West Point Manufacturing Company v. Detroit Stamping Company

222 F.2d 581, 105 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 200, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 5428
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 26, 1955
Docket12310_1
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 222 F.2d 581 (West Point Manufacturing Company v. Detroit Stamping Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West Point Manufacturing Company v. Detroit Stamping Company, 222 F.2d 581, 105 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 200, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 5428 (6th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

McALLISTER, Circuit Judge.

Upon the expiration of appellee’s patent for a toggle clamp, a device for clamping parts in industrial production, appellant copied a number of appellee’s clamps and prepared to advertise, manufacture, and sell them to the industry with its own trade-mark affixed in place of appellee’s trade-mark.

To forestall such action, appellee filed a complaint, claiming that, although the patent had expired, appellant, under the Lanham Trade-Mark Act of 1946, 15 U.S. C.A. § 1051 et seq., was guilty of unfair competition in copying and manufacturing such clamps, and asked that appellant be enjoined from advertising, manufacturing and selling toggle clamps, “confusingly similar in appearance” to appellee’s clamps.

Proofs were taken by deposition and by way of answers to interrogatories. From this evidence, it appeared that upon the expiration of appellee’s patent, appellant had exactly copied appellee’s clamps, affixing its trade-mark to the clamps in place of appellee’s trade-mark; and that appellant had advertised its clamps for sale, displaying in its advertisements an exact copy of appellee’s clamps, the likeness of which had been reproduced for such purpose from a photograph of appellee’s clamps.

Upon motions by both parties for summary judgment, the district court held that appellant was guilty of unfair competition for the reason that the evidence showed that appellant had copied not only the functional, but also the nonfunctional parts of appellee’s patented clamp; that the nonfunctional parts gave appellee’s clamp a general appearance identifying and distinguishing it as the particular product made by appellee; that because of such general appearance and shape of the clamp, so identified and distinguished, the patented article had attained a special significance, or secondary meaning, as to which appellee was entitled to protection against copiers; that, having copied several nonfunctional parts of appellee’s clamp which gave essence to the general appearance by which it was identified and distinguished as having been made by appellee, appellant was guilty of unfair competition; that appellant’s trademark affixed to the clamps which it made was not sufficient to avoid a probable *584 “palming off” of appellant’s product as that of appellee; that since appellee’s product had acquired a secondary meaning and appellant could have made its clamp in a slightly different way while utilizing the patented features, the law required appellant to distinguish its article from that of appellee to the extent that the public would not be misled or confused; and that it was “actionable unfair competition to unnecessarily copy non-functional parts of any article or device which give essence to a general appearance identifying and distinguishing that particular product as associated with a manufacturer whose reputation is of great importance in securing sales.” [122 F.Supp. 743] The district court, therefore, adjudged appellant to be guilty of unfair competition, and enjoined it from “advertising, offering for sale, manufacturing and selling toggle clamps confusingly similar in appearance to plaintiff’s toggle clamps.” From this decision of the district court, appeal was duly taken.

Some time after the filing of the appeal, appellee filed a motion in the district court for an order enforcing the injunction which was, in effect, a petition for an order to show cause why appellant should not be held in contempt of court for violation of the injunction. Upon the hearing of the motion, in a colloquy between the judge and counsel for both parties that extends for one hundred pages of the transcript of the record, appellant attempted to demonstrate to the court that it had made sufficient changes in the appearance of its clamps to avoid disobedience of the court’s injunction; and both parties then pointed out the similarities and differences in their clamps as compared to each other, as well as to clamps manufactured by third parties.

The district court severely reprimanded appellant during the course of this hearing, stating that it was prepared to punish it for contempt of court for violation of its injunction. 'However, appellant pointed out to the court a number of alterations it had made in the clamp subsequent to the issuance of the injunction. When it was stated that appellant, as one instance, had changed the color of its rubber handle from red, which was the color used by the appellee, to white, ap-pellee’s counsel proceeded to inform the court of the similarities still existing between the clamps, and called attention to the fact that appellant, instead of copying appellee’s claw form of stop, could have used a metal pin for a forward stop in the clamp; that a curve in the contour of appellee’s clamp did not have to be imitated; that instead of having two thicknesses of metal for the handle, appellant could have formed a loop metal handle; that in one of the clamps, appellant, instead of a “T” handle, could have used a straight up- and-down handle, or a handle projecting to one side, and a number of other small changes were pointed out to the effect that the patent features could have been availed of by. appellant to make a clamp “that is not confusing to the public.” In reply to all of the foregoing, appellant submitted that substantially everything in the clamp which it copied was functional rather than nonfunctional, and that it was so admitted in the testimony of appellee’s president; and that, further, if appellant adopted the changes in the clamp pointed out by appellee, it would only be copying other forms of appellee’s clamps, or infringing on patented clamps of third parties. The trial court seemed impressed by the evidence that appellant could not make the clamps with the patented features unless it duplicated either the clamps in question or other clamps made by appellee— or infringed upon patented features of clamps made by third parties. Furthermore, in considering the testimony of ap-pellee’s president that everything about appellee’s clamp was “functional to an extent,” the court suggested the possibility of reconsideration of its views on a new trial, stating that it might entertain a motion for a new trial and see what *585 could be done, but that, in the meanwhile, appellant could not manufacture the clamps.

However, in the end, the district court arrived at the view that if appellee could show how appellant could take advantage of all of the patented features of the clamp and, at the same time, make the changes which appellee’s counsel had outlined, then appellant would be guilty of unfair competition unless such changes were made.

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Bluebook (online)
222 F.2d 581, 105 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 200, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 5428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-point-manufacturing-company-v-detroit-stamping-company-ca6-1955.