A trademark consisting of an ordinary surname is not the subject
of exclusive appropriation as a common law trademark, but may,
under the fourth proviso of § 5 of the Trade-Mark Act of 1905,
be validly registered if in use for ten years next preceding the
passage of that act in the manner specified therein.
A proviso in a statute will not be so construed as to have
little or nothing to act upon and to have no reason for its
insertion.
The fourth proviso of § 5 of the Trade-Mark Act of 1905
modifies the general limitations contained in the second proviso of
the same section against the use of personal and geographical names
and terms descriptive of character and quality.
In enacting the Trade-Mark Act of 1905 and inserting the
provisos in § 5 thereof, Congress did not intend to provide
for a barren notice of an ineffectual claim, but to confer definite
rights, and an applicant properly registering under the act becomes
the owner of the trademark and entitled to be protected in its use
as such.
While a trademark consisting of a proper name may be
registered
Page 233 U. S. 462
under the fourth proviso of § 5 of the Trade-Mark Act of
1905, another who uses that name will not be regarded as infringing
the trademark unless the name is so reproduced, copied, or imitated
as to mislead the public with respect to the origin or ownership of
the goods.
Improperly using a proper-name trademark registered under the
fourth proviso of § 5 of the Trade-Mark Act of 1905 in such
manner as to mislead the public and thereby constitute infringement
is not merely unfair competition at common law, which would not
give the federal court jurisdiction unless diverse citizenship
existed, but is a violation of a federal right, and a federal court
has jurisdiction of an action based thereon.
While, in a case for unfair competition, it may be necessary to
show intent to deceive the public, in a case for violation of a
properly registered trademark, it is not necessary to show wrongful
intent or facts justifying an inference of such intent.
Complainant having, for the period and in the manner specified
in the proviso of § 5 of the Trade-Mark Act of 1905, used the
name "Davids'" in connection with ink manufactured and sold by it
in a particular manner, that name was properly registered as a
trademark, and the defendants, by using the same word in such a
similar style on the ink manufactured by them as to mislead the
public, infringed complainant's rights under the statute, and
should be enjoined.
192 F. 915 reversed.
The facts, which involve the construction of the Trade-Mark Act
of February 20, 1905, and what constitutes infringement of a
trademark registered thereunder, are stated in the opinion.
Page 233 U. S. 463
MR. JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
Thaddeus Davids Company, manufacturer of inks, etc., brought
this suit for the infringement of its registered trademark
"DAVIDS'." It was alleged that the complainant was the owner of the
trademark; that it had been used in interstate commerce by the
complainant and its predecessors in business for upwards of eighty
years; that, on January 22, 1907, it had been registered by the
complainant
Page 233 U. S. 464
as a trademark, applicable to inks and stamp pads, under the Act
of February 20, 1905, c. 592, 33 Stat. 724; that the complainant
was entitled to such registration under § 5 of the act by
reason of actual and exclusive use for more than ten years prior to
the passage of the act, and that the defendants, Cortlandt I.
Davids and Walter I. Davids, trading as Davids Manufacturing
Company, were putting inks upon the market with infringing labels.
The bill also charged unfair competition. Upon demurrer, the
validity of the trademark was upheld by the circuit court of
appeals (178 F. 801), and on final hearing, upon pleadings and
proofs, complainant had a decree. 190 F. 285. This decree was
reversed by the circuit court of appeals, which held that there was
no infringement of the registered trademark, and that the suit, if
regarded as one for unfair competition, was not within the
jurisdiction of the court, the parties being citizens of the same
state. 192 F. 915. Certiorari was granted.
As the mark consisted of an ordinary surname, it was not the
subject of exclusive appropriation as a common law trademark
(
Brown Chemical Co. v. Meyer, 139 U.
S. 540,
139 U. S. 542;
Howe Scale Co. v. Wyckoff, 198 U.
