1. The damages recoverable under the Trade-Mark Act for
infringement of a registered trademark are limited to those
inflicted after the registration, and, if the notice of
registration has not been attached to the mark as prescribed by the
act (§ 28), to those arising after the defendant was notified
of infringement. P.
255 U. S. 52.
2. Where the action arises wholly under the Trade-Mark Act,
diversity of citizenship being absent, the district court is
without jurisdiction to require an accounting for profits resulting
from unfair competition before the registration, or
(
semble) before the notice conditioning liability to
damages,
ut supra. Id.
257 F. 9 affirmed.
Page 255 U. S. 51
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit brought September 11, 1916, in the district court
of the United States by the petitioner, a Missouri corporation,
against citizens of Missouri, for an infringement of a trademark,
"Stark Trees," registered under the Act of Congress of February 20,
1905, c. 592, 33 Stat. 724, and amendments. The district court
found infringement and unfair competition, granted an injunction,
and made a decree for an account of profits from March 11, 1914,
when the infringement began, limiting the damages, however, to
those suffered after August 26, 1916, that being the date when the
plaintiff gave the defendant notice of the registration of the
mark. The circuit court of appeals concurred with the district
court as to the facts, but limited the account as well as the
damages to the date when notice was given of the registered mark, a
few days before the bringing of this suit. 248 F. 154;
Stark v.
Stark Bros. Nurseries & Orchards Co., 257 F. 9. This
limitation is the only question here.
By § 28 of the Trade-Mark Act, it is made the duty of the
registrant to give notice to the public by attaching certain
specified words or abbreviations to the trademark or to the
receptacle wherein the article is enclosed,
"and in any suit for infringement by a party failing so to give
notice of registration, no damages shall be recovered except on
proof that the defendant was duly notified of infringement and
continued the same after such notice."
33 Stat. 730. The infringement that is sued for is infringement
of a registered trademark, not infringement
Page 255 U. S. 52
of a trademark. That is the plain meaning of the above words and
the necessary scope of this suit, since that is the scope of the
jurisdiction of the district court.
A. Lescher & Sons Rope
Co. v. Broderick & Bascom Rope Co., 201 U.
S. 166,
201 U. S. 172.
It seems very plain that the plaintiff had a cause of action
outside the statute, but that would have to be asserted elsewhere,
as the suit was between citizens of the same state. The statute
alone gave the right to come into this Court of the United States.
Coming in to assert its statutory rights, we will assume in the
plaintiff's favor that it could recover for unfair competition that
was inseparable from the statutory wrong, but it could not reach
back and recover for earlier injuries to rights derived from a
different source.
The plaintiff argues that a notice of March 11, 1914, calling on
the defendants "to discontinue the unfair competition and
infringement on our rights," coupled with the willful character of
the defendants' wrongdoing, ought to lead to a different result,
and the district judge seems to have had a similar notion. But that
is to forget the origin and necessary limit of the jurisdiction in
this case.
Decree affirmed.