The Meat Inspection Law applies to oleomargarine. P.
249 U. S.
498.
Registration of a tradename under the Trade Mark Law has no
bearing on the right to use it under the Meat Inspection Law. P.
249 U. S.
499.
Under the Meat Inspection Law, the power to determine whether a
tradename is false or deceptive is lodged with the Secretary of
Agriculture, and his determination, if not arbitrary, is
conclusive.
Houston v. St. Louis Independent Packing Co.,
ante, 249 U. S. 479.
Id.
The power of the Secretary is a continuing one, approval of a
name at one time not precluding its disapproval later. P.
249 U. S.
501.
Held that the Secretary, having approved the name
"Creamo" as a designation of an oleo product containing 30% cream,
and which was strongly extolled on that ground, was amply justified
in denying the use when the cream had been greatly reduced or
omitted and replaced by skimmed milk, notwithstanding evidence that
the manufacturer invested heavily upon the faith of the approval.
Id.
243 F. 503 reversed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 249 U. S. 496
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellants are officers of the Department of Agriculture charged
with the administration of the meat inspection acts. The appellee,
Blanton Manufacturing Company, is a manufacturer of oleomargarine,
and brought this suit against appellants to enjoin and restrain
them from interfering with it in the use of the word "Creamo" as a
trademark in the manufacture and sale of its product and the use of
that mark upon packages of its product shipped from St. Louis in
interstate commerce.
The district court granted the injunction, and its decree was
affirmed by the circuit court of appeals. 243 F. 503.
As a ground of suit and recovery, the company relies upon the
following facts, and they express, in a general way, its
contentions. To what extent they should be modified will be
apparent as we proceed.
The company is a manufacturer of oleomargarine, having a factory
at St. Louis, Missouri, which comprises a group of buildings
specially arranged and equipped for the purpose of such manufacture
and where the company has made an investment of many thousands of
dollars. Its product has been sold in packages of various sizes,
marked with a trade label or stencil adopted for that purpose,
which trademark is the word "Creamo," used since 1904. Its trade
has become extensive and valuable, its product has acquired a high
reputation and become a source of profit, increasing yearly, and an
interruption in the use of its trademark and label would cause
serious injury in a sum exceeding $5,000.
January 6, 1908, the company applied to the United
Page 249 U. S. 497
states Patent Office for the registration of "Creamo" as a
trademark, it was duly registered June 9, 1908, and the company has
since enjoyed the use of it and made contracts with dealers under
it, and the company's oleomargarine is known to its customers far
and wide by that label, tradename, and mark.
In 1906, after the enactment of the Act of June 30, 1906, c.
3913, 34 Stat. 669, concerning the inspection of "meat and meat
food products," the company was informed by the Bureau of Animal
Industry that its plant would be subject to inspection under the
act of Congress. The company objected, but yielded to avoid
controversy and hazard to its interest, and an inspector was
installed. The company, however, contends that its manufacture of
oleomargarine is not subject to the power and authority of the
bureau.
The Secretary of Agriculture, in 1907, approved the company's
trademark of "Creamo," and, upon the faith of the approval, the
company has used the same and by expenditure of large sums of money
has extended its popularity and publicity; but, notwithstanding,
Dr. Brougham [one of the appellants] threatened the company that
from and after March 1, 1914, its use would not be allowed, and
that the inspector in the establishment of the company would
enforce the threat and attempt to prevent the use of the trademark
and label.
The trademark is duly registered in the office of the Secretary
of State of Missouri.
Some of the contentions of the company are somewhat difficult to
handle -- indeed, to get at in separation. One of these is that the
Bureau of Animal Industry has no authority or power over the
company's product, its manufacture, or market. The basis of the
contention is that the food products indicated by
"the meat inspection act do not include a food product bearing
the tradename 'oleomargarine,' prescribed by a special revenue law
to
Page 249 U. S. 498
be used in the sale thereof, and that statutory name is not
'false or deceptive' when so used."
And for the contention, the company relies on
Homer v.
Collector, 1 Wall. 486, and
Chew Hing Lung v.
Wise, 176 U. S. 156. The
further contention is that § 6 of the Oleomargarine Act (24
Stat. 209) requires the article to be packed in a particular way
which is not the same as that prescribed by the meat inspection act
and was in force before the latter was enacted, and therefore
excluded "an article like this oleomargarine having a
tradename
by law.'" And yet again, that the Food and Drugs Act, which is
"in pari materia, enacts that articles of food containing no
poisonous or deleterious ingredients shall not be deemed
misbranded" which shall thereafter be known as articles of food
under their own distinctive names and not offered for sale under
the distinctive name of another article if the name be accompanied
on the same label or brand by the name of the place where
manufactured or produced. And it is said that the company's
oleomargarine bears that statutory tradename, and hence should not
be considered misbranded.
United States v. Coca Cola Co.,
241 U. S. 265, is
adduced to support the contention. We do not consider it necessary
to follow the company's argument in detail. It is rather involved.
We disagree with it. In other words, we are of opinion that the
meat inspection act is applicable. This was the decision of the
circuit court of appeals. The company's oleomargarine is a meat
product, compounded, among other things, of oleo oil and neutral
lard.
* Besides, it is
not sold under the name of oleomargarine alone; there is the
qualifying addition of the word "Creamo," and used, as we shall
hereafter see, to qualify and distinguish it from other
combinations which might bear the designation oleomargarine.
Page 249 U. S. 499
We pass to the consideration of the meat inspection acts (of
June 30, 1906, and March 4, 1907, 34 Stat. 669, 1260). They require
an inspection of all meat and meat food products prepared for
interstate and foreign commerce, and provide that no persons or
firm or corporation shall offer for transportation, and no carrier
shall transport in interstate or foreign commerce, any such
products unless marked "Inspected and Passed," and that
"no such meat or meat food products shall be sold or offered for
sale by any person, firm, or corporation in interstate or foreign
commerce under any false or deceptive name, but established
tradename or names which are usual to such products and which are
not false and deceptive and which shall be approved by the
Secretary of Agriculture are permitted."