S. 118,
198 U. S.
134-135), and the complainant derived its right from the
fourth proviso of § 5. This section, at the time of the
registration, was as follows: [
Footnote 1]
"Sec. 5. That no mark by which the goods of the owner of the
mark may be distinguished from other goods of the same class shall
be refused registration as a trademark on account of the nature of
such mark unless such mark --"
"(a) Consists of or comprises immoral or scandalous matter;"
"(b) Consists of or comprises the flag or coat of arms or
Page 233 U. S. 465
other insignia of the United States, or any simulation thereof,
or of any state or municipality, or of any foreign nation:
Provided, That trademarks which are identical with a
registered or known trademark owned and in use by another, and
appropriated to merchandise of the same descriptive properties, or
which so nearly resemble a registered or known trademark owned and
in use by another, and appropriated to merchandise of the same
descriptive properties, as to be likely to cause confusion or
mistake in the mind of the public, or to deceive purchasers, shall
not be registered:
Provided, That no mark which consists
merely in the name of an individual, firm, corporation, or
association, not written, printed, impressed, or woven in some
particular or distinctive manner or in association with a portrait
of the individual, or merely in words or devices which are
descriptive of the goods with which they are used, or of the
character or quality of such goods, or merely a geographical name
or term, shall be registered under the terms of this act:
Provided further, That no portrait of a living individual
may be registered as a trademark, except by the consent of such
individual, evidenced by an instrument in writing:
and provided
further, That nothing herein shall prevent the registration of
any mark used by the applicant or his predecessors, or by those
from whom title to the mark is derived, in commerce with foreign
nations or among the several states, or with Indian tribes, which
was in actual and exclusive use as a trademark of the applicant or
his predecessors from whom he derived title for ten years next
preceding the passage of this act."
The fourth proviso, or ten-year clause, has manifest reference
to marks which are not technical trademarks; otherwise, it would
have no effect. The owner of a trademark valid at common law and
used in commerce with foreign nations, or among the several states,
or with Indian tribes, may obtain its registration under the
act
Page 233 U. S. 466
without showing the user of ten years required by this clause.
Sections 1, 2. Congress evidently had in mind the fact that marks,
although not susceptible of exclusive appropriation at common law,
frequently acquired a special significance in connection with
particular commodities, and the language of the fourth proviso was
carefully chosen in order to bring within the statute those marks
which, while not being technical trademarks, had been in "actual
and exclusive use" as trademarks for ten years next preceding the
passage of the act. [
Footnote
2]
See
Page 233 U. S. 467
In re Cahn, 27 App.D.C. 173, 177;
Worster Brewing
Corp. v. Rueter, 30 App.D.C. 428, 430, 431;
In re
Wright, 33 App.D.C. 510.
It is suggested, however, that the privilege accorded by this
proviso is limited to marks which lie outside the positive
prohibitions contained in the earlier clauses of § 5. Thus, it
is said that the exceptions with respect to marks of a scandalous
sort, and as to those embracing public insignia, are plainly
intended to apply to all marks of the described character, whether
or not they had been used for the preceding ten years (
In re
Cahn, Belt & Co., supra), and it is urged that, if this be
so, the prohibitions of the provisos which precede the ten-year
clause must likewise be deemed to restrict its scope. The emphasis
in the present case is placed upon the second proviso in § 5.
This in substance prohibits the registration of marks consisting
merely of individual, firm, or corporate names not written or
printed in a distinctive manner, or of designations descriptive of
the character or quality of the goods with which they are used, or
of geographical names or terms, and it thus contains, as the court
of appeals said, "a fairly complete list" of the marks used by
dealers in selling their goods, which are not valid trademarks at
common law. If the ten-year proviso be construed as not to apply to
any marks within this comprehensive description, the clause would
have little or nothing to act upon, and we can conceive of no
reason for its insertion.
We think that the intent of Congress is clear. In the opening
clause of § 5, it is provided that no mark by which the goods
of the owner may be distinguished from other goods of the same
class shall be refused registration as a trademark on account of
its nature unless it consists of, or comprises: (a) immoral or
scandalous matter; or (b) certain public insignia. The marks within
these excepted classes are withdrawn from the purview of the act.
Then,
Page 233 U. S. 468
in dealing with the marks which remain, limitations upon
registrability are defined by the first, second, and third
provisos, and the restrictions thus imposed are in turn qualified
by the fourth proviso or ten-year clause. It follows that the
fourth proviso in no way detracts from the force of the exceptions
contained in clauses (a) and (b) which were plainly intended to be
established without qualification; but the generality of the
succeeding prohibitions is qualified. It may well be that this
qualification, by reason of its terms, does not affect the first
proviso, which relates to cases of conflicting trademarks, as the
ten-year clause explicitly requires that the use shall have been
"exclusive." But there can be no doubt that this clause does modify
the general limitations contained in the second proviso with
respect to the use of marks consisting of names of persons, firms,
or corporations, of terms descriptive of character and quality, or
of geographical names or terms. Marks of this sort, notwithstanding
the general prohibition, were made registrable when the applicant
or his predecessors had used them, actually and exclusively, as
trademarks for the described period.
