Where defendant sets up the claim that it enjoys right or
privilege sought to be enjoined under authority of an act of
Congress and the state court denies the right, the judgment is
reviewable here under § 237 of the new Judicial Code (§
709, Rev.Stat.).
Whether persons have a right to be incorporated in a state as a
state branch of an organization incorporated in the District of
Columbia under an act of Congress is a nonfederal question.
Quaere whether the principles applicable to use of
trademarks and tradenames are applicable to the use of names of
fraternal organizations having a main organization with branches in
the several states.
The doctrine of laches applies to the use of a name of a
fraternal corporation, and equity will not grant relief against the
use of the name by parties who have been using it for many years
without objection at the instance of the older organization, there
not appearing to be any fraud or intent to deceive the public.
While this Court does not as a general rule review findings of
fact of the state court on writ of error, where a federal right has
been denied as a result of a finding of fact and it is contended
there is no evidence to support that finding and the evidence is in
the record, the resulting question is open for decision, and where
a conclusion of law as to a federal right and a finding of fact are
so intermingled as to require the facts to be analyzed and
dissected so as to pas on the federal question, this Court has
power to do so.
In this case,
held that:
There was no evidence to support a finding that the defendants
below were attempting by their application for incorporation in a
state to use the name Knight of Pythias so as to deceive the public
and work pecuniary damage to the older organization of that name,
the complainant.
The long continued acquiescence of the older organization of the
Knights of Pythias in the use of the name by the junior
organization prior to the attempt of the latter to have this
particular
Page 225 U. S. 247
state branch incorporated amounted to laches, and under such
conditions, equity could not grant relief.
The existence of laches in this case is incompatible with a
finding of injury to property and deceit to the public.
133 Ga. 837 reversed.
The facts, which involve the right of two associations to use
the name "Knights of Pythias" and to be incorporated thereunder in
one of the states, are stated in the opinion.
Page 225 U. S. 248
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
A secret fraternal and benevolent order known as the Knights of
Pythias was organized as a voluntary association in Washington,
District of Columbia, in 1864. Pursuant to the authority conferred
by an act of Congress approved May 5, 1870 (16 Stat. 98, c. 80),
authorizing the formation of corporations in the District of
Columbia,
Page 225 U. S. 249
the persons composing the Supreme Lodge, the governing body of
the order, became incorporated as the Supreme Lodge Knights of
Pythias by filing in the proper office the certificate required by
the act. Among other things required to be stated in the
certificate was the name or title by which the society was to be
known in law and the particular business and objects of the
society. The statute provided that, upon the filing of the
certificate the persons signing and acknowledging the same, and
their associates and successors, "shall . . . be a body politic and
corporate, by the name and style stated in the certificate. . . ."
The life of the corporation thus created, it would seem, expired by
limitation in 1890. On June 29, 1894 (28 Stat. 96, c. 119),
however, by a special act of Congress, the Supreme Lodge was again
made a corporation of the District of Columbia by the name of the
Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias, and still exists as such.
Membership in the order is restricted to white males. In addition
to a Grand Lodge and subordinate lodges in each state to which it
has been extended, the order conducts an insurance branch known as
the Endowment Rank and a military branch known as the Uniform Rank.
The Grand Lodge of Georgia was instituted by the Supreme Lodge on
March 20, 1871.
An order of Knights of Pythias of the same general nature as
that above described, consisting of members of the colored race,
was established in Mississippi on March 26, 1880. It became a
corporation of the District of Columbia on or about October 10,
1889, by virtue of the general incorporation act of Congress of May
5, 1870, already referred to, under the name and style of "The
Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias, North and South America, Europe,
Asia, and Africa." The order was introduced into Georgia in June,
1886, and a Grand Lodge was instituted in that state by the Supreme
Lodge on December 15, 1890. The corporation of October 10,
1889,
Page 225 U. S. 250
was reincorporated December 14, 1903, under the same general law
of May 5, 1870, by the name of "Knights of Pythias of North
America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Australia." After
such reincorporation, on January 15, 1905, the Supreme Lodge issued
a new charter to the Grand Lodge of Georgia.
