La. 1929).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

This is a suit for an injunction and for damages for the alleged infringement of a trade-mark. The case comes before us from a judgment sustaining an exception of no cause of action.

The facts alleged in the petition, and shown by the exhibits attached to it, so far as material, are as follows:

Since 1919, plaintiff has been operating a business known as the Baton Rouge Coffee Mills. This business consists of roasting,. *561 grinding, and blending coffee, of packing it alone, and also with chicory, in packages of various sizes, and of selling the same to dealers, in the city of Baton Rouge, in other parts of the state, and in various sections of the United States.- In 1919, plaintiff adopted, it is alleged, the term “Community” as the name of his coffee, whether packed alone or blended with chicory, and since adopting the .name has spent considerable money in advertising it under that name. As a result of this advertisement and of plaintiff’s efforts, it is alleged, the term “Community,” as applied both to his coffee and coffee and chicory, became distinctive thereof, prior to January 1, 1926. On April 20, 1926, plaintiff secured from this state, under Act 49 of 1898, a certificate showing that he, under the name of the Baton Rouge Coffee Mills, had filed for record, in the office of the secretary of state, two copies of the trade-mark, “Community Brand,” for ground coffee and for ground coffee and chicory, together with a sworn application, showing the remaining requisites to obtain registry of the trademark. On March 18,1925, plaintiff also made an application to the Commissioner of Patents of the United States for the registration of the term “Community,” or, as shown by a copy of the application and drawing, attached to the petition, which is controlling, for the registration of the term “Community Brand,” as a trade-mark for “coffee in class 46, Poods and Ingredients of Poods,” and the Commissioner of Patents issued to plaintiff a certificate, entitling him to the exclusive use of the trade-mark for a period of 20 years.

Among plaintiff’s former customers was a corporation organized in November, 1923, known as the “Community Stores of Louisiana, Inc.,” which is the defendant herein. This corporation owns and operates a number of stores in Baton Rouge, and one at Port Allen, La. In the early part of 1926, the Community Stores of Louisiana, Inc., the defendant herein, without plaintiff’s consent, began packing and offering for sale, in containers of the same general size and shape as those used by plaintiff, ground coffee, and ground coffee and chicory, under the name, “Community Stores Coffee” and “Community Stores Coffee and Chicory,” if the allegation, so showing, is not modified by the exhibits attached to the petition, and has been selling the same to consumers and to retailers for resale, under that name, ever since, without plaintiff’s consent. ''

Plaintiff’s trade-mark, as appears from the design, attached to the certificate issued by the Commissioner of Patents, and annexed to the petition herein, is “Community Brand,” capitals being used in printing those words. The word “Community” is printed with a slightly upward slant, the letters gradually diminishing in size, so as apparently to make room for the word “Brand,” which is also printed in capitals immediately beneath it, the letters of the word “Brand” gradually increasing in size, so as to correspond at their top with the slant given the word “Community” ; the lower part of the word “Brand” being on a level with the bottom of the letter “C” in “Community.” Intervening between the bottom of the letter “C” and the word “Brand” is a barred triangle or conical design. This trade-mark appears conspicuously on the containers used by plaintiff. Immediately beneath it, on the containers, the words “Pure ground coffee,” or “Pure ground chicory and coffee,” as the case may be, appear, and then follow the words, “Packed by Baton Rouge Coffee Mills, Baton Rouge, La.” At the bottom is the picture of a colonial residence, and on the reverse is a cup, emitting steam, placed within a circular figure.

On defendant’s containers, which are differently colored from plaintiff’s, samples of which are attached to the petition herein, there appear in a colored square, printed at an angle of 45 degrees, the words “Communi *563 ty Stores,” in capitals,, with.' the word “Stores” immediately helow the word “Community,” and with the letters all of the same size, with the exception of the letter “C,” which extends as low as the bottom of the letter “S” in “Stores.” In the same square, in a corner thereof, the words “Community Stores” are followed by the words “Good eats for the table,” and immediately below, in a white square, appear the words, printed in capitals, “Pure Coffee — Light Roast' — I-Iigh Grade — Baton Rouge, Louisiana,” or, as the case may be, “Coffee and Chicory, Baton Rouge, Louisiana,” and the same inscriptions appear on the reverse of the containers. On a strip used by plaintiff to seal the containers, intended for coffee, or for coffee and chicory, appear the words on the first line, “Community Stores,” and on the second line the word “Coffee,” without any punctuation between “Stores” and “Coffee,” and on the third line, still without punctuation, the words “Baton Rouge, Louisiana.”

The question to be decided is whether defendant has infringed plaintiff’s trade-mark. In 26 Ruling Case Law, § 49, p. 869, it is said:

“The infringement of a trade-mark consists in its use or imitation by another on his goods in such manner that the purchasers of such goods are deceived, or liable to be deceived, and induced to believe that they were manufactured or sold by the owner of the trade-mark. When this occurs, injunctive relief will ordinarily be granted. The essential element is the same in trade-mark cases as in cases of unfair competition unaccompanied with trade-mark infringement. In fact, the common law of trade-marks, is but a part of the broader law of unfair competition. The wrong consists in misrepresenting to the public, by the use of his trade-mark, goods or wares of another as having been made by the true owner of the mark, and. thereby depriving him to a greater or less extent of the benefit of the good will of his establishment, and the reputation that he has given the articles made by him. * * * ”

In Gorham Manufacturing Co. v. White, 14 Wall. 511, 20 L. Ed. 731, with reference to what constitutes an infringement, it was said:

“It is the appearance to the eye that constitutes mainly, if not entirely, the contribution to the public which the law deems worthy of recompense, and identity of appearance, or sameness of effect upon the eye, is the main test of substantial identity of design.

“It is not essential to identity of design that the appearance should be the same to the eye of an expert. If, in the eye of an ordinary observer, giving such attention as a purchaser usually gives, two designs are substantially the same, if the resemblance is such as to deceive such an'observer, and sufficient to induce him to purchase one, supposing it to be the other, the one first patented is infringed by the other.”

A rule, similar to the foregoing, is laid down in the case of A. Cusimano & Co. v. Olive Oil Importing Co., 114 La. 312, 38 So. 200. There, it is said:

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Related

Gorham Co. v. White
81 U.S. 511 (Supreme Court, 1872)
McLean v. Fleming
96 U.S. 245 (Supreme Court, 1878)
A. Cusimano & Co. v. Olive Oil Importing Co.
38 So. 200 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1905)
Wolfe v. Barnett
24 La. Ann. 97 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1872)
Thomas H. Handy & Co. v. Commander
22 So. 230 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1897)

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Bluebook (online)
119 So. 873, 167 La. 560, 1929 La. LEXIS 1656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saurage-v-community-stores-of-louisiana-inc-la-1929.