Sayles Biltmore Bleacheries Inc. v. Narragansett Wiping Supply Co.

134 A.2d 57, 86 R.I. 99, 1957 R.I. LEXIS 84
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 16, 1957
DocketEq. No. 2556
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 134 A.2d 57 (Sayles Biltmore Bleacheries Inc. v. Narragansett Wiping Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sayles Biltmore Bleacheries Inc. v. Narragansett Wiping Supply Co., 134 A.2d 57, 86 R.I. 99, 1957 R.I. LEXIS 84 (R.I. 1957).

Opinion

*101 Condon, J.

This is a bill in equity to enjoin the respondents from using the name “Lorraine” or “Lorraine Mill Outlet” in their retail store located in a mill building formerly owned by Lorraine Manufacturing Company. After a hearing in the superior court on bill, answer, replication, and proof, the trial justice found that the complainants had an exclusive right to the name “Lorraine” as a registered trade-mark and as a trade name, and further that the respondents’ use of it in their business tended “to mislead and confuse the public to the injury of the complainants” and hence they were guilty of unfair competition from which they should be enjoined. A decree granting the injunction prayed for was thereupon duly entered. The case is here on the respondents’ appeal therefrom.

The respondents contend that the decree is against the law in that neither complainant had the right to sue and *102 in any event there is a misjoinder of complainants; also that the decree is against the evidence in that there was no proof of infringement of the registered trade-mark, nor of deceit, fraud, and confusion of the public which are the bases of the allegation of unfair competition. The respondents also contend that they were prejudiced by numerous erroneous rulings on the admission of evidence. On the view which we take of the law applicable to the undisputed facts of the case we shall not have occasion to consider all of these points; hence there is no necessity for describing them at any further length.

However, a statement of the undisputed facts at this point may contribute to a better understanding of the ultimate conclusions to which we have come concerning the applicable law. In December 1954 respondents opened a store in a mill building on Mineral Spring avenue in the city of Pawtucket under the name of Lorraine Mill Outlet for the sale of candy, drugs, sundries, remnants, ready-to-wear clothes, shoes, and work clothes. Ready-to-wear garments represented 70 per cent of their trade. They did not sell or represent that any textile goods which they offered for sale were Lorraine goods.

In advertising their business both on signs and in the newspapers they always used the name Lorraine Mill Outlet and never represented directly or indirectly that they were the successors of Lorraine Manufacturing Company. Their store is located in one of the mill buildings which was formerly owned and operated by that company in the manufacture of a variety of textile fabrics from 1881 until 1953 when it went out of that business and sold all of its mill buildings and machinery. The respondents’ business is conducted strictly as a retail cash-and-carry store, so called, appealing to customers within a limited local area. The words Lorraine Mill in its name furnish an apt way of identifying the location of the store.

The Lorraine Manufacturing Company was incorporated *103 in 1896 as a Rhode Island corporation and was engaged in manufacturing cotton, silk, woolen and rayon fabrics on Mineral Spring avenue in Pawtucket until October 1953. At that time it processed its last piece of goods. Thereafter on December 15, 1953 it changed its name to Sayles Biltmore Bleacheries, Inc. and is now engaged in bleaching, dyeing, and otherwise finishing cloth and textile fabrics. This change of corporate name was officially recorded in the office of the secretary of state on December 30, 1953 at 10:15 a.m.

However, on December 15 before effecting such change and for the purpose of preserving the name Lorraine Manufacturing Company the directors authorized its president and treasurer or secretary to consent in writing to the use of that name by the Sayles Land Company which is controlled by the same interests that control Sayles Biltmore Bleacheries, Inc. Thereupon Sayles Land Company changed its name to Lorraine Manufacturing Company and such change was recorded in the office of the secretary of state on December 30, 1953 at 10:20 a.m. This company is the other complainant in the instant suit.

Later in 1954 Sayles Biltmore Bleacheries, Inc. sold all its mill buildings on Mineral Spring avenue including the one now occupied by respondents. In 1955 it completed the sale of all its machinery and had previously notified the trade that it would present no new lines since it was not manufacturing any more. Prior thereto its trade had consisted of various jobbers and “cutting-up” mills with whom it did a wholesale business. Until 1941 it conducted a retail store in one of its mills where it sold remnants, some of which were “seconds.”

Since selling its mills and machinery the company has not manufactured any textile fabrics and has no present intention of doing so. Its sole business, which it now carries on in North Carolina, is dyeing, bleaching, and finishing cloth. It does not use the name of Lorraine Manufacturing *104 Company there. Except for an office which it maintains at Sayles Finishing Plants, Inc. in Saylesville, Rhode Island, it has no business in this state.

Apparently the interests which control Sayles Biltmore Bleacheries, Inc. and the former Sayles Land Company assumed that by transferring to that company the right to adopt the name of Lorraine Manufacturing Company they had preserved for use in the future the name Lorraine both as a trade name and a registered trade-mark. In this we think they were mistaken.

The president of the new Lorraine Manufacturing Company testified that although no corporate action had been taken, it was the intention of such controlling interests to have the company allow the American Bleached Goods Company to use the name “Lorraine” on its products. That company is owned by the Sayles Finishing Plants, Inc. It is located in New York where it is engaged in the converting business. It does not manufacture cloth nor does it dye, bleach or finish. As a converter it buys goods in the grey from various mills, has them finished at finishing plants, and then sells the finished goods. Presumably it is on such goods that the Lorraine trade-mark is to be used.

The same witness testified further that in his opinion it would make no difference whether a formal vote granting such permission had been taken, since precisely the same interests which controlled Lorraine Manufacturing Company also owned Sayles Finishing Plants, Inc. In other words, it appears that those interests felt that they could at will pass around the exclusive use of the name Lorraine to corporations which they controlled regardless of the nature of the business of such corporations or the kind and character of their products. Pursuant to this belief the new Lorraine Manufacturing Company joined in the instant bill of complaint and based its right to do so solely on its adoption of that corporate name with the consent of the former *105 Lorraine Manufacturing Company before it became Sayles Biltmore Bleacheries, Inc.

This new company has never engaged in any kind of business. Under its former name of Sayles Land Company it dealt exclusively in real estate conformably to the purposes set out in its articles of association. It has never used the name Lorraine in either manufacturing or merchandising.

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Bluebook (online)
134 A.2d 57, 86 R.I. 99, 1957 R.I. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sayles-biltmore-bleacheries-inc-v-narragansett-wiping-supply-co-ri-1957.