The Supreme Lodge of Knights of Pythias, which, as heretofore
stated, was finally incorporated in 1894 by special act of
Congress, the Grand Lodge of Georgia, which was subject to its
jurisdiction, and the officers of such Grand Lodge were parties
complainant in an amended petition in this litigation commenced in
the Superior Court of Fulton County, Georgia. The defendants were
the officers of the Grand Lodge in Georgia of the other body, who
had made application to the court in which this suit was commenced
to be incorporated as a domestic corporation of Georgia under the
name and style of "The Grand Lodge Knights of Pythias of North
America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Australia,
Jurisdiction of Georgia." The petition filed in the cause recited
the organization of the order of the plaintiffs substantially as
heretofore stated, and the defendants were alleged to be wrongfully
attempting to incorporate under a name which infringed that of
plaintiffs' order, and to be unlawfully styling themselves Knights
of Pythias, and to be fraudulently using the insignia, emblems,
etc., of the plaintiffs' order. The averments of the petition and
the amended petition as to damage sustained by the alleged unlawful
acts of the defendants and their associates were stated in general
terms to constitute a wrong and injury to petitioners and to the
membership in Georgia, and to be a fraud upon the public. The
relief prayed was, in substance, a permanent injunction enjoining
the prosecution of the application for incorporation, and the use
by the defendants and the members of the subordinate lodges under
their jurisdiction of the name "Knights of
Page 225 U. S. 251
Pythias" and of other names, insignia, emblems, etc., which
would be like or a colorable imitation of those in use by the
plaintiffs' order.
By their answer, the defendants put the plaintiffs to proof of
the material averments of the petition, set up the origin, growth,
and purposes of the order of which they were members, and
especially stated that it was confined to the "negro race and the
Asiatic races." The incorporation of the order under the general
incorporation act of Congress of 1870 was also averred, and the
claim was made of lawful right to the use of the names, signs,
symbols, emblems, insignia, and the other paraphernalia adopted by
the corporation, and the good faith of the corporation and all
concerned in the matter was averred. It was further stated that the
membership of the order in the United States aggregated 80,747, and
in the State of Georgia 11,805, and that there never had been an
attempt to confuse the order with that of which the plaintiffs were
members, and that no such confusion in fact had ever arisen or
could arise, the field of operation of the orders being absolutely
different. Laches of the plaintiffs was pleaded in bar of any
relief on the ground that the existence of the order and its
operations had been publicly known and was matter of common
knowledge for many years.
The case came on for hearing on a motion for preliminary
injunction, and after hearing the evidence and argument of counsel,
the court denied an injunction and quashed a preliminary
restraining order. The plaintiffs took the case by a bill of
exceptions to the Supreme Court of Georgia. That court, in
disposing of it, referred to the fact that the Supreme Lodge of the
order represented by plaintiffs was a corporation of the District
of Columbia, and that, by amendment of the petition, it had been
joined as a plaintiff. It further stated:
"That the defendants have been operating and are
Page 225 U. S. 252
seeking to be incorporated in this state under a name which is
claimed to be an infringement of the name of the plaintiff's
association, and the question is involved whether and how far the
plaintiff, which is a foreign corporation, might be affected by the
state's granting a charter to the defendants as a domestic
corporation in the name and for the purpose asked, and also whether
there is a fraudulent purpose or design to so infringe."
It was next observed that
"the presiding judge should have enjoined the defendants from
obtaining the charter applied for, so as to preserve the status in
respect thereto until, on final jury trial, all of the questions of
law and fact can be fully adjudicated."
The court held that error had been committed in refusing to
grant an injunction as to the charter applied for, and the "ruling
of the chancellor denying the injunction in other matters" was
allowed "to stand until the final trial or further order of court,
leaving open all the other questions for future determination." 128
Ga. 775. There followed a hearing of the case before the court and
a jury, and evidence, both oral and documentary, was introduced.
