Tigrett Industries, Inc. v. Top Value Enterprises, Inc.

217 F. Supp. 313, 137 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 648, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10038
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Tennessee
DecidedMay 21, 1963
DocketCiv. A. No. 1248
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 217 F. Supp. 313 (Tigrett Industries, Inc. v. Top Value Enterprises, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tigrett Industries, Inc. v. Top Value Enterprises, Inc., 217 F. Supp. 313, 137 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 648, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10038 (W.D. Tenn. 1963).

Opinion

BAILEY BROWN, District Judge.

This is an action filed by Tigrett Industries, Inc., a Delaware corporation with principal place of business at Jackson, Tennessee, against Top Value Enterprises, Inc., an Ohio corporation doing business at Jackson, Tennessee. Plaintiff seeks only injunctive relief against alleged trade-mark infringement and unfair competition.

Jurisdiction is grounded as to the alleged trade-mark infringement on 28 U. S.C.A. § 1338(a), and as to the alleged unfair competition both on § 1338(b) (pendant jurisdiction) and diversity of citizenship.

[314]*314Plaintiff is a manufacturer of toys and related items and defendant is a trading stamp redemption firm. The merchandise that bore the allegedly infringing trade-mark was manufactured and sold to defendant by Plastic Block City, Inc., an Illinois corporation with principal place of business at Chicago, which is also a manufacturer of toys and related items. Plastic Block City, Inc., has intervened and taken over the defense of this action. Henceforth, plaintiff will be referred to as “Tigrett” and interven- or will be referred to as “Block City.”

Tigrett is the exclusive licensee under a patent covering a recreational apparatus the purpose of which is to return a ball thrown against the apparatus. (Tigrett originally sued also for patent infringement but thereafter dismissed that count.) It is also the owner of the trade-mark “Pitch Back” which is on the principal register, and the trademark certificate describes the apparatus in connection with which it is used as comprising a combination baseball backstop and ball return apparatus. Tigrett contends that Block City has infringed its registered trade-mark and has been guilty of unfair competition by using the trade-mark “Pitch-N-Field” in connection with the recreational apparatus manufactured and sold by it.

Block City contends (1) that the registered trade-mark “Pitch Back” is invalid for the reason that it is merely descriptive of Tigrett’s recreational apparatus, (2) that this trade-mark cannot be the basis of an unfair competition claim because it is descriptive and had not attained secondary meaning by the time Block City began using its trademark “Pitch-N-Field” and (3) that in any event its trade-mark does not infringe and its use is not unfair competition for the reason that its use is not likely to cause confusion or mistake or to deceive purchasers.

Shortly prior to September, 1959, Tigrett obtained the license to manufacture and sell the ball rebound device which was new on the United States market, consisting of a metal frame within which a netting is resiliently mounted (with springs or rubber bands) to provide a ball rebound surface. To the frame is attached an adjustable standard for controlling the angle of the netting and thus controlling the angle at which the ball rebounds. Therefore, when a ball is thrown into the netting, it will rebound, depending on the angle of the netting, as a fly ball, a line drive, or a grounder.

In September, 1959, Tigrett adopted the trade-mark “Pitch Back” for this device and then began its sales promotion by exhibiting the device under that name at the National Recreational Conference Exhibit at Chicago, which is the location of Block City’s headquarters. During the remainder of 1959, Tigrett sold about 3000 units at a gross of about $10,000 and expended $2500 on publicity. In 1960, in January, Tigrett again displayed its “Pitch Back” device in Chicago at the National Sporting Goods Association Show and still again at Chicago in April at the Premium Show. In New York, in March, 1960, it displayed the “Pitch Back” device at the Toy Fair at the New Yorker Hotel where Block City also displayed some of its products and which exhibit was attended by its president. “Pitch Back” was the subject of a gratuitous feature article in an issue of a New York give-away magazine known as “Where”, which was distributed during the Toy Fair.

“Sports Illustrated”, a magazine of national circulation, contained advertisements of “Pitch Back” as did various newspapers in the spring of 1960. In the May 16, 1960, issue of “Life”, another national magazine, there was a full page, gratuitous feature article dealing with “Pitch Back” with prominent display of the trade-mark, illustration of the apparatus, and Tigrett’s connection with it. Moreover, in the spring of 1960, there were television commercials, and there were gratuitous television demonstrations on the “Tonight Show” by Jack Paar and on the “Today Show” by Jack Lascoule, both on national hookups. And, in the spring of 1960, prominent [315]*315baseball players, for a fee, endorsed “Pitch Back” publicly.

During the first six months of 1960, 'Tigrett’s gross sales of “Pitch Back” .amounted to over a half million dollars and for the entire year amounted to ■almost a million dollars.

Tigrett filed its application for the trade-mark “Pitch Back” on April 11, 1960 and the certificate was issued by the Patent Office on December 6, 1960.

Block City’s president testified that he first heard of the type of apparatus involved here in September, 1959, through their New York sales representative, who reported to him that there were about thirty brands on the market. The sales representative did not testify nor was his failure to do so otherwise explained. The president also testified that Block •City considered the matter again in the early part of 1960 and a sample of the product not manufactured by Tigrett was obtained in Chicago. The sample was not produced at the trial. Block 'City then decided to manufacture the product, checked a toy directory for the names being used in the field, and gave its trade-mark lawyers four names on which searches were made. The search, he testified, did not reveal “Pitch Back.” “Pitch-N-Field” was selected and was used for the first time by Block City on its product on June 13, 1960.

While Block City’s president denied that he and his associates had any knowledge of the trade-mark “Pitch Back” prior to June 13, 1960, the Court believes and so finds that they did have such knowledge prior to that date. The publicity attending the use of the trademark “Pitch Back” was too intensively and too generally disseminated to escape notice by those in that line of business.

There is no substantial difference between the merchandise marketed by Tigrett under the trade-mark “Pitch Back” and Block City under the trademark “Pitch-N-Field.” For present purposes, the products are physically the same. Moreover, the packaging is the same, the suggested retail prices for equivalent models are the same, the geographical distribution, which is national, is the same, the trade channels are the same and the means of publicity are now the same. “Piteh-N-Field” is obviously in direct competition with “Pitch Back.”

As stated, Block City’s first line of defense is that the trade-mark “Pitch Back” is invalid for the reason, it asserts, that it is descriptive rather than arbitrary and fanciful when applied to this product. It is provided in 15 U.S. C.A. § 1052(e) (1), of course, that a trade-mark may not be placed on the principal register if it “ * * * when applied to the goods of the applicant is merely descriptive * *

On the other hand, Tigrett contends that the trade-mark is not descriptive as so used and relies on Sec. 1057(b) which provides that the certificate of registration is prima facie evidence of the validity of the registration and of Tigrett’s exclusive right to use the trade-mark.

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217 F. Supp. 313, 137 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 648, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tigrett-industries-inc-v-top-value-enterprises-inc-tnwd-1963.