Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias v. Improved Order Knights of Pythias

38 L.R.A. 658, 71 N.W. 470, 113 Mich. 133, 1897 Mich. LEXIS 738
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 38 L.R.A. 658 (Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias v. Improved Order Knights of Pythias) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias v. Improved Order Knights of Pythias, 38 L.R.A. 658, 71 N.W. 470, 113 Mich. 133, 1897 Mich. LEXIS 738 (Mich. 1897).

Opinion

Montgomery, J.

Complainant filed a bill for an injunction, praying that defendants be restrained from using the ritual and jewels of the order of the Knights of [134]*134Pythias, and from using the name “Improved Order Knights of Pythias.” A careful examination of the authorities cited by counsel, and of the reasons urged by them, has failed to convince us that the learned trial judge erred in dismissing the bill. The opinion of Judge Carpenter contains so full a review of the case, and its reasoning is so satisfactory, that we adopt it as our own. That opinion is as follows:

“The Knights of Pythias is a secret, unincorporated society, organized in 1864, and has about 500,000 members. Complainant is the Supreme Lodge of the Knights of Pythias, and was incorporated by special act of Congress in 1894. The Improved Order Knights of Pythias is also a secret, unincorporated society, and had, June 30, 1895, when the last report was made, 1,738 members. It was formed in December, 1894, by former members of the Knights of Pythias. These last-mentioned members left the old order, and formed the new, because a convention of the Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias, in August, 1894, declared that ‘ henceforth and forevermore the ritual used in this and all other English-speaking countries shall be printed in the English language only.’ Both orders are fraternal and benevolent. They have many resemblances. The important difference between them, as already indicated, is this: The ritual of the Improved Order may be printed in German, while that of the Knights of Pythias cannot be. Complainant asks an injunction restraining defendants from using the name ‘Improved Order Knights of Pythias,’ and from using the name ‘ Knights of Pythias,’ or any derivative thereof, and from printing or using any ritual in substance like that used by the Knights of Pythias.
‘ ‘ There is no proof that the defendants’ ritual is so nearly like complainant’s as to justify the interference of a court. The sole question is, then, whether defendants shall be enjoined from using the name ‘ Improved Order Knights of Pythias.’ Complainant’s counsel insist that by the act incorporating complainant as ‘ Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias’ an exclusive right to the name ‘Knights of Pythias ’ was acquired. Numerous cases are cited holding that a corporation has an exclusive right to its name. No case, however, is cited holding that incorporation gives an exclusive right to a name already in use, as the name ‘Knights of Pythias’ was, by an existing voluntary society. [135]*135On the contrary, McGlynn v. Post, 21 Abb. N. C. 97, cited by complainant’s counsel, and Black Rabbit Association v. Munday, 21 Abb. N. C. 99, hold that in such a case an exclusive right is not acquired. Indeed, if complainant, by incorporating, acquired the exclusive right to the name ‘ Knights of Pythias, ’ it could at will compel the order of which it is only the head, and all other lodges, subordinate and grand, to cease using the name ‘ Knights of Pythias.’ It seems clear, therefore, that complainant did not, by becoming a corporation, acquire the exclusive right to the name ‘Knights of Pythias,’ and that, whatever are its rights, they cannot exceed those of the order of which it is the head.
“The question, then, arises, are the rights of the order violated? Nearly all the members who withdrew from the old order and went into the new are Germans, and many of them are unable to read and understand a ritual not printed in German. Prior to the action of the order which was the occasion of their withdrawal, the order furnished for their use, and they used, rituals printed in German. Defendants therefore withdrew from the society of which they were members, because it changed, not because it continued, its policy. The propriety of the conduct of complainant in forbidding the printing of the ritual in German, the propriety of the conduct of defendants in withdrawing from the order, are questions solely for the consideration of the parties themselves. The Knights of Pythias had a lawful right to declare that its ritual should be printed only in English, and defendants had an equally lawful right to found an order whose ritual might be printed in German. Having formed this order, is it possible that defendants cannot give it an appropriate name, a name which will properly describe it? This new order is formed by the members of the Knights of Pythias who withdrew from the Knights of Pythias because that order changed its policy in a matter which it must be presumed they thought important. This order resembles the Knights of Pythias. It stands to these members in the place which the Knights of Pythias has vacated. To a certain extent it carries out a policy which the Knights of Pythias formerly carried out and abandoned. Complainant charges that the defendants have seceded from it, and have established a rival and very similar organization. No name could appropriately be adopted, under these circumstances, which did not contain the words ‘ Knights of Pythias,’ because no name [136]*136could properly describe it, either by reference to its origin, its history, or its purposes, which did not contain those words. Suppose that this new order had received some other name. It would have been none the less, in the minds of complainant, a seceding faction of the Knights of Pythias; it would have been none the less, to defendants, a substitute for the Knights of Pythias; and it would have been none the less, to the impartial historian, an offshoot of the Knights of Pythias.
“One excellent test of an appropriate name to select under such circumstances is furnished by the history of schisms in other societies. Nearly all our varieties of churches of the same denomination are the result of secession or withdrawals from the parent church of that name, and it has been the usual course for the new church society to adopt as a permanent part of its name the name of the parent oi’ganization. Take one instance: A part of the Methodist Episcopal Church withdrew and established the Protestant Methodist Church. So we have the Order of Foresters of America, formerly the Ancient Order of Foresters of America; the Canadian Order of Foresters; the Independent Order of Foresters, — all of which are, as I understand, offshoots of the Ancient Order of Foresters of England. No one has ever questioned the appropriateness of using the parent name as a part of thé name of a new society formed under these circumstances, so far as I can learn. To my mind, it is clear, therefore, that defendants, in naming their order, not only could, but were almost bound to, in order to, properly describe it, make some use of the words ‘ Knights of Pythias.’ Of course, there is this limitation: Defendants should not use a name so much like the name of the order from which they have withdrawn as to work a damage to that order. The only way that the order can be damaged, as the least reflection will prove, is by depriving it of members who would otherwise join it.
“Let us apply to this case the principles by which courts determine similar controversies of trading concerns. The decisive principle is this: ‘'No man has a right to sell or advertise his own business or goods as those of another.’ Williams v. Farrand, 88 Mich. 478. ‘One must not, therefore, adopt a name so similar to that of another as to draw to himself business intended for that other.’ Higgins Co. v. Higgins Soap Co., 144 N. Y. 462; Tallcot v. Moore, 6 Hun, 106; Potter v. McPherson, 21 Hun, 559;

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Bluebook (online)
38 L.R.A. 658, 71 N.W. 470, 113 Mich. 133, 1897 Mich. LEXIS 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/supreme-lodge-knights-of-pythias-v-improved-order-knights-of-pythias-mich-1897.