1. The mere fact that one person has adopted and used a
trademark on his goods does not prevent the adoption and use of the
same trademark by others on articles of a different description. P.
269 U. S.
379.
2. The law of trademarks is but a part of the broader law of
unfair competition, the general purpose of which is to prevent one
person from passing off his goods or his business as the goods or
business of another.
Id.
3. Whether the name of a corporation be regarded as a trademark,
a tradename, or both, the law affords protection against its
appropriation on the same fundamental principles. P.
269 U. S.
380.
4. The effect of assuming a name by a corporation under the law
of its creation is to exclusively appropriate it as an element of
the corporation's existence.
Id.
5. Equity will enjoin the appropriation and use by another of a
trademark or tradename resembling the name of a corporation where,
from the closeness of the resemblance and the other facts of the
particular case, it appears that confusion of identity may likely
result to the injury of such corporation. P.
269 U. S.
381.
6. The provision of § 5 of the Trade Mark Act of February
20, 1905, that no mark consisting merely of the name of a
corporation shall be registered under the Act is to be construed in
harmony with the foregoing principles, and does not prevent
registration of part of the name of a corporation where the partial
appropriation is
Page 269 U. S. 373
unlikely to deceive or confuse the public to the injury of the
corporation to which the name belongs. P.
269 U. S.
381.
7. The fact that the word "Simplex" was a salient part of the
name of a corporation other than the applicant for registration
held not a ground for refusing registration where the good
to which it was applied by the applicant were unlike those
manufactured or sold by the corporation, where many registrations
of the same word, singly or in combination, had been made by others
for other goods, and where it did not appear that, standing alone,
the word denoted that corporation or any other to the mind of the
public. P.
269 U. S.
382.
Response to questions certified by the circuit court of appeals
upon appeal to that court from a decree of the district court
dismissing the bill in a suit under Rev.Stats. § 4915 brought
by the American Steel Foundries against the Commissioner of Patents
and Simplex Electric Heating Co. to enforce registration of the
word "Simplex" as a trademark for articles made and sold by the
plaintiff.
See 262 U. S. 262 U.S.
209;
256 U. S. 256 U.S.
40; 258 F. 160.
Page 269 U. S. 377
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiff and its predecessor, and Simplex Railway Appliance
Company, have used the trademark "Simplex"
Page 269 U. S. 378
on railway car bolsters since 1897, and on car couplers since
1907, the former being registered in the Patent Office in 1911, the
latter in 1909. In 1917, plaintiff adopted and thereafter used the
same trademark on brake rigging, brake heads, brake beams, brake
shoes, brake hangers, and clasp brakes. Application was made in
1917 to register the trademark for the last-named uses, but the
Commissioner of Patents refused the registration on the ground that
the trademark consisted merely in the name of a corporation,
viz., the Simplex Electric Heating Company, defendant
herein. The Commissioner's ruling was affirmed by the Court of
Appeals of the District of Columbia.
In re American Steel
Foundries, 258 F. 160. The case came to this Court on
certiorari, but was dismissed for want of jurisdiction
sub nom.
American Steel Foundries v. Whitehead, Commissioner of
Patents, 256 U. S. 40.
Thereupon this suit in equity was brought in the Federal
District Court for the Northern District of Illinois under §
4915 (
American Foundries v. Robertson, 262 U.
S. 209), to which the Commissioner of Patents
voluntarily appeared. That court dismissed the bill, and an appeal
to the court of appeals followed.
The defendant company was organized as a corporation in 1902.
Its predecessors in business had adopted in 1886, and thereafter
had used, the trademark "Simplex" on insulating or protected
conducting wire, the same being registered in 1890. In 1906, the
company registered trademarks comprising the word "Simplex" as
applied to a large variety of other goods.
The word "Simplex" has comprised the whole or a part of
trademarks registered in the Patent Office in approximately 60
registrations by nearly as many different parties, and as applied
to many classes of merchandise. There are other corporations in the
country which now have or have had names which embody the word
"Simplex."
Page 269 U. S. 379
Neither the defendant company nor its predecessors ever have
been engaged in the manufacture or sale of any of the devices upon
which plaintiff has used the trademark as hereinbefore
specified.
Upon these facts, the court below has certified the following
questions upon which it desires instruction:
"1. Does the clause of § 5 of the Trade-Mark Act of
February 20, 1905,"
"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 an individual . . . shall be
registered under the terms of this act,"
"prohibit registration as a trademark under said act of the word
'Simplex' by the plaintiff under the recited facts?"
"2. Does the said clause quoted of § 5 prohibit
registration under the Act of February 20, 1905, of a trademark
consisting solely of a single word, otherwise registerable under
the said Act, if that word is the salient feature of the name of a
corporation, not the applicant for registration?"
