Whitehurst v. Rogers

38 Md. 503, 1873 Md. LEXIS 76
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 3, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 38 Md. 503 (Whitehurst v. Rogers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitehurst v. Rogers, 38 Md. 503, 1873 Md. LEXIS 76 (Md. 1873).

Opinion

Bowie, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant sued the appellee in the Superior Court of Baltimore City, on the 8th of September, 1871, declar[509]*509ing against him originally in two counts, but afterwards, by leave of the Court, adding a third.

The first charges that the appellant, being tbe manufacturer of a valuable specific, a preparation which at great expense he advertised and caused to be widely known by the name and trade-mark of “Forrest’s Juniper Tar,” by which it had acquired great reputation, etc., and whereby the appellant had acquired a valuable property in said name and trade mark, etc., the appellee well knowing the same, and disregarding the rights of the appellant at sundry times, between the 4th of February, 1889, and the commencement of the suit, unlawfully infringed said trade-mark, and appropriated said name, and manufactured and sold, under the said name of “Forrest’s Juniper Tar,” and put up in bottles closely resembling those used by the appellant, and calculated and designed to deceive and defraud the public, a fraudulent and spurious article, calculated to bring The Forrest Juniper Tar, sold by appellant, into discredit, prevent the sales of the appellant, and destroy the reputation of the specific, manufactured and sold by the plaintiff, to the great damage and injury of the appellant.

The second count charged in substance, that the appellant manufactured and sold divers large quantities of a certain valuable specific, called “Forrest’s Juniper Tar,” which he was accustomed to sell in small oval bottles of a peculiar size and shape, wrapped up and labelled “Forrest’s Juniper Tar,” which had acquired great reputation, whereby the appellant gained great profit, the appellee on the 4th of February, 1869, and on divers other days and times before, etc., did prepare and make, etc,, 25,000 bottles of a compound, in imitation of the specific of the appellant, and did wrap and label the same, with wrappers and labels, bearing the title “Forrest’s Juniper Tar,” in order to denote it as the genuine specific, and sold the same for his own lucre fraudulently, etc.

[510]*510The third count'charges that the appellant was the proprietor of Forrest’s Juniper Tar, and a certain other specific known as “Forrest’s preparation from the Oil of Tar,” and the appellee, well knowing the same, disregarding the rights of the appellant, on the 4th of February, 1869, and divers other days, etc., did wrongfully, injuriously, etc., prepare, make and sell 25,000 bottles of the last mentioned specific, in fraud of the appellant’s right to prepare and sell the same, and put up and label the same, with the labels, etc., of the first mentioned specific, so as to cause the same to bear the same name, with that prepared and sold by the appellant, whereby he caused great interruption and hindrance to the sale of the first mentioned specific, and great loss and injury to the appellant.

To which several counts, the appellant pleaded, first, a former action brought by the appellant against the appellee, “at-the trial of which the sole question presented for the consideration of the jury was the question as to the right to the use of the said trade-mark, and the verdict and judgment was for the defendant,” which judgment is still in force and of record in said Court.

Secondly, the appellee further pleaded, that the appellant was not the owner of the trade-mark mentioned, in the declaration, but that one John M. Forrest was the owner, under whose license and authority the appellee manufactured and sold the said Juniper Tar, under the said trade-mark. On which pleas, issues were joined ; it is said in the appellant’s brief that the general issue was pleaded, but we find no such plea in the record.

It would seem from the issues joined, the only questions submitted to the jury were, whether in a former action between the appellant and appellee, the appellant sought to recover damages, for infringing the same trade-mark, in the same manner as complained of in this, and in said action, the appellant’s right to said trade-mark was [511]*511denied by the appellee, and verdict and judgment were rendered therein for the defendant. Secondly, that the appellant was not the owner of the trade-mark', the infringement of which was complained of, but the same belonged to one John M. Forrest.

Three bills of exception were taken by the appellant at the trial below.

The first to the exclusion by the Court of a letter of J. M. Forrest, (designated as the 4th letter) offered by the appellant, but objected to by the appellee. Second. To the admission by the Court of the testimony of John II. Warner, counsel of the appellee in the former trial, to show what were the issues presented and decided in the former trial.

Third. To the refusal of the prayers of Ihe appellant, and- granting of those of the appellee, and theinstiuction of the Court given in place of the appellant’s eighth prayer.

The appellant’s counsel have made no specific objection in their brief, or argument, (as far as recollected) in this Court, to the rulings of the Court, in the first and second bills of exception.

As to the first, it is apparent that the letter is only an overture for compromise of the disputes between the writer and the appellant; written some time after the alleged mutual release of all contracts, between the appellant and Forrest; and according to the testimony of Rogers, after he had been induced by that release to enter into relations of business with him.

Under these circumstances, the letter, if relevant to the matters in issue, was “res inter alios,” and therefore properly excluded.

There can he as little doubt as to the propriety of the decision involved in the second bill of exception.

The general principle as to the mode of establishing the identity of the right, or subject decided in a former [512]*512action between the same parties, is thus announced by Greenleaf in his “ Evidence,” section 532, part in., ch. 5.

“When a former judgment is shown by way of bar, whether in pleading or in evidence, it is competent for the plaintiff to reply, that it did not relate to the same property, or transaction in controversy in the action, to which it is set up in bar, and the question of identity, thus raised, is to be determined by the jury upon the evidence adduced. And though the declaration in the former suit may be broad enough to include the subject-matter of- the second action, yet if, upon the whole record it remains doubtful whether the satne subject-matter were actually passed upon, it seems, that parol evidence may be received to show .the truth.”

This Court has recognized the rule in Garrott vs. Johnson, 11 G. & J., 182, in this language : '‘Moreover it appears to be a principle of law, well established, that to make a record evidence to conclude any matter, it should appear by the. record, or by other proof, that the matter was in issue and decided in that suit.” Vide, also, Cecil vs. Cecil, 19 Md., 79.

The former action, verdict and judgment between the appellant and appellee are pleaded with an averment, that the plaintiff and defendant named in the record of the.

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Bluebook (online)
38 Md. 503, 1873 Md. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehurst-v-rogers-md-1873.