The evidence showed without contradiction that, in addition to
being incorporated as stated in the answer, the defendant order had
also organized on May 24, 1905, as a fraternal beneficial
association by its corporate name under the insurance laws of the
District of Columbia; that the laws enacted by the order were such
as were common to a fraternal body; that the rituals of the order
and its emblems, flags, badges, pins, and jewelry adornment were on
public sale, free to be purchased by anyone; that the membership of
the order throughout the United States aggregated 300,000; that
there had been collected and disbursed to the members of the order
between July 1, 1906, and July 1, 1907, more than $500,000; that
the collections in Georgia during the existence of the order there
aggregated $180,232.21; that there had been paid
Page 225 U. S. 253
to the widows and orphans of deceased members in Georgia
$148,680, and that the collections in Georgia aggregated $51,000 a
year, excluding the expense of burying their dead, which was $9,000
more. After instructing the jury as to the law deemed to be
applicable and observing that the case was of a character wherein
the law provided that questions might be propounded, to be answered
by the jury, such answers to stand as their verdict, the court
submitted fourteen questions to be answered by the jury. The
questions, with the answers given, are copied in the margin.
[
Footnote 1]
Page 225 U. S. 254
Subsequently a final decree was entered granting the relief
prayed by the complainants. A copy of the decree is excerpted in
the margin. [
Footnote 2]
Page 225 U. S. 255
Reciting that they were dissatisfied with the verdict of the
jury upon the questions submitted, the defendants moved for a new
trial upon the ground that the verdict
Page 225 U. S. 256
was contrary to the evidence and without evidence to support it,
that it was strongly and decidedly against the weight of evidence,
and was contrary to law and the principles of equity. Nearly six
months afterwards, by leave of court, defendants amended the motion
by adding thirty-six additional grounds, attacking specifically
each of the
Page 225 U. S. 257
answers to the questions, charging each to be not only contrary
to the evidence, but contrary to the charge of the court, and in
addition error was alleged in the charge as given and to the
failure to instruct the jury as pointed out in some of the
specifications of error. The omission to specifically instruct the
jury that the defendants claimed
Page 225 U. S. 258
a right to their name under a charter from the District of
Columbia by virtue of an act of Congress, and the answers of the
jury to certain of the questions, were alleged to violate
defendants' rights under the charter and to be repugnant to the due
faith and credit clause of the Constitution of the United States,
and the decree was alleged also to constitute a violation of the
general incorporation act under which the order of which defendants
were a part had been incorporated. The motion for a new trial was
overruled. A bill of exceptions was soon afterwards allowed, which
was certified to contain "all the evidence" and the material
portions of the record. The case was then taken by a writ of error
to the supreme court of the state, where the judgment was affirmed.
133 Ga. 837. This writ of error was then prosecuted.
In the trial court, in various forms, plaintiffs in error,
defendants below, invoked the right to the use of its corporate
name and the incidental right to the designation "Knights of
Pythias" and the use of insignia, emblems, etc., appropriate to the
order. As this right or privilege was claimed in virtue of the
authority to incorporate conferred by the general incorporation act
of May 5, 1870, enacted by Congress, it constituted a right or
privilege claimed under an authority exercised under the United
States, which, being denied by the state court, is reviewable here
by virtue of the provisions of § 237 of the new Judicial Code,
§ 709, Rev.Stat.
Dupasseur v.
Rochereau, 21 Wall. 130;
Embry v. Palmer,
107 U. S. 3;
Ferris v. Frohman, 223 U. S. 424,
223 U. S. 431,
and cases cited. The fact that corporations created by the general
law of 1870 and the special act of Congress of 1894, heretofore
referred to, derived their rights and powers under a law of the
United States is recognized in the following cases which were
removed from state courts:
Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias v.
Kalinski, 163 U. S. 289;
Same v. Withers, 177 U. S. 260, and
Same v. Beck, 181 U. S. 49.
Page 225 U. S. 259
Whether or not the defendants below and their successors were
entitled to prosecute in the state court the application to be made
a domestic corporation of Georgia is, in our opinion, plainly a
question nonfederal in character, and we therefore pass its
consideration. The question, however, whether the right or
privilege arising from the authority exercised under legislation of
Congress was invaded by the decree complained of, so far as it
forbade the use of the corporate name or a designation containing
the distinctive words "Knights of Pythias" and the use of the
emblems and insignia of such order, being within our competency to
review, we come to the consideration of the question whether the
asserted right or privilege was properly denied.
