WE Bassett Company v. HC Cook Company

164 F. Supp. 278
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 9, 1958
DocketCiv. 6532
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 164 F. Supp. 278 (WE Bassett Company v. HC Cook Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
WE Bassett Company v. HC Cook Company, 164 F. Supp. 278 (D. Conn. 1958).

Opinion

ANDERSON, District Judge.

This motion seeks a judgment or order to supplement or enforce the preliminary injunction issued July 23, 1957, restraining the defendants, Cook, Lighter Corporation and Ernest C. Britton, from certain specified acts of unfair competition in the production and distribution of a novelty pocketknife which the plaintiff put on the market about May of 1956. Since the acts of unfair competition were sufficiently related to the alleged infringement of United States Patent No. 2,779,098, issued to the plaintiff relative to a spring action in its knife, on January 29, 1957, the cause was properly before the court by virtue of its pendent jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C. § 1338; Maternally Yours v. Your Maternity Shop, 2 Cir., 1956, 234 F.2d 538.

The temporary injunction was based on findings that the defendants’ had simulated the plaintiff’s patented spring detent devise in an imitative knife, that the defendants had palmed off the imitative knife on dealers or others as a product associated with the plaintiff, and that the defendants’ trade names “Slim Jim” and “Mr. Slim” were confusingly similar to plaintiff’s “Trim Trio” in sound and meaning.

After the temporary injunction issued, the defendants produced a new knife, Exhibit 22, and sought a clarification of the injunction in relation to the new item. In a memorandum of decision dated September 30, 1957, this court refused to modify the temporary injunction, since the defendants were, in effect, seeking an advisory opinion. The plaintiff presently moves for either a supplemental injunction or a civil contempt citation to restrain the production and distribution of another new knife, Exhibits FA and FD, currently being sold by the defendant, Lighter Corporation. On the pending motion the following findings, based on the moving affidavits,, depositions and testimony given at the-hearing, are made:

1. The novelty pocketknife trade is divided into two distinct markets. In one — the advertising specialty trade— the sale is made through a jobber to a customer, who gives the knife, imprinted' with the customer’s name for advertising purposes, to the ultimate user. In the-other — the carded goods trade — the sale is made through a jobber and a retailer to the customer, who is the ultimate-user of the knife.

2. By custom of the trade in the advertising specialty field, maker identification on the knife or its package is avoided. The jobber is aware, of course-, of the manufacturer but conceals this information to prevent the customer from purchasing directly from the manufacturer.

3. The defendants began manufacturing the knife, Exhibits FA and FD, which is at issue here, about three months after the temporary injunction issued. This knife was first produced for the advertising specialty trade and several months later, in early 1958, production began for the carded goods trade.

4. The new knife which is produced for the carded goods trade, Exhibit FA, unlike the enjoined knife, is imprinted along its back edge with the words, “Lighter Corp. Newington. Ct. U.S.A.” and is retailed from counter display cards marked “Buddy Boy knife and opener” and “Manufactured by: Lighter Corp., Newington, Conn.”

5. The new knife produced for the carded goods trade, Exhibit FA, is identical to the new knife produced for the advertising specialty trade, Exhibit FD, except that the former is imprinted with defendant Lighter Corporation’s name along its back edge.

*281 6. The knife which the court refused to pass upon in its September 30, 1957, decision, Exhibit 22, has been produced for one advertising specialty order from the Carolina Life Insurance Co. and for two other customers.

7. The knife at issue here, Exhibits FA and FD, is approximately the same over all length and height as the previously enjoined knife. It is shaped in the form of a rhomboid whereas the enjoined knife was shaped as a trapezoid with rounded edges at the open corners of the case. It further differs in that there is no separate hole for the key chain, which is inserted through the eyelet securing the blades to the casing, and there are only two blade elements — a knife and a bottle opener — and thus Exhibits FA and FD are thinner than the enjoined three-blade model.

8. The new knife in general production, Exhibits FA and FD, has a small indentation on the back edge, which covers an area approximately one-third as large as the simulated integral spring detent feature on the enjoined knife. If the indentation and the simulated feature were transposed to the same knife-case, the areas covered would not coincide, but would be adjacent to each other.

9. The defendants’ purpose for the indentation on the new knife is to prevent the knife-blade from being closed beyond the reach of the fingernail groove with which the blade is opened. The cut-away model of the new knife, Exhibit 15, shows that the base of the knife-blade rests on the indentation.

10. The Dunrite Service was hired by the plaintiff to conduct surveys in the trade to see to what extent advertising specialty jobbers and retailers could identify the manufacturer of defendants’ new knife. Mr. Charles F. Perner, a private investigator and owner of the Dunrite Company, on oral instructions from the plaintiff’s counsel, conducted the surveys and submitted six reports which, with the testimony in Mr. Perner’s deposition, indicate:

(a) 7 advertising specialty jobbers and 30 retailers were interviewed. (44 calls were made but 7 were not available for interview.)

(b) The names of all of the jobbers and 9 of the 30 retailers were taken from lists furnished by the plaintiff. 21 of the retailers were selected at random in an area from 42nd Street to 30th Street near Third Avenue in New York City, a territory selected on advice of plaintiff’s counsel.

(c) Of the 37 jobbers and retailers asked if they could identify the manufacturer of the defendants’ new knife, 24 could make no identification, 6 identified the defendants’ knife as being manufactured by the plaintiff; 3 were doubtful, i. e. they thought it might be made by plaintiff; 2 correctly recognized it as being made by the defendants; and 1 did not know who manufactured the knife, but knew it was not the plaintiff’s.

(d) Of the 6 retailers who identified the knife as being produced by the plaintiff, the names of 5 were on the lists furnished by the plaintiff.

(e) The knife was displayed so that the back edge where the defendant’s name is imprinted was not visible to the person being interviewed and was shown detached from the tent-like card upon which it is sold in the retail trade.

11. The National Business Gifts Co., a jobber in the advertising trade, noting that the new knife was similar to plaintiff’s knife but different in that it had only two blades, inquired by letter to the plaintiff as to the cost of the defendants’ new knife, and stated, “We did not find this [the unimprinted new knife] in your catalogue but are sure you make it.” (Exhibit FB.)

12. The Trixie Co., in returning 93 pocketknives to the plaintiff for credit, included two new knives imprinted with the defendant Lighter Corporation’s name, Exhibit FA. (Exh. EZ.)

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Bluebook (online)
164 F. Supp. 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/we-bassett-company-v-hc-cook-company-ctd-1958.