Star Distillery Co. v. Mihalovitch-Fletcher Co.

12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 113, 23 Ohio Dec. 342, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 99
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedNovember 3, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 113 (Star Distillery Co. v. Mihalovitch-Fletcher Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Star Distillery Co. v. Mihalovitch-Fletcher Co., 12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 113, 23 Ohio Dec. 342, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 99 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Hoffheimer, J.

This matter came on to be heard on the receivers’ motion, (a) to modify the decree heretofore entered herein; (6) on exceptions by receiver to the report of the special master in the matter of the accounting; and (c) on motion to refer back to the special master for correction; and also on application of the intervenor, Beekman, to modify the decree heretofore entered herein.

Taking up intervenor’s application first, the court it may be noted, is asked to strike out of said decree, certain operating expenses enumerated in said decree, and in the 6th finding thereof, for the reasons that none of said operating expenses are a proper charge to be borne by the business done by the receivers, in goods carrying the trade-mark “Vionana” and that none of said expenses were made necessary or were in any way increased, by the carrying on of the Vionana department, in connection with the other business carried on by the receivers, during the accounting period, and because none of said expenses, as matter of law, are properly chargeable against the business done by the receivers, in goods carrying the “Vionana” name.

Reliance for this application is placed on Regis v. Jaynes, 191 Mass., 245; Nelson v. Winchell, 203 Mass., 75, and certain other cases.

[115]*115If the rule of these cases is to be applied here, then obviously these receivers (unless it could be said they sustained the burden. and proved by that method to what extent the operating expenses of the entire business were increased by carrying on the “Vionana” department, which it is insisted they 'made no endeavor to do), must be held to account to intervenor on the gross, instead of on the net profits, as this court has heretofore decreed.

The rule which intervenor contends for, however, is an extreme one, and attention to the eases cited will show, that it is based on the principle that “the wrong-doer should not be permitted to derive a direct advantage from his own wrong” (Regis v. Jaynes, 252); and if by reason of his wrong the infringer causes confusion of property or of goods, he does so at his peril, and, if unable to separate the items, he must pay the penalty for his wrong.

All' the cases cited by intervenor show that the respective courts had uppermost in their minds the fact that the person against whom the rule was declared was a wrong-doer, who might derive some personal profit or advantage'by reason of his own wrong, unless such rule were invoked.

That it was this element of fraud or wilful wrong-doing that' called for the rule, is well illustrated by the language of the court in Benkert v. Feder, 34 Fed., 535 (cited by intervenor):

“One who deliberately and knowingly uses another’s trademark, commits a palpable and unmitigated fraud, for which there is no possible excuse.”

In Regis v. Jaynes, and in Nelson v. Winchell, the court an-, nounce, in substance, that the wrong-doer is not to be permitted directly or indirectly to profit by his own wrong; and the same reasons underlie Menendez v. Holt, 128 U. S., 514. However just such rule may be in a typical infringement case, where such element of intentional or wilful appropriation of another man’s property is present, and where there is possibility of personal profit or advantage in the wrong-doer, this case presents no such considerations. This was not a case of piracy nor wilful, deliberate. or intentional appropriation on the part of these receivers' [116]*116of intervenor’s property for purposes of private gain or otherwise. The receivers could not have derived any personal advantage, “directly or indirectly,” in what they did. These officers simply took over and attempted to run in good faith, and for the benefit of others, this vast, confused and complicated business, and as it was cast into their hands. This business included the “Vionana” department, ownership of which trade-mark intervenor subsequently claimed.

A long time prior to the receivership, intervenor himself, then in the employ of the Mihalovitch-Fletcher Company, (and he was in their employment practically up to the time of these proceedings,) suggested that the firm use this name, (see Beekman’s testimony, pp. 41, 42); and the firm did use it. - And the manner in which the name had been and was being used by the firm, the fact that it had spent many thousands of dollars in advertising it, as Us “Vionana” Department, reinforced by the further fact that it had in its possession the apparent ownership of title in the shape of the transferred stock-books and certificates of the Vionana Specialty Company, certainly all of these were circumstances which would have justified any reasonably prudent business men, especially after taking advice of counsel, as was done here, in believing, just as receivers believed, that this name, “Vionana,” was the property of the Mihalovitch-Fletcher Company, irrespective of the ultimate conclusion of this court, when it came' to try the question of title. All these circumstances, it seems to me, should, in fairness, be construed so as to relieve these receivers from all imputation of fraud or wilful wrong-doing, and so as to save the estate from the application of a rule, which, as I have endeavored to point out was intended and designed to prevent the -wrong-doer himself from personally benefiting or profiting by his own wrong. Even if these receivers, in continuing to use the name after Mr. Beekman gave'notice of ownership, -were in the wrong, I do not believe, under the circummstances as detailed, the creditors ought to be penalized for such error, and particularly where such error was partly; the result of intervenor’s own act in originally suggesting the use by. the firm of the name “Vionana” in connection with the Mihalovitch-Fletcher busness, and in otherwise acquiescing in a course of business [117]*117■which gave the receivers reasonable grounds to believe they were the owners. In apparent conflict however with the cases cited by intervenors is the Tremolo patent case.

In the Tremolo patent case (23 Wall., 518), the court say:

“The defendants, vendors of organs generally, and selling sometimes organs having a patented invention consisting of a combination of what was called a ‘tremolo attachment’ with the organ; and selling sometimes organs without the attachment, were 'decreed guilty, in their sales of organs with the attachment, of infringing the complainant’s patent.
“Held: 1. That in the ascertainment of profits made by them from sales of organs with the tremolo attachment it was proper to let them prove the general expenses of their business in effecting sales of organs generally, and deduct a ratable proportion from the profits made by the tremolo attachment.”

And in the opinion of the court, it is stated:

“We can not see why the general expenses incurred by the defendants in carrying on their business, such expenses as store rent, clerk hire, fuel, gas, porterage, etc., do not concern one part of their business as much as another. It may be said that the selling a tremolo attachment did not add to their expenses, and therefore that no part of those expenses should be deducted from the' price obtained for such an attachment. This is, however, but a partial view.

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Related

Tremaine v. Hitchcock & Co.
90 U.S. 518 (Supreme Court, 1875)
Menendez v. Holt
128 U.S. 514 (Supreme Court, 1888)
Regis v. H. A. Jaynes & Co.
77 N.E. 774 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1906)
Nelson v. J. H. Winchell & Co.
89 N.E. 180 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1909)
Benkert v. Feder
34 F. 534 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California, 1888)
Walter Baker & Co. v. Slack
130 F. 514 (Seventh Circuit, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 113, 23 Ohio Dec. 342, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/star-distillery-co-v-mihalovitch-fletcher-co-ohsuperctcinci-1911.