Schreiber Mills, Inc. v. O. A. Cooper Co.

87 F. Supp. 674, 83 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 366, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2101
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nebraska
DecidedNovember 2, 1949
DocketCiv. No. 38-48
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 F. Supp. 674 (Schreiber Mills, Inc. v. O. A. Cooper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schreiber Mills, Inc. v. O. A. Cooper Co., 87 F. Supp. 674, 83 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 366, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2101 (D. Neb. 1949).

Opinion

DELEHANT, District Judge.

The plaintiff, a corporation organized under the laws of Missouri, filed its complaint in this action on August 17, 1948 under its then corporate name of Schreiber Milling and Grain Company, against the defendant, a Nebraska corporation. The matter in controversy exceeds in value the sum of $3,000. Whether it be premised upon the infringement of a technical Trade-Mark in violation of statute, Title 15, U.S.C.A. § 1121, or upon diversity of citizenship, Title 28 U.S.C.A. § 1332(a) (1), jurisdiction unquestionably exists. And the plaintiff resorts to it and the defendant does not challenge it.

In its complaint, the plaintiff, basing its claim upon prior origination and employment, and upon registration under the National Trade-Mark law, and upon alleged acts of the defendant amounting to infringement and unfair competition, demands a decree establishing its prior use of, and exclusive right in arid to, the Trade-Marks Lassy and Sweet Lassy in application to live stock feeds, and adjudging that the use by the defendant of the terms Lassy, Lassie and ’Lasses, or [676]*676either of them, or any phonetic equivalent of them, or either of them, in connection with stock feeds constitutes unfair competition and a violation of, and infringement upon, the plaintiff’s rights; a perpetual injunction against such use; an accounting against the defendant of its profits by reason of its use of such names; a judgment for damages for such alleged infringement and unfair competition; the destruction of advertising and publicity material incident to the alleged infringement; costs and general relief.

In its answer, the defendant generally admits the use by the plaintiff in the stock food trade within a limited area of the term Lassy and, inferentially, Sweet Lassy, (though claiming that others had made use prior to the plaintiff of Lassy) and its own subsequent employment for a brief period of time in 1948 of brand names for certain stock foods containing the word Lassie and, thereafter and still, of brand names for such foods containing the term ’Lasses; alleges its abandonment in its brand names, upon demand by the plaintiff, of the word Lassie; denies that, in its actions in the premises, it ever intended to or did engage in unfair competition with the plaintiff or infringe its Trade-Mark or Trade-Marks; and prays for the dismissal of the complaint.

Both the complaint and the answer, each with its supplemental pleading, deal with many matters of detail which, the court considers, need not now be set out or further summarized. The facts, as the court proceeds to find and announce them, have been assembled in full view of the averments of the pleadings. The parties conducted during the pendency of the action certain discovery proceedings; a pretrial conference was held and formal report thereof made; trial was had to the court, but only upon the issue of the plaintiff’s right to injunctive relief; and on that issue the case has been submitted upon exhaustive briefs of counsel. By agreement of the parties trial has not been had of the issue of the plaintiff’s right to or the amount of recovery for damages or profits.

Both parties, through their respective corporate entities and individual predecessors, have long been engaged in the production and marketing, among other things of various feeds for domestic live stock, the plaintiff having its principal place of business at St. Joseph, Missouri and the defendant having its original and principal place of business at Humboldt, Nebraska, and within recent years another plant at Beatrice, Nebraska.

The founder of the plaintiff’s business, still living and active, in its management and operation, is Allen B. Schreiber, Sr. The business has continued for more than thirty-one years, probably some where near a half century. The plaintiff enjoys a high standing, and its products are highly regarded. within its trade territory. It is generally and familiarly referred to as Schreiber Mills. The defendant’s business was established in 1879 by one O. A. Cooper, now deceased, and it has continued as a family operation. It, too, and its products have attained and enjoy a high standing in its trade territory. In the course of time, each business passed under corporate control, but with a comparatively slight actual change, in consequence of the persistence, in each instance of the founder’s direction, and, in the defendant’s case, later that of his descendants. While the general business of the plaintiff has always included the preparation and sale of live stock feeds, its relations to the particular products and Trade-Marks or trade names involved in this action are of shorter duration. So, too, while the defendant has been engaged for some twenty-one years in the stock feed business, its dealings in the precise products and brand names before the court have been very recent.

Prior to a time which may be fixed at about 1924, the plaintiff prepared and sold live stock feeds in bulk. Among those feeds were mixtures of ground grains with a high molasses ingredient, whose contribution to the composite mass included palatability and cohesiveness. Such products were objectionable on the score of their accumulation in blocks or chunks of [677]*677such sizes as to be inedible until they were chopped or broken into smaller pieces.

But 'by a date shortly prior to the year 1924, Allen B. Schreiber, Sr. had perfected a machine, apparently only for the use of his own company and not shown generally to have been manufactured for sale, upon which he obtained a patent or patents, 'by means of which a mixed mass of the feed with a high molasses content is forced under pressure and while heated, through round holes of desired diameters. Each machine has several hundred holes of that character bored into a single metallic plate. Under such pressure, the product emerges from the holes compressed into a cylindrical- shape. Each cylindrical piece is allowed to attain such length after extrusion from its moulding hole that it falls of its own weight upon a drier belt by which it is conveyed through a drying process. Thereby, a small parcel of the stock food results which the plaintiff in its trade practices characterizes as a “pellet”. That term is not unique with the plaintiff, 'but is used generally in describing the moulded form of any such product. These pellets are produced by the plaintiff in two diameters, the smaller, or “pea size” being three-eighths inch, and the larger or “range size” being approximately one inch, in diameter. Pellets of both sizes vary in their lengths between one-fourth inch and one inch.

The small masses formed in that fashion are characterized as soft pellets, because their component parts are not forced under high pressure into a more concentrated and harder mass. They are naturally subject to some erosive and disintegrating action through excessive handling and delay in consumption, slightly impairing the permanent stability of the pellets and producing a fragmented but edible dust like residue. However, the method of manufacture and its result are entirely practicable in the trade. And a witness for the defendant explained, and the court finds, that feeds of the character involved, with a molasses content as high as that of the plaintiff’s product — and also part of the defendant’s products, vide infra — may be compressed only into soft masses and may not practicably be made and marketed as hard pellets.

It should be observed that while the pellet form is the principal present state in which the plaintiff’s products are prepared, it is not the exclusive manner.

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Bluebook (online)
87 F. Supp. 674, 83 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 366, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schreiber-mills-inc-v-o-a-cooper-co-ned-1949.