Stevens-Davis Co. v. Mather & Co.

230 Ill. App. 45, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 80
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 25, 1923
DocketGen. No. 27,765
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 230 Ill. App. 45 (Stevens-Davis Co. v. Mather & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevens-Davis Co. v. Mather & Co., 230 Ill. App. 45, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 80 (Ill. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Johnston

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by Mather & Company and George C. Mather, appellants, from a decree of the superior court of Cook county granting an injunction against appellants substantially in accordance with the prayer of the bill of complaint of the Stevens-Davis Company, appellee. The material allegations of the bill stated briefly are as follows: The Stevens-Davis Company, appellee, has been for many years engaged in the business of “promoting human efficiency” for the employees of “large employers through inspiration and educational work.”- Appellee has built up a successful business throughout the United States, and employs a large number of people whose time is exclusively devoted to such work. The business is conducted by selling to employers a series of fifty-two small colored cards on which are printed “talks to employees” on virtues such as loyalty, enthusiasm, harmony, cheerfulness, temperance and “other topics.” The cards are to be distributed to the employees through their weekly pay envelopes. Appellee has given to this “system or service” the name of “Success Talks,” and has bound the cards in book form. Appellee alleges that appellants “have been and now are engaged in business for the sole purpose of plagiarizing the system, services, products and forms” of appellee and of “so imitating and copying” appellee’s business. Appellants have named their pay envelope cards “Steps to Success,” taking thereby the important word “Success” used by appellee in the name of its cards. The “Success Talks” which are used by appellee “are written on fifty-two titles or topics” and were originated by appellee. “Substantially the same list of topics or titles in the same sequence as used” by appellee has been adopted by and is now used by appellants. The cards of appellee have been copied by appellants in “size, style, color scheme, ruling type and design,” but the language of the cards although “varied somewhat” is the same in “thought, spirit and substance.” Appellants “not satisfied with the purloining of the system and products” of appellee, “resorted to a most wrongful, fraudulent and dastardly practice of obtaining” testimonials or indorsements for their pay envelope cards. They “wrongfully procured a list of the customers” of appellee, wrote to these customers falsely representing that they, appellants, “had in contemplation the purchase of the said ‘Success Talks’ of” appellee, “and the use of same by distribution in the pay envelopes of their own employees.” Appellants obtained responses from many of appellee’s customers “indorsing and commenting on the genius and ability” of appellee, “and the merits of its said pay envelope lectures to employees.” Appellants made photographic copies of the “testimonials” or “indorsements” and used them as “testimonials” or “endorsements” of their own pay envelope cards. When the customers ascertained “the imposition that had been practiced upon them” they “canceled contracts” with appellants “and rescinded their said letters of recommendation.” Nevertheless appellants “have wrongfully used and are now using the said testimonials” to the “great detriment and injury” of appellee. By trading upon the “prestige” of appellee in one instance appellants obtained an “order of over a million cards” from the Worthington Pump Company of New York City, which had been a customer of appellee, and when it gave the order was buying the products of appellee. Appellants “have represented that they have succeeded to the business” of appellee “and that the continuance of the 1 Success Talks’ and similar work is now being prosecuted and conducted solely by them”; and “that through said gross misrepresentations and their fraudulent methods” they “have secured orders from customers of” appellee “when such customers thought they were purchasing a continuation of” appellee’s “service.” In the perpetration “of the frauds hereinabove set forth,” appellants “induced two of their employees to enter the employment” of appellee and “said employees in the course of their said employment obtained copies of the fifty-two 1 Success Talks’ of” appellee, “and all its forms, lists of customers, etc.”; that these employees “were again taken back into the employ of” appellants and that they “turned over to” appellants “all of the said papers, documents, information, and trade secrets” of appellee. It is charged by appellee that “the said acts constituted unfair business competition and piracy in that the said emissaries of” appellants “obtained secret information” from appellee. It is further charged by appellee that the method by which the “testimonials” were obtained constituted “unfair competition”; and further that appellants “are guilty of piracy in using” appellee’s “testimonials as testimonials of” appellants’ work. Appellee claims that it has sustained “great loss and damages to its trade and business”; that it has no adequate remedy at law; and that it is entitled to an “accounting of profits made by” appellants in the “fraudulent sale of their goods in the name” of appellee. The bill alleges that the individual appellants “are persons of no financial standing and that they are insolvent”; that the appellant “Mather & Company, a corporation, has no tangible or valuable property” or “assets except such contracts and funds as it has recently secured by piratical methods from” appellee; and that “it is imperatively necessary that an injunction be issued.” The bill prayed that “an account may be taken” and that the appellants be required to pay to appellee “whatever shall appear to be due to it upon the taking of such account.” The bill also prayed for a preliminary injunction restraining the appellants as follows: (1) From obtaining testimonial letters; (2) from using the testimonial letters already obtained; (3) from representing that the appellants are the “authors, owners, vendors, or users of the ‘Success Talks’” or “of any of the products” of appellee; (4) from representing that appellants “have taken over or have the right to use said ‘Success Talks’ ” or that ‘ ‘ they have in any manner purchased or succeeded to the business of” appellee; (5) from “using any of the lists of topics or names of the said fifty-two weekly ‘Success Talles’ of” appellee or “of any of its forms, printed matter, system or devices where the appellants obtained such information from the employees of said” appellee “secretly and without the knowledge and consent of said” appellee; (6) “from photographing any letters recommending the work or products” of appellee or “from using any photographs heretofore taken” of such work or products; (7) “from infringing upon any of the trade secrets of” appellee or “indulging in any manner in any unfair business competition with said” appellee and “from manufacturing or selling pay envelope cards of any kind or description so made or produced in form, size, color scheme, ruling, printing and general appearance as to be or appear to be like the ‘ Success Talks’ of” appellee or “to deceive or tend to deceive the public into thinking that the products of the” appellants “were in fact those of” appellee.

Attached to the bill is an affidavit of Roderick Gr.

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Bluebook (online)
230 Ill. App. 45, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-davis-co-v-mather-co-illappct-1923.