Straus Frank Company v. Brown

169 So. 2d 77, 246 La. 999, 144 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 164, 1964 La. LEXIS 2830
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 9, 1964
Docket47098
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 169 So. 2d 77 (Straus Frank Company v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Straus Frank Company v. Brown, 169 So. 2d 77, 246 La. 999, 144 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 164, 1964 La. LEXIS 2830 (La. 1964).

Opinion

SUMMERS, Justice.

Plaintiff, Straus Frank Company, operating auto parts and supply stores in the city of Lake Charles and the town of Sulphur under the trade name of “Lake Auto Parts”, sought damages and an injunction to restrain the defendant, Curlin Brown, from the use of the trade name “Lake Auto Supply” in the conduct of his business of selling auto parts and supplies in the town of Lake Arthur. The trial court denied plaintiff’s demands and dismissed its suit. . Tlie Court of Appeal, Third Circuit, reversed'the trial court, denied the claim for damages and granted plaintiff the injunction it sought. (159 So.2d 570). We granted certiorari to review that judgment.

Lake Auto Parts was organized by J. L. Van Norman and W. P. Logan as a partnership in 1932. Later, 'in 1943, Van Norman acquired Logan’s interest and conducted the business under'the same name until it was incorporated in 1958. After incorporation *1003 the name “Lake Auto Parts” continued to be used until the business was sold in 1961 to plaintiff Straus Frank Company, which retained the same name. The business has consisted, since its inception, of a wholesale auto parts enterprise selling to garages, service stations, car dealers, fleets, etc., with some retail sales. It is now conducted from a main store with two branch stores in Lake Charles and one branch store in Sulphur. All of the operations cover an area of approximately 60 miles surrounding Lake Charles, including all or parts of the parishes of Calcasieu, Cameron, Jefferson Davis, Beauregard, Allen and Acadia.

The area outside of Lake Charles is worked by three salesmen, who visit the territories assigned to them weekly, including the small town of Lake Arthur (population 3,541) approximately 45 miles from Lake Charles.

An advertising campaign was carried on by Lake Auto Parts, consisting of direct mailing pieces, calendars and bulletins, with some of the material being distributed to its customers by the salesmen. This advertising material makes no reference to Lake Arthur, but does list the addresses of plaintiff’s stores in Lake Charles and Sulphur.

The defendant, Curlin Brown, who lives in the town of Eunice, where he formerly worked for his father in a similar business, opened the store which is in controversy in Lake Arthur in April 1961. It is a walk-in business operated by one employee. A similar store is owned and operated by defendant in Welsh, known as “Welsh Auto-Supply”, also a trade name. The Lake Arthur business is about three-fourths retail and one-fourth wholesale. To some extent, therefore, plaintiff’s and defendant’s-businesses are competitive. Defendant concedes that he had prior knowledge that plaintiff’s business existed and was being conducted in the name of Lake Auto Parts.

Attention was first drawn to defendant’s business by plaintiff’s salesmen working in the Lake Arthur area and by errors in billing which confused the names of the two businesses. These billing errors occurred about six times and have not recurred since April 1962 when the suit was filed.

Plaintiff has lost no customers since defendant’s business began but there has been a reduction in the volume of plaintiff’s business.

There were some inquiries of plaintiff’s salesmen by customers in the Lake Arthur area as to whether the new business, Lake Auto Supply, was connected with Lake Auto Parts; but this question was promptly clarified and no confusion among the customers was shown to exist thereafter. Some sales are made by plaintiff to farmers in the area. These customers are channeled to it through association of the purchasers with, or their inquiry from, some of plain *1005 tiff’s customers or establishments familiar with its business. There has been no confusion among these customers because of the similarity of defendant’s trade name.

Testimony of a former employee of defendant in the Lake Auto Supply store in Lake Arthur shows that three or four persons made inquiries as to whether Lake Auto Supply and Lake Auto Parts were the same business. The matter was promptly clarified by the employee.

Plaintiff’s and defendant’s trade names are a combination of a geographical designation and words descriptive of the businesses in which each is engaged. The geographical designation consists of the word “Lake” in each name. Each of the businesses is located in a municipality situated on the shores of a lake after which the community is named—Lake Charles in one instance and Lake Arthur in the other. The descriptive words in the names are readily apparent—“Auto Parts” and “Auto Supply”, describing the nature of the respective businesses, which is to sell and furnish auto parts or supplies.

The law of this State has long recognized that trade names will be protected against unfair use, simulation, or imitation. Marcev v. Mandich et al., 158 La. 15, 103 So. 389 (1925); Arbutnot, Latham & Co. v. Cage Drew Co., 6 Orleans App. 374 (1909).

This does not mean that mere geographic names, or words and terms designating or describing a trade or occupation, or indicating that a particular class of goods is dealt in, can be exclusively appropriated by one as a trade name. The reason for this is that words of this character are in the public domain and not subject to exclusive appropriation, for if one person could acquire an exclusive right thus to designate his place of business no others engaged in the same business could properly so designate theirs. No one is entitled to a monopoly on such words under ordinary circumstances. Home Beverage Service v. Baas, 210 La. 873, 28 So.2d 481 (1946); 52 Am.Jur. Trademarks, Trade-names, etc. §§ 60, 66.

However, when a geographic name or descriptive words constituting a trade name by long usage have acquired a secondary meaning, then the name identifies exclusively the particular business conducted by the user. Thus a superior right to its use may be acquired by the person who first adopted it, and he is entitled to protection under the law of unfair competition against unfair use thereof by a competitor. Home Beverage Service v. Baas, supra; 52 Am.Jur., Trademarks, Tradenames, etc., § 72. This much of the law is clear, and we will assume that because of its long usage by plaintiff, the trade name Lake Auto Parts has acquired a secondary meaning.

*1007 The central issue in this case, however, presents the legal question: Is it necessary to establish fraud on the part of the party who has adopted a trade name similar to one which has acquired a secondary meaning in order that he may be enjoined from the use of the similar name?

In a case rested on the doctrine of secondary meaning, it is recognized that the authorities are not in agreement as to whether it is necessary for the plaintiff to show actual fraud on the part of the defendant. See Annotation to Cleo Syrup Corp. v. Coca-Cola Co., 150 A.L.R. at page 1133; also, 52 Am.Jur., Trademarks, Trade-names, etc., § 82.

The law in Louisiana, however, is clear in this respect. The latest expression of this court is contained in Home Beverage Service v. Baas, 210 La. 873, 28 So.2d 481 (1946).

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Bluebook (online)
169 So. 2d 77, 246 La. 999, 144 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 164, 1964 La. LEXIS 2830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/straus-frank-company-v-brown-la-1964.