Standard Brewery Co. v. Interboro Brewing Co.
This text of 229 F. 543 (Standard Brewery Co. v. Interboro Brewing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Upon an application filed January 5, 1906, and which stated that the trade-mark had been used continuously in its business since July 1, 1903, complainant on March 15, 1907, obtained a registered trade-mark for the name “Bismarck” applied to packages of beer. The evidence shows that certainly since July, 1904, plaintiff has been_ selling its beer continuously under that name. The evidence also indicates that, except for defendant’s sales, to be referred to later, no beer was sold anywhere in the United States subsequent to May, 1904, under the name “Bismarck.” We have, then, a registered United States trademark issued to an individual at a time when such individual was and for some time had been the only individual selling under that trademark; subsequent to the issue the same individual continues selling his goods under that mark for several years, with no one else selling goods under the same mark; finally, six years after registration, defendant begins selling under such mark. Manifestly a prima facie case of infringement of the statutory trade-mark is made out. It is in order, then, to consider the defenses.
In 1912 defendant decided to use the name .“Bismarck” as trademark for beer of its brewing. Quite naturally it apprehended that a similar use of the name of the great Chancellor had been made before, and undertook to ascertain if this were so. Its investigation seems to have been quite carelessly conducted, because it wholly failed to discover the registration of complainant’s trade-mark in the Patent Office in 1907. It did, however, discover, the registration in that office of the words “Bismarck Brau” by one Charles Weiler, of Moorestown, N. J., on December 8, 1890. Defendant tried to- get into communication with Weiler, but found he was deceased, whereupon it began to market .its beer as “Bismarck” in 1913. Subsequently learning of complainant’s use of the trade-mark,, it made a further search as to the Weiler trade-mark with the following results: Weiler was an employe of the Henry Muller Brewing Company. Apparently neither [545]*545lie nor that company ever sold any beer under the trade-mark. The registration of Weiler, by mesne assignments, came into the possession of the Bergner & Engel Brewing Company, with which the Muller Company had amalgamated, but tlie Bergner & Engel Company has never “used the brand of beer known as Bismarck.” In November, 1894, the latter company assigned to Habitch & Co. an exclusive license under this Weiler registration to use the trade-mark in the New England States. Habitch & Co. sold beer under this mark until 1900, when they amalgamated with other companies to form the'Massachusetts Breweries Company. The latter company continued to sell beer under the trade-mark until May 26, 1904; since then it has discontinued sales. On May 8, 1913, defendant obtained from the Massachusetts Brewing Company a letter purporting to license defendant to use the trade-mark on condition that it would guarantee that its products would not he sold in New England.
[546]*546It is urged that the office was not fully informed as to tire assignment from Engel Company to complainant with its exception of New England territory. But if everything here proved had been laid before the office, it would have been its duty under the statute to grant the registration. By the assignment from the Engel Company complainant had obtained nothing, but it showed that certainly since July, 1904,. it had continuously sold “Bismarck beer” as part of its regular business. The so-called license to the Habitch Company from the Engel Company, which never had a Bismarck beer business, conveyed nothing. The sales of Bismarck beer in New England by Habitch Company ceased in 1900, and by Massachusetts Breweries ceased in May, 1904. So far as the record shows, no one else in the United States was selling beer under such trade-mark, and as exclusive dealer for over two years complainant was entitled to his registration.
The decree is reversed.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
229 F. 543, 144 C.C.A. 3, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-brewery-co-v-interboro-brewing-co-ca2-1916.