Spangler Candy Company v. Crystal Pure Candy Company, Spangler Candy Company v. Crystal Pure Candy Company, Defendant-Counterclaimant-Appellant

353 F.2d 641
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 11, 1966
Docket14918-9_1
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 353 F.2d 641 (Spangler Candy Company v. Crystal Pure Candy Company, Spangler Candy Company v. Crystal Pure Candy Company, Defendant-Counterclaimant-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spangler Candy Company v. Crystal Pure Candy Company, Spangler Candy Company v. Crystal Pure Candy Company, Defendant-Counterclaimant-Appellant, 353 F.2d 641 (7th Cir. 1966).

Opinion

DUFFY, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff sought injunctive relief and an accounting for profits and damages allegedly occasioned by trademark infringement and unfair competition. Defendant counterclaimed seeking injunctive relief, damages and attorneys’ fees for alleged unfair competition, asserting that plaintiff had issued unfair press releases and had threatened defendant’s customers with involvement in the pending litigation.

The District Court held that the plaintiff’s copyright had not been infringed and that the defendant had not engaged in unfair competition. The District Court also held there had been no unfair competition as alleged in defendant’s counterclaim and the counterclaim was dismissed.

Both plaintiff and defendant manufacture lollipops which, in this record, are often referred to as “suckers.” Lollipops are a hard candy made in various flavors and molded on the end of a stick which is made of wood or strongly compressed paper.

In 1953, plaintiff entered the lollipop business by purchasing from another company the necessary machinery and the trademark Dum-Dums. This trademark had been registered in 1924. Since 1953, plaintiff continuously has marketed its suckers under the Dum-Dums mark.

For years, suckers were usually sold individually in the stores. With the coming of supermarkets, package sales of suckers became predominant. By 1960, plaintiff’s “290 supermarket bag” alone accounted for almost 50% of its sucker sales.

Customers at supermarkets usually wait upon themselves. In the candy section of a modern supermarket there may be displayed three or four brands of suckers. Many times candy customers *643 are accompanied and influenced by their children, some of whom may not be old enough to read. “Impulse buying” is often the basis for the selection which is made.

Lollipop manufacturers have attempted to identify their products by decorating the labels. The suckers are usually individually wrapped in either clear or colored cellophane. However, plaintiff used colored wax paper. Plaintiff was the only manufacturer making a ball-shaped and banded penny lollipop using wax paper wrappers and offering self-liquidating premiums.

Plaintiff’s sales of suckers, marked and dressed as hereinbefore described, rose from 61,593,000 in 1953, to 286,182,000 in 1959, the last full year before defendant’s accused acts. Of the 1959 sales, approximately 119,000,000 were made in the so-called “290 supermarket bag.” Testimony of supermarket and drugstore operators established there was a steady consumer demand for Dum-Dums suckers.

For many years, defendant had marketed suckers of various shapes and sizes under various brand names. In 1954, it had registered the trademark “Tot Pops.” However, in the late 1950’s, defendant’s leading brand was “Kiddie Pops.”

Jewel Tea Company was an important customer of defendant. In the spring or summer of 1959, it transferred its lollipop business to plaintiff. Defendant’s managing partner, Abbey, testified— “Well, I felt that if a good customer of mine thought that that was a good item to handle, I should put it in my line since I made nothing but pops.”

Abbey sat down with one of plaintiff’s packages before him as well as certain other packages. He frankly testified he tried “to get as close to [plaintiff’s] as I thought good ethics and good taste would allow me to.” Abbey’s endeavor to have his package look like plaintiff’s is shown by the copying of errors which occurred on plaintiff’s package. Plaintiff had printed “Save Wraps” on its bags, but “Save Wrappers” on the labels. This error was copied exactly by Abbey.

Abbey sent one of plaintiff’s suckers to a candy mold maker so that the mold maker could design a mold which would duplicate the form of plaintiff’s product. He devised a new trademark. Abbey designed a wrapper with plaintiff’s wrapper before him, and substituted the words “Pop-Pops” for “Dum-Dums.”

Abbey then devised the decoration for an outer polyethylene bag nearly the identical size of plaintiff’s, and used shades of colors as in plaintiff’s outer bag. He used slogans on the bag almost identical with those used by plaintiff. One side of defendant’s bag was printed vertically and the other horizontally, just as was plaintiff’s. About the only place where defendant differed from plaintiff’s color scheme was that plaintiff’s name was printed in deep blue against the clear polyethylene background where plaintiff’s name could be easily read, while defendant’s name was printed on opaque white and was not so readily discernible.

Hence almost every element which Abbey put into his new sucker, mark and dress save the word “Pop-Pops” was borrowed without consent, from plaintiff. It would seem to be an unusual example of “good ethics” and “good taste.”

There was no evidence of confusion, or confusing similarity, between the numerous competing suckers until the advent of defendant’s accused mark and dress. Subsequently, there was proof of instances of actual confusion. One instance was — Mrs. Robert Smith was a Sunday School teacher who was familiar with Dum-Dums. She went to a supermarket in Georgia where she had previously purchased Dum-Dums in order to obtain a package of suckers to be distributed to her Sunday School class. She asked the assistant manager for DumDums and he brought her a bag and laid it on the counter. After glancing at it, Mrs. Smith paid for it, took it home and thereafter distributed the contents to the children. Her brother-in-law, who was one of plaintiff’s distributors and whose *644 children were, apparently, in the class, telephoned Mrs. Smith chiding her for giving his competitor’s product to the children. She replied — “I thought that I had Dum-Dums; I asked for Dum-Dums and it looked like Dum-Dums.” There was other evidence of actual confusion. “There can be no more positive proof of likelihood of confusion than evidence of actual confusion.” Standard Oil Co. v. Standard Oil Co., 10 Cir., 252 F.2d 65, 74, 76 A.L.R.2d 600.

Supermarkets did not customarily carry both Pop-Pops and Dum-Dums. The reason is the one assigned by the District Court, that one wrapped and packaged item could be substituted for the other. It is interesting to note that after defendant copied plaintiff’s product, wrapping and dress, Jewel Tea Company dropped plaintiff’s Dum-Dums and substituted Pop-Pops.

ALLEGED TRADEMARK INFRINGEMENT

The test for establishing trademark infringement was stated by this Court nearly forty years ago in Northam Warren Corp. v. Universal Cosmetic Company, 7 Cir., 18 F.2d 774, 775, and reaffirmed in Independent Nail & Packing Company v. Stronghold Screw Products, Inc., 7 Cir., 205 F.2d 921, 924, and National Van Lines, Inc. v. Dean, 7 Cir., 288 F.2d 5

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Bluebook (online)
353 F.2d 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spangler-candy-company-v-crystal-pure-candy-company-spangler-candy-ca7-1966.