Seven-Up Company v. Green Mill Beverage Company

191 F. Supp. 32, 128 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 284, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6001
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 31, 1961
DocketCiv. A. 58 C 1478
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 191 F. Supp. 32 (Seven-Up Company v. Green Mill Beverage Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seven-Up Company v. Green Mill Beverage Company, 191 F. Supp. 32, 128 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 284, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6001 (N.D. Ill. 1961).

Opinion

WHAM, Senior Judge.

Findings of Fact

1. Plaintiff, The Seven-Up Company, is a Missouri corporation, located and having its principal office and place of business at 1300 Delmar Boulevard, in the City of St. Louis, State of Missouri.

2. Defendants, Green Mill Beverage Company and Spring Beverage Company, Inc., are Illinois corporations located and having their principal office and place of business at 1307 South Pulaski Road, in the City of Chicago, State of Illinois, and are residents and inhabitants of the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.

3. The value in controversy herein exceeds $10,000 exclusive of interest and costs.

4. Plaintiff adopted and commenced using its trademark 7 Up (also written Seven-Up) on or about August 7, 1928, for a soft drink beverage, and for flavors and extracts for making such soft drink beverage, and plaintiff has continuously used, and now uses, said trademark in the manufacture and sale of an extract and flavoring for making a soft drink beverage.

*34 5. Plaintiff adopted its corporate name, The Seven-Up Company, on October 17,1936 and plaintiff has been known throughout the United States by its said name and has continuously used its said name throughout the United States, and plaintiff’s said name has continuously indicated and signified plaintiff and its business to the trade and public.

6. The extract and flavoring for making the lemon-lime soft drink beverage which plaintiff manufactures and sells under its name and trademark 7 Up are sold throughout the United States, including the State of Illinois, County of Cook, and City of Chicago, exclusively to plaintiff’s franchised “7 Up” bottlers who manufacture from said extract and flavoring, under plaintiff’s license, direction, and control, and sell a soft drink beverage under plaintiff’s name and trademark 7 Up.

7. Plaintiff duly registered its trademark 7 Up (Seven-Up) in the United States Patent Office on February 5, 1929 (Reg. No. 252,350), January 7, 1936 (Reg. No. 331,345), February 9, 1943 (Reg. No. 399,995), October 26, 1943 (Reg. No. 403,990), March 14,1944 (Reg. No. 406,182), December 11, 1945 (Reg. No. 418,191), September.21, 1954 (Reg. No. 595,639), August 14, 1956 (Reg. No. 632,795), and January 8, 1957 (Reg. No. 639,769), and plaintiff registered its trademark 7 Up with the Secretary of State of the State of Illinois on April 14, 1943 (Reg. No. 19,884), and all of said registrations are valid and subsisting, unrevoked and uncancelled, and are owned by plaintiff, and plaintiff’s federal registrations, Nos. 252,350; 331,345; 399,995; 403,990; 406,182; 418,191, and 595,639, have become and now are incontestable under the provisions of the United States Trademark Act.

8. Plaintiff has spent more than $50,000,000 in distinctive advertising of its 7 Up brand of soft drink beverage throughout the United States, including the State of Illinois, County of Cook, and City of Chicago, and said distinctive advertising has long since become, and now is, well and favorably known to the trade and public throughout the United States.

9. Plaintiff and its franchised bottlers sell, and for many years have sold, many millions of cases of 7 Up, and said sales aggregate many millions of dollars annually.

10. Plaintiff and its franchised bottlers sell, and for many years have sold, plaintiff’s 7 Up brand of soft drink in a distinctively designed dress and under distinctive labels and in distinctive cartons, cases and bottles which long since have acquired, and now have, a secondary meaning signifying plaintiff and its soft drink beverage.

11. Plaintiff has a large and valuable business in the sale of its extracts and flavorings for making its aforesaid 7 Up soft drink beverage, and plaintiff is the owner of a valuable good will, worth many millions of dollars, represented and symbolized by its aforesaid name and trademark 7 Up (also Seven-Up).

12. The soft drink beverage sold under plaintiff’s name and trademark 7 Up is now, and always has been, of high quality and has become well and favorably known by the trade and public, and plaintiff’s name and trademark 7 Up is the means by which said soft drink is identified by the trade and public with plaintiff and its business.

13. As a result of plaintiff’s distinctive advertising and sales under its name and trademark 7 Up, and as a result of the consistently high quality of the soft drink beverage offered for sale and sold under plaintiff’s said name and trademark, 7 Up has come to represent, to the trade and public, a soft drink beverage offered for sale and sold by plaintiff or a concern legitimately connected with, licensed by, or controlled by plaintiff, and plaintiff’s name and trademark 7 Up has acquired a distinctiveness and a secondary meaning signifying plaintiff and its lemon-lime soft drink beverage.

14. On or about February 7, 1958, and long subsequent to the adoption and use of the name and trademark 7 Up by *35 plaintiff, and long subsequent to the acquisition of the distinctiveness and secondary meaning of plaintiff’s name and trademark 7 Up, defendant Spring Beverage Company, Inc., acquired an inventory of bottles, labels, cartons, cases, display pieces and crowns, all bearing the trademark Fizz Up, and an Illinois registration of Fizz Up, No. 31,177, dated April 15, 1955, from California Beverage Company, Chicago, Illinois, and defendants thereafter commenced advertising, selling and offering for sale, in interstate commerce, a lemon-lime soft drink beverage under said trademark Fizz Up.

15. Defendants’ trademark Fizz Up simulates and colorably imitates plaintiff’s trademark 7 Up and defendants’ use of Fizz Up simulates plaintiff’s distinctive advertising and the over-all appearance of plaintiff’s distinctive 7 Up labels, cartons, bottles, crowns and cases.

16. Defendants’ use of Fizz Up in connection with the advertising, sale, or offering for sale of a soft drink beverage is likely to cause, and has caused, confusion, mistake or deception of purchasers and potential purchasers as to the source of said beverage in that defendants' beverage is likely to be attributed, and has been attributed, to plaintiff or to a concern legitimately connected with, licensed by, or controlled by plaintiff.

17. Plaintiff’s evidence in the form of a stratified and randomized reaction test and sound motion picture interviews demonstrates that a substantial percentage of those who encounter defendants’ Fizz Up soft drink believe that it emanates from plaintiff.

18. Defendants’ use of Fizz Up irreparably damages plaintiff but because defendants are relatively small, localized and of little impact on the soft drink market in the Chicago area, the amount of damages to plaintiff growing out of customer deception in actual purchaser transactions is not shown by the evidence to have been more than slight.

19.

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Bluebook (online)
191 F. Supp. 32, 128 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 284, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6001, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seven-up-company-v-green-mill-beverage-company-ilnd-1961.