It is manifest from the record that the existence within the
State of Georgia of two bodies of Knights of Pythias, controlled by
corporations of the District of Columbia, and the authority exerted
over the membership in that state by the governing body of each
order, was not contrary to any state statute, and the Supreme Court
of Georgia, in determining the right to relief, applied what it
conceived to be the applicable principles of general law. Speaking
in a general sense, it is true to say that the Supreme Court of
Georgia deemed the case before it to be controlled by the
principles of law applicable to trademarks and tradenames, and in
substance held: (a) that an association whose primary object was
fraternal or benevolent, first appropriating and using an arbitrary
or fanciful name, acquires an exclusive right to the same; (b) that
a subsequent unauthorized use by others of such name or a colorable
imitation thereof would be unlawful; (c) that, in the absence of
laches, if, as a result of such wrongful use, injury was occasioned
to the rightful owner by the unlawful appropriation and use of the
name, equity would afford relief. Coming to apply these principles,
the court held first that there had been a lawful appropriation
Page 225 U. S. 260
of the name by the plaintiff corporation and an unauthorized and
wrongful use thereof by the defendants -- indeed, that such use was
made "with a fraudulent purpose and design;" second, that the
unlawful appropriation had inflicted injury upon the property
rights of the lawful appropriator. On this subject, the court said
(p. 844):
"The plaintiffs' order, while primarily fraternal and
benevolent, has certain property and business attributes and
activities, including the acquiring and ownership of large amounts
of property, and the conducting of a department of insurance
protection. Under the evidence, the element of injury is
sufficiently shown."
The conclusion of the court that there had been, as a matter of
fact, no such laches as should prevent a court of equity from
affording relief, was thus stated:
"Taking into consideration that the subject of controversy in
this case is in the nature of a tradename, and that the contest is
between two secret societies whose relations to each other during
the period from the appropriation of the name by one to the
institution of the suit for injunction by the other was not the
usual relation that one person ordinarily sustains to another, we
cannot say that the finding of the jury that the plaintiffs had not
acquiesced in the use of their name by defendants is not supported
by the evidence. The suit was filed promptly after the defendants
came out into the open, and by petition, duly published, asked the
court to give legal sanction to their use of the plaintiff's
name."
We do not stop to consider whether the court was right under
principles of general law in applying to organizations like those
here involved the rules applicable to trademarks and tradenames and
unfair competition in trade, a subject as to which there is
conflict in the decisions, because, under the view we take of the
case, we propose, for the sake of argument only, to indulge in the
hypothesis
Page 225 U. S. 261
that the conception which the court entertained on the subject
was correct. It is indisputable that the court was clearly right as
a matter of law in holding that a court of equity, in any event,
would not afford relief where there had been such laches as would
cause it to be inequitable to do so.
Saxlehner v. Eisner &
M. Co., 179 U. S. 19,
179 U. S. 35.
The question, then, is can the decree of the court be maintained
consistently with the doctrine of laches which the court expounded
and which we have accepted as correct beyond all controversy? As
the inquiry which we thus state rests upon the premises that all
the propositions of law applied by the court are to be taken as
correct, it follows that there is no possibility of deciding there
was material error unless it is to be found in the application
which the court made of the principle of law which it applied to
the facts established by the evidence, all of which is in the
record in connection with the findings made by the jury. While it
is true that, upon a writ of error to a state court, we do not
review findings of fact, nevertheless two propositions are as well
settled as the rule itself, as follows: (a) that where a federal
right has been denied as the result of a finding of fact which it
is contended there was no evidence whatever to support, and the
evidence is in the record, the resulting question of law is open
for decision, and (b) that where a conclusion of law as to a
federal right and a finding of fact are so intermingled as to cause
it to be essentially necessary, for the purpose of passing upon the
federal question, to analyze and dissect the facts, to the extent
necessary to do so, the power exists as a necessary incident to a
decision upon the claim of denial of the federal right.
Kansas
City So. Ry. Co. v. Albers Comm. Co., 223 U.
S. 573,
223 U. S. 591;
Cedar Rapids Gas Co. v. Cedar Rapids, 223 U.
