Superfine Products, Inc. v. Denny

54 F. Supp. 148, 60 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 126, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1763
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedDecember 17, 1943
DocketC. A. No. 2700
StatusPublished

This text of 54 F. Supp. 148 (Superfine Products, Inc. v. Denny) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Superfine Products, Inc. v. Denny, 54 F. Supp. 148, 60 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 126, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1763 (N.D. Ga. 1943).

Opinion

RUSSELL, District Judge.

Superfine Products, Inc., seeks to enjoin the partnership of B. Earl Denny and Schaul Greinoman, a partnership trading as Plit Cola Company, from infringing copyrighted labels of plaintiff, and from using upon the defendant’s products any labels, or doing any acts, which are calculated to cause defendant’s products to be confused with or passed off as plaintiff’s, and from manufacturing or offering for sale any product of similar color; from using for shipment or sale cartons, jugs or bottles which are identical or colorably similar to the distinctly marked cartons or containers of plaintiff and from doing any act that would represent the product of defendant as the product of plaintiff, and for general relief. The defendants answered the rule to show cause, a full hearing was had and it is stipulated that final decree may be entered herein without the necessity of an additional hearing.

The suit involves four labels for soft drink cola syrups. The defense asserted is that the labels in question, though regis[149]*149tered in the copyright office, were not legally subject to copyright, and, further, that the portion of the labels which had been appropriated by the defendants had prior to registration, been dedicated to the public by their being printed and used in the general conduct of manufacture, sales and shipment of the complainant for several months prior to registration.

Findings of Fact.

Label copyright Class KK No. 19007; date published stated in certificate March 1, 1943. Copies received May 14, 1943.

The label copyrighted is an attractive lithographed label in colors and distinctive lettering and display. In the form and appearance as registered it was not used prior to registry. However the statements of the components of the syrup, the method of dispensing and warning against substitution are for all practical purposes identical with similar labels first printed and used without the copyright at least as early as November 18, 1942. Save in the respects mentioned the Hit Cola fountain syrup label bears no resemblance to the •copyrighted label, and as to the derivative content, directions for dispensing and warning against substitution, the defendant’s fountain syrup label contains identical language except for substitution of ■“ ‘Hit Cola’ ” instead of “ ‘De Lux Cola.’ ” However the appearance of the label is not at all similar and could not be mistaken for the “De Lux” label used by Superfine Products, Inc.

Label copyright Class KK No. 19975; •date of publication stated in certificate July 9, 1943. Copies received July 12, 1943.

It appears from the evidence that this label for pint and gallon containers was printed and used in the labeling and marketing of complainant’s product at least as early as December 18, 1943, but in a different color and type from that copyrighted. The “working formula” or directions for using the concentrate to make fountain syrup is identical on both the non-copyrighted and copyrighted label, as is also the statement of contents and directions for dispensing. In respect to wording of contents, “working formula” and method of dispensing, the label used by Hit Cola is also identical in words with the De Lux Cola label. The appearance of its labels is not similar, they being in different color, having a different border, and also being distinguished by the name of the product and the manufacturer.

Label copyright Class No. KK 18917; date of publication given on certificate March 1, 1943. Copy received May 7, 1943.

It appears from the evidence that so far as the statement of contents and its derivatives, the “working formula,” and directions for dispensing, the language and substantial appearance of the copyrighted label had been employed in a label printed December 18, 1942 and used by complainant in its manufacture, sales and shipment, without registration and prior to its application for copyright. As to such wording the Hit Cola fountain concentrate label is identical with the copyrighted label. The appearance is not at all similar. The De Lux fountain concentrate label is an attractive multi-colored lithographed one and the Hit Cola label is in single color and does not at all simulate the complainant’s copyrighted label.

Label copyright Class KK No. 20325. Date of publication August 6, 1943. Copies received August 12, 1943.

Here again the statement of derivatives, formula, and directions for bottling contained in the copyrighted label is identical with wording of a label published at least as early as April 28, 1943 and thereafter used in the manufacture, sale and shipment of complainant’s product, except for the directions of gallons of water to be used in the mixture, which is 7% gallons in the published non-copyrighted label and 8 in the copyrighted label. Defendant’s label contains a statement of derivatives, content formula and directions for bottling identical with the complainant’s copyrighted label. . The defendant’s label is not similar in appearance to complainant’s, the copyrighted label being printed in black with “Superfine” in script and defendants’ being in green ink, designated “Bottlers Number 16” in a printed type, and the border and label having a design dissimilar to complainant’s.

Each of the defendant’s labels were printed prior to June 30, 1943. The name of defendant’s products and the statement that it was manufactured by “Hit Cola Company” with the address is prominently displayed upon each of the defendant’s labels so as to give no cause for confusion between its product and the product of the complainant.

[150]*150The containers and cartons used by the complainant, and likewise by the defendants, have no distinctive characteristic and are of well-established use in the soft drink syrup trade. Caramel is the usual coloring agent employed and all cola soft drink syrups have a substantial identical appearance. It is customary in the soft drink business of the nature here involved for the manufacturer or seller to furnish directions for preparing and dispensing syrup and drinks from the concentrate and syrups sold.

Defendant, B. Earl Denny, has been employed in the soft drink syrup business for many years, while the president and chief officer of the complainant first became engaged in the soft drink business in May of 1942. Denny and such president collaborated in preparing the formulas and directions set forth on the various labels.

Complainant fails to show that the defendant has attempted to sell its products as the product of complainant. On the contrary the only evidence in the record shows that defendant contended that its product was not only different from, but superior to, the complainant’s product. Except for the similarity in words in the statement of derivative content, color and method of use, nothing is shown to authorize a finding that the labels of defendants are so similar to complainant’s as to lead to confusion on the part of the buying public, and the identity of wording standing alone is not sufficient to raise such confusion.

Conclusions of Law.

In view of the evidence in this case it is found unnecessary to determine whether the labels of the complainant are of such character as to be entitled to the protection of the copyright laws.

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Bluebook (online)
54 F. Supp. 148, 60 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 126, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/superfine-products-inc-v-denny-gand-1943.