In this view, the complainant was entitled to register its mark.
We need not stop to discuss the contention that the complainant's
use had not been exclusive, or that the mark had not been used in
interstate commerce, or the further defense that the complainant
should be denied relief because it had deceived the public. It is
enough to say that these contentions were without adequate support
in the evidence, and were properly overruled by the circuit
court.
Having the right to register its mark, the complainant was
entitled to its protection as a valid trademark under the statute.
As defined in § 29, "the term
trademark' includes any mark
which is entitled to registration under the terms of this act." The
defendants,
Page 233 U. S.
469
however, insisted below and urge here that, although the
mark was registrable, it was not susceptible of ownership, and
hence that the complainant could not maintain a suit for
injunction, profits, and damages, as provided in the statute, for
the reason that the remedies it affords are available only to
"owners" (§§ 16, 19). That is to say that registration
was expressly permitted, but that protection to the registrant was
denied. This interpretation, of course, would render the ten-year
proviso meaningless by stripping it of practical effect. It was not
the intention of Congress thus to provide for a barren notice of an
ineffectual claim, but to confer definite rights. The applicant
who, by virtue of actual and exclusive use, is entitled to register
his mark under this clause becomes, on due registration, the
"owner" of a "trademark" within the meaning of the act, and he is
entitled to be protected in its use as such.
The further argument is made that, assuming that the complainant
has a valid registered trademark, still the protection is limited
to its use when standing alone (as the complainant has used it on
its labels), and that there can be no infringement unless it is
used in this precise manner. The statutory right cannot be so
narrowly limited. Not only exact reproduction, but a "colorable
imitation" is within the statute; otherwise, the trademark would be
of little avail, as by shrewd simulation it could be appropriated
with impunity. The act provides (§ 16):
"Any person who shall, without the consent of the owner thereof,
reproduce, counterfeit, copy, or colorably imitate any such
trademark . . . and shall use, or shall have used, such
reproduction, counterfeit, copy, or colorable imitation in commerce
among the several states . . . shall be liable. . . ."
This provision applies to all trademarks that are within the
act, including those which come under the ten-year clause, provided
they are not used "in unlawful business," or "upon any article
injurious in itself," or
Page 233 U. S. 470
"with the design of deceiving the public," and have not been
"abandoned" (§ 21).
But, while this is true, the inquiry as to the extent of the
right thus secured by the statute, in the case of marks which are
admitted to registration under the ten-year clause, is not
completely answered. It is apparent that, with respect to names or
terms coming within this class, there may be proper uses by others
than the registrant, even in connection with trade in similar
goods. It would seem to be clear, for example, that the
registration for which the statute provides was not designed to
confer a monopoly of the use of surnames, or of geographical names,
as such. It is not to be supposed that Congress intended to prevent
one from using his own name in trade, or from making appropriate
reference to the town or city in which his place of business is
located, and we do not find it necessary to consider the question
of the validity of such an attempt if one were made. Congress has
admitted to registration the names or terms belonging to the class
under consideration simply because of their prior use as
trademarks, although they had not been such in law. Their exclusive
use as trademarks for the stated period was deemed, in the judgment
of Congress, a sufficient assurance that they had acquired a
secondary meaning as the designation of the origin or ownership of
the merchandise to which they were affixed. And it was manifestly
in this limited character only that they received statutory
recognition, and, on registration, became entitled to protection
under the act.
In the case, therefore, of marks consisting of names or terms
having a double significance, and being susceptible of legitimate
uses with respect to their primary sense, the reproduction, copy,
or imitation which constitutes infringement must be such as is
calculated to mislead the public with respect to the origin or
ownership of the goods, and thus to invade the right of the
registrant to the use
Page 233 U. S. 471
of the name or term as a designation of his merchandise. This we
conceive to be the meaning of the statute. It follows that, where
the mark consists of a surname, a person having the same name and
using it in his own business, although dealing in similar goods,
would not be an infringer, provided that the name was not used in a
manner tending to mislead, and it was clearly made to appear that
the goods were his own, and not those of the registrant. This is
not to say that, in this view, the case becomes one simply of
unfair competition as that category has been defined in the law,
for whatever analogy may exist with respect to the scope of
protection in this class of cases, still the right to be protected
against an unwarranted use of the registered mark has been made a
statutory right, and the courts of the United States have been
vested with jurisdiction of suits for infringement, regardless of
diversity of citizenship. Moreover, in view of this statutory
right, it could not be considered necessary that the complainant,
in order to establish infringement, should show wrongful intent in
fact on the part of the defendant, or facts justifying the
inference of such an intent.
