Stern Furniture Co. v. Stern

83 N.E.2d 804, 52 Ohio Law. Abs. 527, 1948 Ohio App. LEXIS 896
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 21, 1948
DocketNo. 20810
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 83 N.E.2d 804 (Stern Furniture Co. v. Stern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stern Furniture Co. v. Stern, 83 N.E.2d 804, 52 Ohio Law. Abs. 527, 1948 Ohio App. LEXIS 896 (Ohio Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

OPINION

By SKEEL, J.

This appeal comes to this court on questions of law and fact from the common pleas court of Cuyahoga county. The plaintiff appellee seeks to enjoin the defendant appellants from using the names “Stern” “Stern Furniture” “Stern Bros.” or “Stern Bros. Co.” in connection with their retail furniture and household appliance business.

The plaintiff, The Stern Furniture Company, has been in the furniture business at its present location at 7734 Broadway, or within a few doors of that location since 1911. There is some evidence tending to show that Sam Stern, the founder of The Stern Furniture Company, also ran a department store close to his furniture business, under the name of Stern, but that such business was closed out and the furniture business moved into the building occupied by the department store. In all events, The Stern Furniture Company has continued in about the same location for thirty-six years. During that period of time, through its policy of merchandising and the expenditure of about two hundred thousand dollars for advertising, the company has become well known in the general district in which it is located as a retail supplier of furniture.

The defendants, Henry Stern and Eugene Stern as partners, now doing business under the name “Stern Brothers Appliance .& Furniture Company” on occasions using in advertising and otherwise the name of “Stern Brothers” and “Stern Brothers Furniture Company”, started in the household appliance business at 5420 Broadway in the year 1939. This location is about a mile from the location of plaintiff, and, as is evident from addresses given, is on the same street.

The defendants, Henry and Eugene Stern’s family name was Sternberg. Some members of the family, for business purposes, began in 1931 to shorten their name to “Stern.” By 1936 the defendants, Henry and Eugene Stern had begun [529]*529the use of the shorter name and were known by that name in some of their business relationships. In 1939 Eugene and Henry Stern opened the “Stern Brothers Appliance Company” at 5420 Broadway, confining the enterprise to household appliances. In 1941 they added a line of furniture and in 1943 and thereafter, in advertising, used the name “Stern Brothers Furniture Company” and on occasions the name “Stern Brothers.”

Henry and Eugene Stern, and the members of their families, in 1941 by action of Probate Court, changed their surnames to Stern, giving the reason for requesting the change: “* * * difficulty in pronouncing in English and are being continually misspelled by their associates and people with whom they have business * *

The record discloses that after the defendants began to sell furniture, a great deal of confusion developed. Deliveries from wholesalers intended for one company, being delivered to the other; telephone calls from customers, meant for one company being directed to the other; correspondence addressed to the wrong store; credit mix-ups with suppliers and customers; customers going to defendants’ store in the belief that they were dealing with plaintiff; and in other ways a great deal of confusion developed.

The evidence also shows that through the years in which The Stern Furniture Company has continued to sell furniture, the word “Stern” has come to have a secondary "meaning in the general district in which they have conducted their business, that is, that when the word “Stern” was used in connection with the purchase of furniture, The Stern Furniture Company was intended by the use of such word.

It is the claim of the plaintiff that by reason of the foregoing facts they are entitled to an order enjoining the1 defendants from using the name “Stern’s” “Stern Brothers” “Stern Furniture” “Stern Bros. Co.” in connection with their furniture business at 5420 Broadway in the City of Cleveland, Ohio.

The defendants’ contentions with respect to this claim 0f plaintiff are:

1. That they are using a name that is rightfully theirs;

2. That they are not guilty of unfair trade practices;

3. That the plaintiff has been guilty of laches.

There is no evidence in this record that tends to establish that the defendants Eugene and Henry Stern, deliberately changed their surnames from Sternberg to Stern so that they could establish a furniture business in unfair competition with the plaintiff. These defendants and other members of the [530]*530family used the name “Stern” long before the furniture store was even considered. So, under the facts, the wilful intent to injure the plaintiff or to purposely take advantage of the established business reputation of the plaintiff, for the defendants’ benefit, is not involved.

The name “Stern” is one of common use. The evidence discloses that many people have the surname “Stern”. But such fact does not prevent a business organization from appropriating it to the conduct of its business in such a way and over a sufficient period of time, to acquire through continued and notorious use the' exclusive right to use such name in connection with such business.

In O. Jur., Vol. 39, page 380, parag. 34, after stating that the general rule is that there is no exclusive right to a trademark in the name of a person, because such names are generic, and if there is no attempt to mislead, one has the right to use his family name commercially, the author says:

“* * * There are, however, exceptions to this general rule, and under certain circumstances the name even of a living person may be a good trademark. For example, it has been held that the name of the inventor or original maker of an article of traffic, if not used in a way which would be likely to deceive or defraud, will be protected as a trademark. Thus, the name ‘Dr. Drake’s German Croup Remedy’ so-called, because the manufacturer and vendor, the plaintiff, obtained the formula from one Dr. August Drake, a German physician, the remedy having been made and sold by the plaintiff for ten years before the remedy of the defendants was brought before the public, in the same place, is a good trademark.”

Again, in the same work, at page 408, Section 67, it is said:

“Even though a word or a combination of words is incapable of becoming a valid trademark, yet if it has by a sufficiently long and exclusive use, acquired such a secondary meaning as to indicate in the trade that the goods to which it is applied are made by a particular manufacturer, or are put on the market by a particular vendor, its use by another on similar goods in such a way as to be likely to deceive purchasers, will be restrained as unfair competition, and its use even in its primary meaning will be so limited as to prevent the working of a probable deception by passing off the goods of one maker as those of another.”

The case of Hugo Stein Cloak Company v. The S. B. Stein & Sons Inc. 58 Oh Ap 377 is clearly in point. Here the plain[531]*531tiffs who were in the retail clothing business had over a number of years publicized the word “Stein’s” as a trade name. The defendant in conducting its jewelry business had used several names, including therein the name of “Stein” such as “S. B. Stein” “S. B. Stein, Jeweler” (and in 1931 upon incorporating the business) “The S. B. Stein & Son Inc.” The original family name of S. B. Stein was Beckenstein which he changed to Stein in 1906.

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.E.2d 804, 52 Ohio Law. Abs. 527, 1948 Ohio App. LEXIS 896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stern-furniture-co-v-stern-ohioctapp-1948.