Wyokoff, Seamans & Benedict v. Howe Scale Co. of 1886

122 F. 348, 58 C.C.A. 510
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 9, 1903
DocketNo. 56
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 122 F. 348 (Wyokoff, Seamans & Benedict v. Howe Scale Co. of 1886) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wyokoff, Seamans & Benedict v. Howe Scale Co. of 1886, 122 F. 348, 58 C.C.A. 510 (2d Cir. 1903).

Opinions

LACOMBE, Circuit Judge.

The complainant is the successor of so much of the business of the corporation E. Remington & Sons (which succeeded the old firm of the same name), of Ilion, N. Y., as is concerned with the manufacture and sale of typewriters, including good will, trade-marks, etc. The old firm was organized into a corporation in 1865, and in 1873 it began the manufacture of typewriting machines. It is not disputed here that the firm and the corporation acquired a high and well-deserved reputation for careful workmanship in every branch of manufacture which it undertook; nor is it disputed that the typewriting machines which the corporation and its successor have continuously manufactured at Ilion are most favorably known to the public, and are associated in the public mind with the name “Remington,” so that the ordinary purchaser is quite likely to assume that a machine offered to him for sale as a “Remington” has come from the establishment founded by the Remingtons at Ilion nearly half a century ago. To this manufacture and trade the complainant succeeded in-1886. It thereupon became entitled to conduct the business of manufacturing machines and selling them as Remington machines, and would have the right to invoke the aid of a court of equity to restrain another trader from any action which would be calculated unnecessarily to confuse the goods of his own make with those of complainant.

The defendant is the Remington-Sholes Company. It marks its machines “Remington-Sholes” and “Rem-Sho,” and there can be no doubt upon the record that the use of,the name “Remington” helps the sale of machines, and induces many purchasers to suppose that 'such machines are the product of the old establishment at Ilion. Defendant,, however, insists that it has the right to use that name.because of its re[350]*350lations with two gentlemen of the name of Remington; that it has done nothing else to produce confusion; and that, therefore, whatever confusion results is damnum absque injuria. We do not find in this voluminous record sufficient evidence that defendant has itself done anything to promote confusion in the minds of the public, except to use the name “Remington” on its machines and in its literature. It may very well be that it understood quite clearly that by thus using the name defendant gave to all middlemen and dealers outside of its own agents opportunity, and perhaps a suggestion, to misrepresent the parentage of the machines; but, if it had the right to use the same, it cannot be held responsible for the consequences of such use. On the other hand, if it had no right so to use the name, it cannot avoid responsibility merely because its agents were careful to explain, when selling to the trade, that the Remington-Sholes machines were not the product of the original Remington establishment or of its successor. In such a case the question is “whether the defendants have or have not knowingly put into the hands of the retail dealers the means of deceiving the ultimate purchasers.” N. K. Fairbank Co. v. Bell, 23 C. C. A. 554, 77 Fed. 869.

The question here is whether the name “Remington-Sholes,” which is defendant’s designation, and'which, therefore, impregnates all the literature it circulates with the name which complainant’s predecessors made a household word, was fairly bestowed upon it; and whether the same name was fairly placed on the machines. The history of defendant’s machines is as follows: In 1892, Zalmon G. Sholes (whose father had been an inventor of typewriters) invented a machine, constructed a working model of it, and subsequently a second model, the first having been destroyed by fire. He called this the “Z. G. Sholes” typewriter, and endeavored unsuccessfully to get sufficient capital to manufacture it for sale. In 1893 he became acquainted with Franklin Remington and Carter Remington, who were sons of Samuel Remington, at one time president of the original corporation at Ilion. These junior Remingtons had not been themselves engaged in the manufacture of typewriting machines, and at the time they met Sholes were engaged in some contracting work in Chicago in connection with the drainage canal. In August, 1893, they entered into an agreement with Sholes, becoming jointly interested with him in the enterprise, and endeavored to interest capitalists, their own means being insufficient. In November, 1893, the name of the machine was changed from the “Z. G. Sholes” to “Remington-Sholes”—that is to say, the name on the model was changed, and the parties interested began to talk of the machine as the “Remington-Sholes”—but no such machines had apparently been manufactured and offered for sale. In the spring of 1894, Mr. Head and Mr. Fay, two large capitalists, became interested, and in May of that year a corporation was organized to manufacture and sell the machines. Of this corporation Franklin and Carter Remington were stockholders. Fay was the chief promoter, and received one-third of the capital stock as compensation for his services in organizing it. The name selected by its promoters for the corporation was “Remington-Sholes Typewriter Company.” The new company leased a factory, bought tools, and by December, [351]*3511894, its first typewriting machine was placed upon the market. It was labeled “Remington-Sholes.” This company continued to make and sell machines under that designation until it became financially embarrassed. Thereupon its stockholders, Remington, Fay, Head, and others, organized a new company, the present defendant “Remington-Sholes Co.,” to whom the entire assets of the old company, were transferred through Fay, who held them, and conducted.the business for a brief interval. The new company devised the name “Rem-Sho” as a trade-mark of its machine, and marks upon the cross-bar of each machine the words “Remington-Sholes Company, Mfrs., Chicago.” Manifestly, the situation of the new company relatively to any issues raised here is substantially the same as that of the old company.

The principles of law governing cases of this kind are simple, and easily stated. The only difficulty is their application. The Supreme Court, in Singer Mfg. Co. v. June Mfg. Co., 163 U. S. 169, 16 Sup. Ct. 1002, 41 L. Ed. 118, held that:

“Every one has the absolute right to use his own name honestly in his own business, even though he may incidentally interfere with and injure the business of another having the same name. In such ease the inconvenience or loss to which those having a common right are subjected is damnum absque injuria. But, although he may thus use his name, he cannot resort to any artifice, or to any act calculated to mislead the public as to the identity of the business firm or establishment, or of the article produced by them, and thus produce injury to the other beyond that which results from the similarity of name. Where the name is one which has previously thereto come to indicate the source of manufacture of particular devices, the use of such name by another, unaccompanied with any precaution or indication, in itself amounts to an artifice calculated to produce the deception.”

No one may be excluded from taking up whatever business he chooses by the circumstance that some one else of the same name has made a reputation in it; nor may he be required to conduct such business under an alias, although the conducting of it under his own name may produce a confusion in the public mind as to the identity of goods, which no “precaution or indication” of his can effectually prevent.

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Bluebook (online)
122 F. 348, 58 C.C.A. 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyokoff-seamans-benedict-v-howe-scale-co-of-1886-ca2-1903.