S. 655,
223 U. S. 668;
State of Washington ex Rel. v. Fairchild, 224 U.
S. 510. The contentions here made bring this case under
the first category, since the insistence here is that there was not
any evidence
Page 225 U. S. 262
justifying the findings made by the court concerning fraudulent
purpose, injury to property, deception of the public, etc.
On examining the evidence, we are compelled to say we do not
think it has any tendency to prove an intent on the part of the
defendant order by the adoption of the designation given to their
body or the use of the emblems, insignia, etc., employed, to make
it appear that their order and that of the complainant is one and
the same, or that it tends to show that the use of the corporate
name or the distinctive words "Knights of Pythias" and the emblems,
etc., of that order, operated in any degree to deceive the public
or to work pecuniary damage to the complainant order within or
without the State of Georgia. But, strong as are our convictions as
to these subjects, we prefer not to rest our conclusion upon them,
but rather to place the decree of reversal which we shall render
upon the application to the facts of the well settled doctrine on
the subject of laches. As we have observed, the court below, in
considering the facts on that subject, made no reference to the
evidence, but assumed that it must be that the findings of the jury
were sustained by evidence, and indulged in the assumption that it
was natural to suppose that the long continued existence and
development of the defendant order had not been interfered with by
the complainant corporation because not known until the defendants
came into the open by making an application to be made a domestic
corporation of Georgia. The facts, however, which we have stated
concerning the establishment of the order, its lodgment in Georgia,
its vast expansion, its years of duration, and its volume of
transactions were not disputed in any particular whatever, and
therefore leave no room for any other but the legal conclusion of
laches. This, we think, in the most conclusive way demonstrates the
violation of the elementary principles of equity which would result
from the enforcement of the injunction
Page 225 U. S. 263
which the court awarded. And the conclusion just stated renders
it unnecessary to point out the incompatibility between the
holding, on the one hand, that there was injury to the property
rights of the plaintiff corporation and a deceit of the public
arising from the existence of the defendant order and its
activities, and the holding, on the other hand, that laches cannot
be imputed to the plaintiff corporation as a result of its inaction
during the many years in which the defendant corporation existed
and exercised its attributes and functions, because the wrongs thus
being publicly inflicted could not be presumed to have been known
until the defendant order came out into the open by the application
for incorporation under the law of the State of Georgia.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Georgia is reversed, and
the cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with
this opinion.
[
Footnote 1]
"
(Questions and Verdict)"
"GEORGIA,
Fulton County:"
"(1) Is the proposed corporate name of the defendants an
infringement on the name of the plaintiff's association?"
"Yes."
"(2) If it is such an infringement, would it affect or injure
plaintiff in any property right? If so, what?"
"Yes, in name."
"(3) If so, is there any fraudulent purpose or design to [in?]
so infringing?"
"Yes, there is."
"(4) Are any of the emblems or insignia of defendants the same
as any of those used by plaintiffs, and if so, does such use injure
plaintiff in any property right?"
"Yes."
"(5) Has the plaintiff acquiesced in the use by defendants of
the name and insignia, etc., and if so, how long?"
"No."
"(6) Is it true that, since the organization of the order
represented by petitioners and its introduction into the State of
Georgia, it has been called the Order of Knights of Pythias, and
that its members have been known as Knights of Pythias or Pythian
Knights, indifferently?"
"Yes."
"(7) Is it true that 'Pythias' is the distinctive word in the
name of the order represented by petitioners, which ordinarily
distinguishes it from the name and style of other fraternal orders
in the State of Georgia and in the United States?"
"Yes."
"(8) Is it true that the name set forth in defendants' petition
for incorporation is substantially identical with the name and
style of your petitioners, the Grand Lodge Knights of Pythias of
Georgia?"
"Yes."
"(9) Is it true that the names set forth in defendants' said
petition for incorporation is a colorable imitation of the name and
style of your petitioner, the Grand Lodge Knights of Pythias of
Georgia?"
"Yes."
"(10) Is it true that the use by defendants and their associates
of the name which they are seeking incorporation would work a fraud
upon your petitioners and their associates and the public, in that
the name under which defendants propose to incorporate is a
colorable imitation of the name of petitioners?"
