A foreign manufacturer and vendor of face powder sold to the
plaintiff its business and goodwill in this country, together with
its trademarks, registered under the Trade Mark Act; the
plaintiff
Page 260 U. S. 690
re-registered the marks and went on with the business here under
the old name, buying the powder from the original concern abroad
and selling it in boxes bearing the trademark, and so built up a
profitable trade, the public associating the marks with the
plaintiff's goods. The defendant bought and imported the product of
the foreign concern in its genuine boxes, which bore labels closely
resembling those of the plaintiff, and sold it here.
Held
that such sales were an infringement of the plaintiff's trademarks,
and that a preliminary injunction was proper under §§ 17
and 19 of the Trade Mark Act. P.
260 U. S.
691.
275 F. 539 reversed.
Certiorari to a decree of the circuit court of appeals reversing
an order of the district court granting a preliminary injunction in
a suit to restrain infringement of trademarks.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a bill to restrain the infringement of the trademarks
"Java" and "Bourjois" registered in the Patent Office of the United
States. A preliminary injunction was granted by the district court,
274 F. 856, but the order was reversed by the circuit court of
appeals, one Judge dissenting, 275 F. 539. A writ of certiorari was
granted by this Court. 257 U.S. 630. In 1913, A. Bourjois &
Cie., E. Wertheimer & Cie. Successeurs, doing business in
France and also in the United States, sold to the plaintiff for a
large sum their business in the United States, with their goodwill
and their trademarks registered in the Patent Office. The latter
related particularly to face powder, and included the above words.
The plaintiff, since its purchase, has registered them again, and
goes
Page 260 U. S. 691
on with the business that it bought, using substantially the
same form of box and label as its predecessors and importing its
face powder from France. It uses care in selecting colors suitable
for the American market, in packing and in keeping up the standard,
and has spent much money in advertising, etc., so that the business
has grown very great, and the labels have come to be understood by
the public here as meaning goods coming from the plaintiff. The
boxes have upon their backs:
"Trade-Marks Reg. U.S. Pat. Off. Made in France -- Packed in the
U.S.A. By A. Bourjois & Co. Inc. of New York, Succ'rs in the
U.S. to A. Bourjois & Cie. and E. Wertheimer & Cie."
The defendant, finding that the rate of exchange enabled her to
do so at a profit, bought a large quantity of the same powder in
France, and is selling it here in the French boxes which closely
resemble those used by the plaintiff, except that they have not the
last quoted statement on the backs, and that the label reads
"Poudre de riz de Java," whereas the plaintiff has found it
advisable to strike out the suggestion of rice powder and has
"Poudre Java" instead. There is no question that the defendant
infringes the plaintiff's rights unless the fact that her boxes and
powder are the genuine product of the French concern gives her a
right to sell them in the present form.
We are of opinion that the plaintiff's rights are infringed.
After the sale, the French manufacturers could not have come to the
United States and have used their old marks in competition with the
plaintiff. That plainly follows from the statute authorizing
assignments. Act of February 20, 1905, c. 592, § 10, 33 Stat.
727. If, for the purpose of evading the effect of the transfer, it
had arranged with the defendant that she should sell with the old
label, we suppose that no one would doubt that the contrivance must
fail. There is no such conspiracy here,
Page 260 U. S. 692
but, apart from the opening of a door to one, the vendors could
not convey their goods free from the restriction to which the
vendors were subject. Ownership of the goods does not carry the
right to sell them with a specific mark. It does not necessarily
carry the right to sell them at all in a given place. If the goods
were patented in the United States, a dealer who lawfully bought
similar goods abroad from one who had a right to make and sell them
there could not sell them in the United States.
Boesch v.
Graff, 133 U. S. 697. The
monopoly in that case is more extensive, but we see no sufficient
reason for holding that the monopoly of a trademark, so far as it
goes, is less complete. It deals with a delicate matter that may be
of great value, but that easily is destroyed, and therefore should
be protected with corresponding care. It is said that the trademark
here is that of the French house, and truly indicates the origin of
the goods. But that is not accurate. It is the trademark of the
plaintiff only in the United States, and indicates in law, and, it
is found, by public understanding, that the goods come from the
plaintiff, although not made by it. It was sold, and could only be
sold, with the goodwill of the business that the plaintiff bought.
Eiseman v. Schiffer, 157 F. 473. It stakes the reputation
of the plaintiff upon the character of the goods.
Menendez v.
Holt, 128 U. S. 514. The
injunction granted by the district court was proper under
§§ 17 and 19 of the Trade-Mark Act. Act of February 20,
1905, c. 592, 33 Stat. 724, 728-729.
Decree of circuit court of appeals reversed.