Lawrence Mfg. Co. v. Tennessee
Mfg. Co., 138 U. S. 537,
138 U. S. 549;
Singer Mfg. Co. v. June Mfg. Co., 163 U.
S. 169;
Elgin Nat'l Watch Co. v. Illinois Watch case
Co., 179 U. S. 665,
179 U. S. 674.
Having duly registered under the act, the complainant would be
entitled to protection against any infringing use; but, in
determining the extent of the right which the statute secures, and
what may be said to constitute an infringing use, regard must be
had, as has been said, to the nature of the mark, and its
secondary, as distinguished from its primary, significance.
The distinction between permissible and prohibited uses may be a
difficult one to draw in particular cases, but it must be drawn in
order to give effect to the Act of Congress. That the distinction
may readily be observed in practice is apparent. In this case, for
instance, if the defendants
Page 233 U. S. 472
had so chosen, they could have adopted a distinct mark of their
own, which would have served to designate their inks and completely
to distinguish them from those of the complainant. It was not
necessary that, in exercising the right to use their own name in
trade, they should imitate the mark which the complainant used, and
was entitled to use under the statute, as a designation of its
wares; or that they should use the name in question upon their
labels without unmistakably differentiating their goods from those
which the complainant manufactured and sold.
We agree with the circuit court that infringement was shown. The
complainant put its mark "DAVIDS'" prominently at the top of its
labels. The defendants, in the same position on its labels, put "C.
I. DAVIDS'." At the bottom of their labels, the defendants placed
"DAVIDS MFG. Co." The use of the name in this manner was a mere
simulation of the complainant's mark, which it had duly registered;
it constituted a "colorable imitation" within the meaning of the
act. The decree of the circuit court accordingly restrained the
defendants from the use of the words "Davids Manufacturing
Company," and from the use of the word "Davids" at the top of their
labels in connection with the business of making and selling inks.
We think that the complainant was entitled to this measure of
protection.
The decree of the circuit court of appeals must therefore be
reversed, and that of the Circuit Court affirmed. It is so
ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Section 5 has been amended by the acts of March 2, 1907, c.
2573, 34 Stat. 1251, February 18, 1911, c. 113, 36 Stat. 918;
January 8, 1913, c. 7, 37 Stat. 649.
[
Footnote 2]
In the bill as it passed the House of Representatives, the
fourth proviso in § 5 read as follows:
"
And provided further, that nothing herein shall
prevent the registration of any trademark used by the applicant or
his predecessors, or by those from whom title to the
trademark is derived, in commerce with foreign nations or
among the several states or with Indian tribes, which was in actual
and lawful use as a trademark of the applicant, or his
predecessors from whom he derived title, over ten years next
preceding February twentieth, nineteen hundred and five."
The bill was amended in the Senate so as to substitute the word
"mark" for the word "trademark," where it is italicized above, and
also by striking out the words "and lawful." The conference
committee recommended that the House recede from its disagreement
to these amendments and that the words "and exclusive" should be
substituted for the words "and lawful." The managers on the part of
the House made the following statement in explanation:
"On amendments Nos. 2 and 3: the word 'mark' is substituted in
each instance for the word 'trademark' in the bill as it passed the
House, for the reason that the use of the word 'trademark' in this
connection would not have accomplished the purposes of the proviso
of the section in question."
"On amendment No. 4: the words 'and lawful' were stricken out by
the Senate amendment, and by the conference report it is
recommended that the words 'and exclusive' be substituted therefor.
The purpose of this amendment is to prohibit the registration of
any marks which are not technical trademarks unless the applicant
has used such mark exclusively for the period of ten years. The
words 'next preceding' are inserted in place of the words 'prior
to' the passage of the act, so as to require the exclusive use of
the mark for the ten years immediately preceding the passage of
this act."
Cong.Rec. Vol. 39, pp. 1399, 2412.