"Yes."
"(11) Is it true that defendants cannot show any organization of
any kind until 1880, and until long after the Grand Lodge Knights
of Pythias of petitioners was organized in the State of
Georgia?"
"Yes."
"(12) Is it true that the use of the word 'Pythias' immediately
in conjunction with the words 'Knights of,' in the name under which
defendants and their associates are seeking incorporation, is a
colorable imitation of the name of your petitioner, the Grand Lodge
Knights of Pythias of Georgia?"
"Yes."
"(13) Is it true that defendants of the 'Supreme Lodge of the
Knights of Pythias of North America, South America, Europe, Asia,
Africa, and Australia' are wearing emblems and insignia identical
in color, design, and lettering with the emblems and insignia of
petitioners, the Grand Lodge Knights of Pythias of Georgia, and is
it true that the wearing and use of such insignia and emblems work
a fraud upon either petitioner or their associates or the
public?"
"Yes."
"(14) Have the defendants used the name 'Knights of Pythias' or
the letters 'K. of P.' without any affix or suffix thereto?"
"Yes."
"May 27, 1908 G. W. FOOTE,
Foreman"
[
Footnote 2]
"
(Final Decree)"
"GEORGIA,
Fulton County:"
"Upon considering the pleadings, evidence. and verdict in the
above-stated case, it is thereupon ordered, adjudged, and decreed
by the court as follows:"
"(1) That the defendants, Chas. D. Creswill, Geo. N. Stoney,
Geo. R. Hutto, N. B. Williamson, Columbus J. Smith, Fred N. Cohen,
Boss W. Warren, Geo. W. Brown, Jas. W. Davis Edwin J. Turner,
Garrett Taylor, and Lucius L. Lee, and each of them, and their
associates, confederates, and successors, be and they are hereby
perpetually enjoined as in said petition prayed, and especially as
follows:"
"A. That said defendants and their associates, confederates, and
successors are hereby perpetually enjoined from prosecuting their
petition for incorporation, and from further proceeding to become
incorporated in Fulton County, or elsewhere in the State of
Georgia, under the name and style of 'The Grand Lodge Knights of
Pythias of North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and
Australia, Jurisdiction of Georgia,' or using any name or title
embracing the word 'Pythias' in immediate conjunction with the
words 'Knights of,' or under any name or title in which the word
'Pythias' is the distinctive and cardinal word, or under any name
which is substantially identical with, or a colorable imitation of,
the name of the petitioners, the Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias
and the Grand Lodge Knights of Pythias of Georgia."
"B. That said defendants, their associates and successors, and
each of them be, and they are hereby, perpetually enjoined from
further using in their voluntary organization said name of the
Grand Lodge Knights of Pythias of North America, South America,
Europe, Asia, Africa, and Australia, Jurisdiction of Georgia, and
in the conduct of its affairs, using any name embracing the word
'Pythias' in immediate conjunction with the words 'Knights of,' or
embracing said word 'Pythias' as the cardinal distinctive word of
the name, or any other name which is substantial identical with or
in colorable imitation of the name of petitioners, the Supreme
Lodge Knights of Pythias and the Grand Lodge Knights of Pythias of
Georgia. The said defendants, their associates and successors, and
each of them, are further perpetually enjoined from instituting
subordinate lodges under the name and designation of the Order of
Knights of Pythias, and from further authorizing the continued
existence of subordinate lodges under the jurisdiction of said
voluntary organization of which defendants and their associates are
members, using the name and designation of Knights of Pythias, or
any name in which the word 'Pythias' is the cardinal and
distinctive word, or any name which is a colorable imitation of the
name of petitioners, the Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias, and the
Grand Lodge Knights of Pythias of Georgia, and of subordinate
lodges instituted by said petitioner's authority. And said
defendants, their associates and successors, and each of them, are
further perpetually enjoined from designating and calling
themselves, and from authorizing their associates and members of
subordinate lodges organized and existing by authority of the
voluntary organization of which said defendants are members to
designate and call themselves, Knights of Pythias or Pythian
Knights, or any other name that is a colorable imitation thereof,
and from designating their voluntary organization or its
subordinate lodges by the initials K. P. or K. of P., and from
using a seal which is a colorable imitation of the seal of the
petitioners, the Grand Lodge Knights of Pythias of Georgia, and
from using and wearing emblems and insignia, buttons, pins, rings,
and watch charms which in color and design are substantially
similar to or a colorable imitation of the emblems and insignia,
buttons, pins, rings, and watch charms adopted, used, and worn by
the members of petitioners, the Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias
and the Grand Lodge Knights of Pythias of Georgia, and the members
of the subordinate lodges organized by authority of said
petitioners, and the said defendants, and each of them, their
successors and associates, are perpetually enjoined from
authorizing or permitting the further use and wearing of such
emblems and insignia by members of subordinate lodges instituted by
and existing under the authority of said voluntary organization of
which the defendants are officers and members."
