Wesson v. Galef

286 F. 621, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1114
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 27, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 286 F. 621 (Wesson v. Galef) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wesson v. Galef, 286 F. 621, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1114 (S.D.N.Y. 1922).

Opinion

LEARNED HAND, District Judge.

I shall first consider the motion to dismiss the bills, which rests upon the assumption that the “trust” is a partnership and that all the certificate holders are partners. If so, then, the argument proceeds, there is a nonjoinder of parties plaintiff which may be raised in limine, and which will compel an amendment. The plaintiffs retort that in fact all the certificate holders are citizens of Massachusetts and Connecticut, so that this court would still have jurisdiction. However, that would not dispose of the objection, though, if it be true, it would reduce its importance merely to an annoyance to the plaintiffs. But the point is not a good one anyway, granting all that the defendants claim. I shall not, therefore, concern myself with'the question of Massachusetts law, whether or not this particular “trust” constitute a partnership among all the certificate holders; it is enough that these plaintiffs are the owners at law of all the property of the trust, real and personal, including the business as a whole, the universitas, whose continued injury this suit is brought to enjoin.

The suit copies into equity because of a threatened tort; it therefore depends altogether on legal rights and legal wrong. If the plaintiffs had a right to sue at law for damages, they have the right to sue in equity for an injunction. The remedy is concurrent and the right no creation of equity itself. Partners are, it is true, joint tenants of the partnership property, and as such it would normally be necessary for all to sue, even upon a tort (Addison v. Overend, 6 T. R. 677), though the point is good only in abatement. Yet if one or more partners hold the legal title, by specific conveyance to themselves by the others, and a fortiori, if by original deed, they may sue for torts against it or even on contracts without joining the rest. Trott v. Irish, 1 Allen (Mass.) 481; Knowles v. Sullivan, 182 Mass. 318, 65 N. E. 389; Railsback v. Lovejoy, 116 Ill. 442, 6 N. E. 504; Burnham v. Whittier, 5 N. H. 334; Agacie v. Forbes, 14 Moore’s P. C. 160. In Miss., etc., Co. v. Ward, 2 Black, 485, 17 L. Ed. 311, a single co-owner, apparently a partner, was allowed to enjoin a nuisance. Perhaps that case must stand upon the theory that any person aggrieved may'be 'substituted in place of the public prosecutor, regardless of his title. Yet it would appear that the reason of the rule — i. -e., to avoid a multiplicity [623]*623of suits by several co-owners — would apply even there.; However, in Hutchinson v. Dubois, 45 Mich. 143, 7 N. W. 714, a great court allowed a single partner to sue in replevin without proof of entire ownership.

It is in any event apparent that, where the right sued upon is legal, the holder of the entire legal title is the only necessary plaintiff. Since no one else can sue afterwards the defendant is protected by the judgment or decree, and that is the only concern which he can have. This is indeed the reason why the point is never good, except in abatement. In the case at bar the whole title to the “business” was conveyed to these plaintiffs on January 27, 1912, and if the other certificate holders are liable for debts as partners, they are not on that account at law joint owners, though they are in equity, whatever be the character of the “trust.” The motion to dismiss is denied.

The case is therefore open for a decision on the motion for preliminary injunction. It is scarcely necessary here to go over the decisions in the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit from the Coffee Mill Case (Enterprise v. Danders, 131 Fed. 240, 65 C. C. A. 587), through the Yale Lock (Yale & Towne v. Adler, 154 Fed. 37, 83 C. C. A. 149), the Searchlight (Rushmore v. Manhattan, 163 Fed. 939, 90 C. C. A. 299, 19 L. R. A. [N. S.] 269), the Crescent Wrench (Crescent, etc., Co. v. Kilborn & Bishop, 247 Fed. 299, 159 C. C. A. 393, 8 Trade-Mark Rep. 177), and the Wheat Biscuit Cases (Shredded Wheat Co. v. Humphrey Cornell Co., 250 Fed. 960, 163 C. C. A. 210, 7 Trade-Mark Rep. 229), to Stanley Works v. Twisted Wire & Steel Co., 256 Fed. 98, 167 C. C. A. 340, which is the last to which I am referred.

It is true that the plaintiffs have no absolute right to prevent the defendants from using a given combination of elements in the make-up of their revolvers provided, as here, that they have no monopoly in the use of any one of them. The defendants’ right extends as much to what are called “nonfunctional” elements as to functional. The case as to such features is no different from descriptive words of common use, which have got a secondary meaning. They are generally open to everybody in all combinations. But, though the plaintiffs have no such absolute right, not even to a combination of elements, let alone to the elements in detail, they may have a conditional right against a combination, when the damage arising from it is substantial, and when there are substitute combinations open to the defendants whose difference is in substance merely trivial. Such cases are therefore always compromises between two rights, one of which must yield. We usually confine relief to “nonfunctional” elements, because the defendant will suffer nothing by abandoning them; but it does not inevitably follow that only these may be included. If the function be trivial, possibly these are cases where it might have to yield to a predominant injury which its continuance might inflict upon the plaintiffs.

The case made on the papers is ample proof that the ensemble of the plaintiffs’ revolver has come to mean the plaintiffs’ manufac[624]*624ture, nor is that in the least affected, because the plaintiff makes and has made others, which have not the especial marks on which it now relies. The swivel model of Smith & Wesson no less means the product of that old and well-known firm, because it also makes “breakdown” revolvers in large quantity, or because in the past it has had other models, or even different details in this model. Though a man may make several kinds of goods, each may still become known as his, and when you copy any one down to the least detail, measure for measure, you may as much represent that your goods are his as though he made only one. While in such cases the protection is narrow, for that very reason the mark of ownership may be picked up from a combination of elements, all old and none sufficient, if taken alone.

There appears to me not the slightest question that all the infringing revolvers were deliberately made for the purpose of imitating a model of the plaintiffs.’ In the case of Galef and Newmark they correspond in dimension even by gauge, a coincidence wholly impossible in the absence of conscious imitation. In the case of Gluck, the visual similarity is as complete. Such things do not happen because manufacturers are merely following old patents.

Tittle identical features in the two lay the matter beyond doubt, if doubt could remain. For example, in all the revolvers the manufacturers have added a circle to indicate a center bushing for the firing pin, which does not exist, a conclusive evidence of intention, at least, to cheat the buyer. Again, the squaring of the barrel at the frame end is totally unnecessary or useless, despite the defendants’ insistence to the contrary. The barrel, if continued cylindrical as in the Colt, would not interfere with the ejector pin; and, if it did, there was no need to do more than grind off a segment. To give it the shape which it actually has was certainly not necessary. In section it is not circular at all, not even circular with a segment missing.

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Bluebook (online)
286 F. 621, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wesson-v-galef-nysd-1922.