Wolfe v. Goulard

18 How. Pr. 64
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 18 How. Pr. 64 (Wolfe v. Goulard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wolfe v. Goulard, 18 How. Pr. 64 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1859).

Opinion

Ingraham, Justice.

The plaintiff, in his complaint, avers that he has 'for a long time past been, and now is, the manufacturer and seller of a certain kind of gin, known as. “ Schiedam Schnapps,” of the composition of which he is the original inventor, different from any other kind of gin, and superior to any other; that he first invented and adopted the term “ Schiedam Schnapps,” as a label, trade-mark or sign of the gin so sold by him, which previously was wholly unused, and never before known in the market as any designation for gin of any kind; that he has used the term “ Schiedam Schnapps,” as designating the article he sold, from 1848 to the present time, • and claims the exclusive right to such name.

He also avers that he used a peculiar shaped bottle, and prepared a label, for which he obtained a copyright.

He charges the defendant with having imitated the bottle used by the plaintiff, with having adopted the term Schiedam Schnapps, and with using wrappers of the same color and resembling the plaintiff’s. He charges the defendant with selling a spurious and inferior imitation of the article he sells, under the same name, except substituting the name of Yoldner for Wolfe, but calling the article so sold by the same name, "Schiedam Schnapps,” and he prays for a perpetual injunction.

An injunction was granted, restraining the defendant from selling any imitation of the plaintiff’s gin, of any other article under the name of Schiedam. Schnapps, and from the use of any imitations of plaintiff’s labels, &c. The defendant now moves to dissolve this injunction.

In his answer, he denies the allegations in the plaintiff’s complaint, but admits that for ten years past he has been selling common Holland gin, under the designation of Schiedam Schnapps, and has used square bottles, with a label such as were previously used by Burnett and Oldner, and which were sold by them as Yoldner’s Schiedam Schnapps. He avers that the article sold by Burnett and Oldner, and subsequently by himself, was a better article than Wolfe’s, and denies that it was ever desired to have this article taken for, or confotmded with that sold by Wolfe.

[66]*66He also claims, that the gin he sells is manufactured in Schiedam; that the term schnapps is used there to represent an alcoholic drink, and was so used there, long before it was adopted by the plaintiff, and was so used in Schiedam long before the plaintiff was born.

Upon the .argument of this motion, several affidavits have been produced on both sides, to sustain the views of the respective parties. Among them are a large number of affidavits on the part of the defendant, showing that the term Schiedam Schnapps had been in use at Schiedam, as applicable •to liquors, long anterior to 1848 ; and a large number on the part of the plaintiff, showing that the term had never been applied to liquors sold in this market, or used as a designation of any kind of gin or liquor, until they were so used by plaintiff.

From the course of the argument before me, and the statements of the counsel, it was apparent that the main object of the action and of the injunction was to restrain the defendant from selling any article under the name of Schiedam Schnapps. The shape of the bottles was only used for the purpose of showing the intended imitation. It cannot be, that any person may not use square glass bottles, or colored wrappers, for the sale of an article of trade, whether previously used by another or not.

The labels offered in evidence cannot in any sense be said to be an imitation, either in color, name or contents, and as the plaintiff has a copyright of his label, if it should be used by others, he has an ample remedy in another proceeding.

The question then on this motion is limited to the sole inquiry whether the plaintiff has such a right to the use of the term “ Schiedam Schnapps,” tq designate the liquor which he sells, as to entitle him to an injunction restraining the defendants from using it. • It was admitted on the argument that the word “ Schiedam,” being the name of a town in Holland, could not be so appropriated by the plaintiff, and that the word “ Schnapps ” was a word adopted from the German language, meaning a dram. Both parties admit its use in Holland, with that signification.

[67]*67The defendant also claims and produces some evidence tc show that in Schiedam it is used to designate gin.

When a person forms a new word to designate an article made by him which has never been used before, he may obtain such a right to that name as to entitle him to the sole use of it as against others who attempt to use it for the sale of a similar article, but such an exclusive use can never be successfully claimed of words in common use previously, as applicable to similar articles. If the affidavits on the part of the defendant are correct, which state that the word Schnapps is used in Schiedam to designate gin, then the use of the words could not be restrained either there or here, any more than the use of the words Hew-York gin could be claimed by any one exclusively for gin manufactured in Hew-York. Words, as used in any language, cannot be appropriated by any one to his exclusive use to designate an article sold by him similar to that for which they were previously used. In Burgess agt. Burgess (17 Eng. Law and Equity Reports, 257), it was held that a person had a right to make and sell any article called “Essence of Anchovy,” although the plaintiff and his father had for a long term of years been making and selling such an article under that name, originally invented by them; and that, too, when the sauce was sold in bottles of the same shape as the plaintiff used, with labels, wrappers and catalogues, bearing a general resemblance to those used by him. In the Amoskeag Manufacturing Company agt. Speer (2 Sandf. S. C. Rep. p. 599), Duer, Justice, says: It is certain that the use by another manufacturer of the words or signs indicative only of these circumstances, i. e., indicating the origin of the article, its appropriate name, the mode or process of its manufacture, &c., may yet have the effect of misleading the public as to the true origin of the goods, but it would be unreasonable to suppose that he is, therefore, precluded from using them as an ex-pression of the facts which they really signify, and which may be just as true in relation to his goods as to those of another.”

In Stokes agt. Landgraff and others (17 Barb. S. C. Rep. p. 608), this point was fully discussed by Strong, Justice. After [68]*68showing the cases in which he may by priority of appropriation obtain a right to the use of many letters, marks or symbols of any kind as á trade-mark, he adds :

In respect to words, marks or devices, which do not denote the goods or property, or particular place of business of a person, but only the nature, kind or quality of the articles in which he deals, á different rule prevails. No property in such words, marks or devices can be acquired.”

Mr. Justice Duer, in Fettridge agt. Wells (13 How. Pr. Rep. 355), says: “A name may rightfully be used as a trade-mark, but this is only true when the name is used merely as indicating the true origin or ownership of the article offered for sale, never where it is used to designate the article itself, and has become, by adoption and use, its proper appellation.

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Bluebook (online)
18 How. Pr. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolfe-v-goulard-nysupct-1859.