"C. That said defendants and each of them, and their associates
and successors, be, and they are, perpetually enjoined from using
the words 'Knights of Pythias' in immediate conjunction, or the
word 'Pythias,' as the cardinal distinctive word in any name, or as
a designation of any insurance, military, or other branch of the
voluntary organization of which said defendants and their
associates are officers and members, and from using any name,
flags, emblems, and insignia that are substantially identical with,
or a colorable imitation of, the name, flags, emblems, or insignia
of petitioners, the Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias and the Grand
Lodge Knights of Pythias of Georgia, in any insurance and military
branches of said petitioners, in connection with any society or
corporation of which defendants are officers or members."
"(2) In order that the voluntary organization of which the
defendants are officers and members may have a reasonable time in
which to select and adopt some other name and make such changes in
the laws as may be necessary in obedience to this decree, and not
hereby disorganize said organization which defendants are members
of, or stop its said association from the prosecution of the word
in which it is engaged:"
"It is hereby adjudged and decreed that the injunction decreed
in subsections B and C, paragraph one hereof shall be in abeyance,
and no penalty shall be visited upon the defendants, their
associates and successors, for disobedience thereof until the first
day of June, 1909. And that, on or after said first day of June,
1909, this suspension of said injunction shall cease and determine,
and said injunction shall be of full and final force and effect
perpetually after said date, and the defendants and each of them,
their associates and successors, are and shall be subject to all
the pains and penalties provided for any disobedience of said
injunction."
"(3) That this decree shall have the force and effect of the
state's writ of injunction, without issuance of such writ,
provided, however, that the writ of injunction, according to the
terms of this decree, shall issue out of this Court, and be further
served upon the defendants and their associates and successors at
any time, on motion of petitioners."
"(4) That the petitioners have and recover of the defendants all
of the costs in this behalf incurred, to-wit: _____ dollars, to be
taxed by the clerk of this Court."
"In open court this tenth of June, 1908."
"J. T. PENDLETON"
"
Judge C.S.A.C."
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE LURTON,
dissenting:
When a federal right is held by a state court to have been lost
by subsequent conduct that of itself involves no federal question,
I think we are not at liberty to reexamine the decision unless we
can say that the state court in substance is denying the right. So
it has been held or strongly intimated as to
res judicata,
Northern Pacific R. Co. v. Ellis, 144 U.
S. 458; estoppel,
Hale v. Lewis, 181 U.
S. 473; the statute of limitations,
Rector v.
Ashley, 6 Wall. 142, and laches,
Moran v.
Horsky, 178 U. S. 205,
178 U. S.
214-215;
Pierce v. Somerset Ry., 171 U.
S. 641, and the principle was recognized only the other
day in
Gaar, Scott & Co. v. Shannon, 223 U.
S. 468,
223 U. S.
470-471. I do not see the distinction by which we can
review the decision in the opposite case, where it is held that the
right is not lost or cannot be interfered with because of laches on
the other side. In a case where the state court held that there
Page 225 U. S. 264
was no defense under the statute of limitations or estoppel, the
writ of error was dismissed.
Carothers v. Mayer,
164 U. S. 325. I
will content myself with saying that I do not see how the decision
can be reversed on the ground of laches.
MR. JUSTICE LURTON concurs in this view, and is of opinion that
the writ should be dismissed.