It is the contention of the government that the use of the word
"Creamo" is deceptive, and induces the belief that cream is a
substantial ingredient of the oleomargarine. The company earnestly
contends to the contrary, and that, besides, the designation
"Creamo" has received the approval of the Department of
Agriculture, and has been sanctioned as an appropriate trademark by
the Interior Department (Patent Office). The latter contention may
be immediately put to one side. The test of the product is the meat
inspection laws, not the trademark laws, and therefore we are
concerned with the action of the Department of Agriculture, and not
with that of the Interior Department. And so intimately is the case
concerned with the action of the Department of Agriculture that the
basic and dominant contention of the government is that to the
department is committed the power of determining the fact of the
influence of the name and label of the company. In other words, the
power of determining whether a tradename is "false or deceptive"
given by the law to the Secretary of Agriculture is, when
exercised, conclusive of the falsity or deception of the name
Page 249 U. S. 500
(
Bates & Guild Co. v. Payne, 194 U.
S. 106, and cases cited;
Fertilizing Co. v. Hyde
Park, 97 U. S. 659), and
the power necessarily is a continuing one. The contention and the
cited cases have been approved very lately in
Houston v. St.
Louis Independent Packing Co., ante, 249 U. S. 479, in
which it is declared that the decision of the department, unless
arbitrary, is conclusive. A sketch of the evidence therefore
becomes necessary.
As early as 1904, there was, if not controversy, discussion
between the company and the department. It was not of serious
extent. The company was indulged in the representation that its
product was composed of "Butter, Oleo Oil, Neutral, Cream and
Salt," and that these were "churned in an abundance of richest
cream, resulting in a perfect substitute for butter." But there was
objection to a statement that the oils were "doubly inspected" by
the United States inspectors, "insuring absolute purity and
cleanliness." Such was the condition of things, we may deduce from
the testimony, until 1908.
We may say in passing that, in the beginning 30% of cream was
used, and the word "Creamo" was selected to suggest such ingredient
to repel the criticisms of the butter makers who represented that
oleomargarine was produced from "sewerage and dead horses." But it
appears from the testimony that the use of cream was discontinued,
skimmed milk being used instead, it having been discovered by the
government chemists that it was not the butter fat in the milk
which produced the flavor, but it, the flavor, came from skimmed
milk.
October 2, 1912, an objection came from the department to the
use of the company's label, and discussion ensued, extending over a
period of twelve or fifteen months. The department then announced
that the use of the word "Creamo" was "considered deceptive and
misleading, and its future use could not be permitted." It was,
however, suggested that "Creamo Brand Oleomargarine"
Page 249 U. S. 501
be used, the words to be displayed alike in prominent type, and
that cream should be used in the product, its use having been
discontinued. Upon this ruling of the department and the resistance
of the company to it, the contest was waged for a time. The company
contended that the word "Creamo" was arbitrary, and not
descriptive; the department asserted the contrary, and that it
"conveyed a false inference to the consuming public," and,
notwithstanding an offer by the company to use 10% of cream,
insisted upon the use of the word "brand," and required also some
modifications of the label. It further declared that, if the
requirements of the bureau should not be complied with on and after
March 1, 1914, the inspector in charge at St. Louis would be
instructed to prohibit "the use of all labels, wrappers, cartons,
etc., which do not bear the bureau stamp of approval and
number."
Such is the testimony in outline, and it is manifest that the
action of the department was not arbitrary, but given upon a
consideration of the circumstances and the fact of the tradename
"Creamo"'s having a deceptive implication to the consuming
public.
But, against the decision of the department, the company opposes
the previous approval of "Creamo" as a tradename and alleges that,
upon the faith of the approval, the company has used the same, and,
by the expenditure of large sums of money, testified to be about
$10,000 a year, has made its product public and popular under that
name. The answer to the contention is that the meat inspection acts
contemplate and confer a continuing inspection and power -- a power
necessarily not exhausted by one exercise. Besides, the approval
was given at a time when the company used 30% of cream in its
product and declared that it and other ingredients were "churned in
an abundance of richest cream, resulting in a perfect substitute
for butter." The indulgence of the department had
justification.
Page 249 U. S. 502
When the practice of the company changed, when it commenced to
vary the percentages of cream and finally used none at all,
naturally the department changed its ruling. The company can
therefore claim no right from the prior ruling. There may be value
in the use of the tradename "Creamo," as the company asserts, and
detriment, it may be, in any change or qualification of it; but its
value may be in its deception -- its suggestion of cream appealing
to the popular preference for that article over skimmed milk,
though the scientific judgment may be in favor of the latter, a
judgment possibly not known, or, if known, not appreciated or
accepted. And the deception would not be taken away and the purpose
of the law satisfied by the addition of 10% of cream which the
company offered to make. At least such was the judgment of the
department, and we cannot pronounce it arbitrary.
It will be observed from the quoted provisions of the meat
inspection act that two conditions are presented: if "Creamo
Oleomargarine" is to be regarded as the name of the product, it is
false and deceptive, whatever it may have been formerly; if it be
asserted to be an established tradename, it has not received the
approval of the Secretary of Agriculture, and hence its use is
without legal permission.
Decree of the circuit court of appeals is reversed, and the
case remanded to the district court with direction to dismiss the
bill.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS took no part in the decision of the
case.
* Defined in the testimony to be "a lard produced from the leaf
of a pig, neutralized so as to take the taste and smell out of
it."