Singer Manufacturing Co. v. Singer Upholstering & Sewing Co.

130 F. Supp. 205, 104 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 339, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3351
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 1, 1955
DocketCiv. A. 11372
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 130 F. Supp. 205 (Singer Manufacturing Co. v. Singer Upholstering & Sewing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Singer Manufacturing Co. v. Singer Upholstering & Sewing Co., 130 F. Supp. 205, 104 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 339, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3351 (W.D. Pa. 1955).

Opinion

WILLSON, District Judge.

This case was tried before me, non-jury, over a period of four days. At the close of the trial, I indicated to counsel that plaintiffs had proved their right to relief by a fair preponderance of the evidence. In forming defendant corporation, the individual defendants deliberately and without justification appropriated the name “Singer” with the result that defendant corporation very quickly built a substantial volume of business, largely as the result of newspaper and other advertising. The advertising produced the leads which defendants’ salesmen followed up by making personal calls. Because of defendants’ method of doing business, numerous incidents of actual confusion have arisen, plaintiffs’ name and reputation in the sewing field having been so long and so widely known that the public is led to believe that defendants’ activities under the name “Singer” are those of the plaintiffs. Plaintiffs seek injunctive relief. They also seek an accounting for profits, or in lieu thereof, litigation expenses and punitive damages. Oral argument has been held and briefs filed, which have been considered.

The Court makes the following

Findings of Fact

1. Plaintiffs are New Jersey corporations and Singer Sewing Machine Company is a wholly owned subsidiary of The Singer Manufacturing Company.

2. Defendant, Singer Upholstering and Sewing Company, is a Pennsylvania corporation.

3. At the time the complaint was filed, the individual defendants, Alexander Showe, Murray L. Cohen and Alexander L. Josselson, were residents of this judicial district.

4. This is a civil action for trademark infringement and unfair competí *206 tion arising between'citizens of different States and involving a sum or value exceeding $3,000, exclusive of interest and costs.

5. Plaintiff, The Singer Manufacturing Company, was organized in 1873 and immediately upon its organization it entered into the business of manufacturing and selling sewing machines and furniture appurtenant thereto, which business had been established by its predecessors as early as the year 1851, and ever since has been continuously engaged and still is engaged in said business.

6. Plaintiff, Singer Sewing Machine Company, was organized in 1904, and since has established over 1500 stores throughout the United States for the distribution and repair of its products manufactured or supplied by plaintiff, The Singer Manufacturing Company, including sewing machines, vacuum cleaners, fans, furniture, and sewing accessories of various kinds, which stores have come to be known to the public as “Singer Sewing Centers” where the products of plaintiff, The Singer Manufacturing Company, are available. Many of the said “Singer Sewing Centers” are located in Pennsylvania and some in the City of Pittsburgh.

7. Prior to the year 1873, the predecessors of plaintiff, The Singer Manufacturing Company, adopted the name “Singer” as a trade-mark. for its merchandise including its sewing machines, furniture and sewing accessories, which name and trade-mark plaintiff, The Singer Manufacturing Company, has employed since 1873 in its said business, as, for example, by applying it to its goods and by displaying it in printed matter and in various sundry ways.

8. Prior to 1904, plaintiff, The Singer Manufacturing Company, did display and since 1904 plaintiff, Singer Sewing Machine Company, has continuously displayed in a prominent position on store fronts, in advertising, in newspapers, periodicals, price lists, telephone directories and other advertising matter, to an enormous extent throughout the world, the mark “Singer” and an arbitrary sign or mark incorporating a prominent or predominant letter “S” for the purpose of making known to the public the products of plaintiff, The Singer Manufacturing Company, and to identify the “Singer Sewing Centers” as places where said products were available and could be serviced.

9. The public commonly refers to Singer Sewing Machine Company by the names “Singer” or “Singer Company.”

10. Plaintiff, Singer Sewing Machine Company, conducts classes in sewing instruction in its “Singer Sewing Centers” including instruction in making furniture slip covers, curtains and draperies. About 300,000 persons a year attend such classes in the United States. About 13,000 persons take sewing instruction each year in the “Singer Sewing Centers” under the jurisdiction of the Pittsburgh Agency.

11. In the past four years plaintiff, Singer Sewing Machine Company, has sold about $150,000,000 worth of furniture and the plaintiff, The Singer Manufacturing Company, operates three factories in the United States for the exclusive manufacture of furniture where it employs about 2,500 persons.

12. About $25,000,000 has been spent over a twenty year period in advertising to keep plaintiffs’ names, trade-marks, services and merchandise before the public.

13. The trade-mark “Singer,” the letter “S” trade-mark, used on or in association with the products of plaintiff, The Singer Manufacturing Company, and the trade-name “Singer Sewing Center” used by plaintiff, Singer Sewing Machine Company, for the stores where such products are available to the public have acquired a world-wide, favorable and very valuable reputation by reason of the high standards reflected in the display methods, advertising copy, sales policies, quality of merchandise offered for sale, customer relations, sewing instruction and servicing of machines sold, all of which have established an extraordinarily high good will for the plaintiffs and their products; and the public *207 has come to know and identify the said products, shops and services throughout the world by said trade-marks, trade-names and trade indicia.

14. The corporate defendant was organized by the individual defendants and incorporated January 9, 1952, under the name “Singer Upholstering and Sewing Company.”

15. From the incorporation of Singer Upholstering and Sewing Company to March 18, 1953, Showe was president, Cohen vice president and Josselson secretary-treasurer; they acted as the sole directors of the corporation; and each of these individual defendants owned one-third of the stock of the corporation.

16. On March 18, 1953, Showe assigned his one-third share to the corporation and resigned as president. At the time of the trial, Josselson and Cohen were the only officers and directors of the defendant corporation and the owners of all the stock thereof.

17. At the time of its incorporation and ever since then, no one by the name of “Singer” was connected with the corporate defendant.

18. The defendants’ business includes the reupholstering and restyling of old furniture, the sale of new furniture and the sale of furniture slip covers and draperies.

19. Defendants’ business involved some telephone solicitation but nearly all of it is the result of advertising in newspapers, radio and television.

20.

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Bluebook (online)
130 F. Supp. 205, 104 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 339, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singer-manufacturing-co-v-singer-upholstering-sewing-co-pawd-1955.