Siegert v. Abbott

25 N.Y.S. 590, 72 Hun 243, 79 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 243, 55 N.Y. St. Rep. 698
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 N.Y.S. 590 (Siegert v. Abbott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Siegert v. Abbott, 25 N.Y.S. 590, 72 Hun 243, 79 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 243, 55 N.Y. St. Rep. 698 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

FOLLETT, J.

To constitute a valid trade-mark, the designation, or term applied to the article must be one which the claimant has the exclusive right to use. Canal Co. v. Clark, 13 Wall. 311. It is apparent on principle, and it is well settled by authority, that [592]*592no one can acquire the exclusive right to use a geographical name, hr a term which denotes the nature of the article to which it is applied. Caswell v. Davis, 58 N. Y. 223; Keasbey v. Chemical Works, (Sup.) 21 N. Y. Supp. 696. The court found that the name “Angostura Bitters” was given by the Siegerts to their mixture because it was manufactured at the city of Angostura. It appears from the plaintiffs’ evidence that the word “Angostura” did not appear on their labels as descriptive of the article until 1875, three years after G. H. Maynard & Co., the defendants’ predecessors, began to use the term “Angostura Aromatic Bitters” to designate an article made and sold by them. The plaintiffs’ agent in this country, who verified the complaint, was sworn on the trial, and testified that since 1878 the bitters made by the Siegerts have been advertised and sold all over the world under the name of “Angostura Bitters.” There is some slight evidence, mostly hearsay in its character, that prior to 1875 Siegerts Bitters were sometimes known as “Angostura Bitters.” This evidence was given by Wuppermann, who was but 51 years of age at the time of the trial, and left Angostura when 12 years of age, and by Paez, who thinks he first saw the article in 1843. The Siegert memorial tablet, which the plaintiffs put in evidence, states that “in 1824 Dr. Siegert prepared the bitters for his own use, and in 1830 a shipment was sent to Trinidad and to England, but that in 1853 their sale did not exceed twenty dozen bottles per annum.” But there is no evidence that the Siegerts applied that name to their compound when put up for sale prior to 1875. It was shown that December 12, 1871, the Siegerts filed in the patent office a so-called “trademark,” by which they designated their compound as “Siegert’s Angostura Bitters,” but there is no evidence that this term was ever applied to the article as sold on the market. The filing in the patent office of a device or name as the trade-mark for an article without afterwards using the emblem or name to denote the article sold is not sufficient to establish the right of the persons filing such a certificate to such trade-mark, and, unless the claimant has actually used the mark or device, he cannot restrain others from using a similar name. Subsequent to 1875 their bitters, when placed on the market, were labeled “Angostura Bitters, Prepared by Dr. Siegert, at Angostura, (now Cuidad Bolivar.)” Though, in 1846, Angostura ceased to be the legal name of the city, it has been since so called, and is carried in geographical gazetteers, in encyclopaedias, and on maps by its former name. Black’s Atlas; Johnson’s Atlas; Lippincott’s Gaz.; Globe Gaz. Whether a word which formerly designated a city or country can be used as a trademark need not now be decided, for the reason that the evidence in this case shows that the defendants, and not the plaintiffs, first used the word “Angostura” to designate an article sold on the markets. Besides, one of the defendants testified—and in this he was not contradicted—that “Angostura bark is the largest ingredient in it, [defendants’ mixture,] and it is from that which it takes its name.” The other defendant, when speaking of the receipt from which their article was compounded, testified:

[593]*593“I remember that Angostura bark was one.of the articles mentioned in the receipt. Don’t recollect what part of the receipt it appeared in. I know it is probably the biggest thing there.”

The word “Angostura” has long been used in medical .and scientific works to designate the bark of a South American tree, having well-known medical properties. The following definition of this word is given in Murray’s New English Distionary:

“Angustura, or Angostura. A town on the Orinoco, now called Cuidad Bolivar. It gives its name to a bark, valuable as febrifuge and tonic, the produce of galipea or cusparía febrífuga, 1791, A. Brande, (title,) ‘Experiments and Observations on the Angustura Bark.’ 1840, Pereria Mat. Med. 1204: ‘Angostura bark was first publicly noticed in the London Medical Journal for 1789.’ 1806, Masters in Treas. Bot. 517: ‘The means, chemical and otherwise, of distinguishing the true from the false Angostura barks.’ 1879, Bliss Brad-don, Vixen III., 191: ‘Propped up with sherry and Angostura bitters.’ 1879, Watts’ Diet. Chem. 3rd Suppl. 87: ‘Sections of true Angostura bark.’ 1881, Syd. Soe. Lex. ‘Angostura.’ ”

The word is defined in the Century Dictionary as follows:

“Angostura or cusparía bark, the product of a rutaceous shrub, galipea cusparía, of the mountains of Venezuela; a valuable tonic in dyspepsia, dysentery, and chronic diarrhea. It was formerly prized as a febrifuge, and is now much used in making a kind of bitters. Its use in medicine was discontinued for a time, because of the introduction into the markets of a false Angostura bark, obtained from the nux vomica tree, which produced fatal effects.”

A word or term which truly denotes the nature or the chief ingredient of an article to which it is applied may be used by any manufacturer or producer of such article, though the word or term has been previously used by others to designate a like article which they produced. Caswell v. Davis, 58 N. Y. 223; Keasbey v. Chemical Works, (Sup.) 21 N. Y. Supp. 696. We think the evidence in the record and the authorities make it plain that the plaintiffs have failed to establish that they have acquired a valid trade-mark by the use which they have made of the word “Angostura” standing alone, or as combined by them with other words. Have the defendants, by the mode in which they have put up and described their fluid, deceitfully induced purchasers to believe that they were buying the article manufactured by the plaintiffs, instead of the one manufactured by the defendants; or is the defendants’ method of bottling, labeling, and describing their article likely, in the future, to induce purchasers exercising reasonable prudence to purchase and use the defendants’ mixture upon the belief that it is the plaintiffs’, and so injure the plaintiffs’ business? When a trade-mark acquired by one person is used, though innocently, by another, the latter becomes liable for the damages caused, and may be restrained from using the device. But when one seeks to restrain another from using a trade-name, or from putting up and selling goods in .any way calculated to induce purchasers to believe that they are buying goods which were manufactured by the complainant, the right of recovery rests upon the theory that a false representation has been made. The rule is well stated in Manufacturing Co. v. Wilson, 2 ° Oh. Div. 434. When this action was begun, the litigants were selling their compounds in quart and pint bottles, made of glass, [594]*594of much the same shape, though there is a perceptible difference between them. The bottles used by the plaintiffs have the name “Dr. J. Gr. B. Siegert & Hijos” blown in their shoulders and bottoms. The bottle°s used by the defendants have the name “O. W. Abbott & Co., Baltimore, Md.,” blown in their shoulders and bottoms. On the bottles used by the plaintiffs there is a label printed in English, French, Grerman, and Spanish, on which two medallions are represented. The bottles used by the defendants are wrapped in a label printed in English, French, and Grerman, but no medallions are represented.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.Y.S. 590, 72 Hun 243, 79 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 243, 55 N.Y. St. Rep. 698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siegert-v-abbott-nysupct-1893.