Tillman & Bendel v. California Packing Corporation

63 F.2d 498, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3474
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 7, 1933
Docket6676
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 63 F.2d 498 (Tillman & Bendel v. California Packing Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tillman & Bendel v. California Packing Corporation, 63 F.2d 498, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3474 (9th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

SAWTELLE, Circuit Judge.

The appellant brought this suit to enjoin the appellee’s use of the trade-mark “Del Monte” on coffee, and for an accounting and general relief. The defendant-appellee, by answer and eross-claim, denied the plaintiff-appellant’s right to the trade-mark, alleged that its trade-mark rights had been infringed, and asked for an injunction perpetually restraining the appellant from using the trademark “Del Monte” on coffee. In a supplement to its answer and eross-eomplaint, the appellee asked for damages, which it asserted to be $1,000,000. Additional pleadings were filed by both parties, and a lengthy trial was had.

The lower court entered a decree enjoining the appellant, perpetually, from using the name “Del Monte” on coffee “not by or for the defendant [appellee] made.” In an amended decree, the court below awarded costs, amounting to $533.03, in favor of the appellee and against the appellant. In a memorandum opinion 1 the District Court declared that because of the appellant’s good faith and because of the fact that the appellee had not proved actual damage, there would be no award of damages in favor of the appellee.

Tillman & Bendel, Inc., the appellant herein, was established in 1857 under the name of F. Tillman & Co., a partnership, by F. Tillman, father of Frederick Tillman, a witness in this case, and grandfather of F. A. Tillman, president of the appellant and its predecessor company since 1915. The concern was incorporated on December 31, 1891, and was re-incorporated, under the style of Tillman & Bendel, Ine., in 1920. Under an agreement dated April 1,1920, Tillman & Bendel transferred to Tillman & Bendel, Inc., all of the old corporation’s “trademarks, trade names, patents, and inventions.”

Up to 1924 the appellant and its predecessors had been engaged in the “diversified wholesale grocery business.” In 1924 the corporation, under the direction of F. A. Tillman, the grandson, liquidated the different departments of its business, except the manufacturing department, “which was always the profitable end of the business.” The company thereafter manufactured tea, coffee, spices, and extracts, until about 1926', when it “decided to eliminate the manufacture of spices and extracts and.give up teas, and concentrate all [its] efforts on coffee.”

In the late eighties, Tillman & Bendel began selling coffee under the name “Del Monte.” The testimony varies as to the precise year, but it was probably some time between 1886 and 1888. The court found the year to be 1887, or prior thereto.

The origin of the name is relied upon by the court below and by the appellee as indicating that, as used by the appellant, “Del Monte” was a grade mark and not a trademark. For that reason a brief history of such origin will bo helpful.

In about the year 1886, George Schonewald, buyer for Hotel Del Monte, near Monterey, Cal., and later buyer for Castle Crag, purchased a blend of coffee from Tillman & Bendel which pleased him so mueh that he insisted it bo stenciled “Del Monte.” According to ono of the appellant’s witnesses, the quality of the merchandise likewise so pleased Mr. Schonewald “that h.e told his patrons, his friends, and little by little a demand manifested itself for Del Monte goods, * * *■ and [the appellant] commenced to list Del Monte commodities under the Del Monte brand * * * and many people, private.' individuals, friends of ours, heard about it,, and used to prevail upon us to sell them the Del Monte blend.” The court found substantially in accordance with this testimony, but also found that the appellant used the name merely as a grade mark and not a trade-mark, until 1925, when- the appellant attempted a, trade-mark use.

The court below also found that “prior to the year 1927, plaintiff [appellant] did sell coffee under the name Del Monte in the states of California, Nevada, Oregon, Washington,, Montana, and Arizona, but not elsewhere.” The appellant, indeed, concedes that “during the succeeding years and until 1926, the Del Monte coffee business of Tillman & Bendel continued to be very largely a western business.” The appellant also concedes that “meanwhile, between 1904 and 1918, the defendant [appellee] and its predecessor company were establishing markets in all parts of the country for their Del Monte fruits and vegetables.”

In 1926, following the liquidation of all of the appellant’s business save the manufacturing, as set forth above, the appellant “made plans for an extension” of its coffee- *500 business. In furtherance of these plans, its president, F. A. Tillman, made several trips east, during which he came into contact with brokers and called on a great niany large accounts throughout the United States. Other representatives of the appellant made similar trips. These trips covered a period extending from June, 1927, to December, 1929'. Other promotional work was undertaken.

As a result of this sales campaign, the appellant established an extensive market for its Del Monte coffee in the middle west and in the east. One of the appellant’s exhibits in the court below is a comparative table of sales of Tillman & Bendel’s Del Monte coffee, as follows: 1925-, 9',302 pounds; 1926, 8,329' pounds; 1927, 301,196 pounds; 1928, 227,506 pounds. The present suit was filed on January 14,1929'. Another exhibit, showing the sales of the appellant’s Del Monte coffee by localities, discloses considerable distribution in sections east of the Mississippi river.

But there is no affirmative evidence that any confusion disadvantageous to the appellant has resulted from the sale of the two Del Monte brands, either in the east or the west, and the lower court so found. Five pieces of testimony do, indeed, indicate that there might have been confusion in favor of the appellee and disadvantageous to the appellant, but speculation and inference cannot take the place of affirmative proof.

We refer to the testimony of T. S. Spaulding, a grocer of Woodland, Yolo county, Cal., who stated that “in the early days,” in the year 1888, the appellant’s coffee bearing the Del Monte brand was better known than the appellee’s Del Monte fruits and vegetables ; the testimony of L. B. Taft, a grocery broker of Salt Lake City, to the effect that in 1929' and the early part of 1930, the “California Packing Corporation, covering practically the same territory as we did, had stepped in [with its Del Monte coffee] with a considerably larger sales organization than we have, and had gathered in the business that we had established on our Del Monte coffee [of the appellant]”; the testimony of Frank II. Cooney, merchandise broker of Butte, Mont., who said that “the effect of this [Del Monte] advertising of the California Packing Corporation upon our sales of Del Monte coffee of Tillman & Bendel has been that it has almost ruined it”; the statement of F. A. Tillman as to the “disastrous” effect of the appellee’s Del Monte, coffee advertising upon the Tillman Del Monte coffee business; and the assertion of Kenneth G. Blodgett,-a Boston merchandise broker, that an impression given by a representative of the appellee to the effect that Tillman & Bendel had “sold out”, to the appellee, had lost Mr. Blodgett a customer for the appellant’s Del Monte coffee.

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Bluebook (online)
63 F.2d 498, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tillman-bendel-v-california-packing-corporation-ca9-1933.