"3. Does the above-quoted clause of § 5 of the Trade-Mark
Act of February 20, 1905, prohibit the registration under said Act
of a common law trademark which is the name, or part of the name,
of another than the applicant, whose business relates exclusively
to goods in a different and noncompeting class from the goods on
which the trademark is used by the applicant?"
For the purposes of discussion, these three questions may be
resolved shortly into one: upon the facts, is the word "Simplex"
merely the name of the Simplex Electric Heating Company within the
meaning of the quoted proviso? The answer to this question will be
simplified if we approach it by first considering certain
principles of the substantive law of trademarks and unfair
competition in the light of which the legislation under review must
be examined.
Page 269 U. S. 380
The mere fact that one person has adopted and used a trademark
on his goods does not prevent the adoption and use of the same
trademark by others on articles of a different description. There
is no property in a trademark apart from the business or trade in
connection with which it is employed.
United Drug Co. v.
Rectanus Co., 248 U. S. 90,
248 U. S. 9;
Hanover Milling Co. v. Metcalf, 240 U.
S. 403,
240 U. S.
413-414. "The law of trademarks is but a part of the
broader law of unfair competition" (
idem), the general
purpose of which is to prevent one person from passing off his
goods or his business as the goods or business of another.
Whether the name of a corporation is to be regarded as a
trademark, a tradename, or both is not entirely clear under the
decisions. To some extent, the two terms overlap, but there is a
difference, more or less definitely recognized, which is that,
generally speaking, the former is applicable to the vendible
commodity to which it is affixed, the latter to a business and its
goodwill.
See Ball v. Broadway Bazaar, 194 N.Y. 429, 434,
435. A corporate name seems to fall more appropriately into the
latter class. But the precise difference is not often material,
since the law affords protection against its appropriation in
either view, upon the same fundamental principles. The effect of
assuming a corporate name by a corporation under the law of its
creation is to exclusively appropriate that name. It is an element
of the corporation's existence.
Newby v. Oregon Cent. Ry. Co.
et al., Deady, 609, 616, s.c. 18 Fed.Cas. 38, No. 10, 144.
And, as Judge Deady said in that case:
"Any act which produces confusion or uncertainty concerning this
name is well calculated to injuriously affect the identity and
business of a corporation. And, as a matter of fact, in some degree
at least, the natural and necessary consequence of the wrongful
appropriation of a corporate name is to injure the business and
rights of the corporation by destroying or confusing its identity.
"
Page 269 U. S. 381
The general doctrine is that equity not only will enjoin the
appropriation and use of a trademark or tradename where it is
completely identical with the name of the corporation, but will
enjoin such appropriation and use where the resemblance is so close
as to be likely to produce confusion as to such identity, to the
injury of the corporation to which the name belongs.
Cape May
Yacht Club v. Cape May Yacht & Country Club, 81 N.J.Eq.
454, 458;
Armington & Sims v. Palmer, 21 R.I. 109,
115. Judicial interference will depend upon the facts proved and
found in each case.
Hendriks v. Montagu, L.R. 17 Ch.Div.
638, 648;
Higgins Co. v. Higgins Soap Co., 144 N.Y. 462,
469-471.
These principles, it must be assumed, were in mind when Congress
came to enact the registration statute. And, since that body has
been given no power to legislate upon the substantive law of
trademarks, it reasonably may be assumed also that, to the extent
the contrary does not appear from the statute, the intention was to
allow the registration of such marks as that law, and the general
law of unfair competition of which it is a part, recognized as
legitimate. The House committee on patents, in reporting the bill
which upon enactment became the registration statute in question,
said:
"Section 5 of the proposed bill we believe will permit the
registration of all marks which could, under the common law as
expounded by the courts, be the subject of a trademark and become
the exclusive property of the party using the same as his
trademark."
Report No. 3147, Dec.19, 1904, H. of R. 58th Cong., 3d Sess.
The provision, therefore, that no mark consisting merely in the
name of a corporation shall be registered is to be construed in
harmony with those established principles in respect of the
appropriation of corporate names to which we have referred. Where
the appropriation of the corporate name is complete, the rule of
the statute, by its own
Page 269 U. S. 382
terms, is absolute, and the proposed mark must be denied
registration without more; but where less than the whole name has
been appropriated, the right of registration will turn upon whether
it appears that such partial appropriation is of such character and
extent that, under the facts of the particular case, it is
calculated to deceive or confuse the public to the injury of the
corporation to which the name belongs.
The fact, for example, that the articles upon which the mark is
used are not of the same description as those put out by the
corporation, is entitled to weight, since the probability of such
confusion and injury in that situation obviously is more remote
than where the articles are of like kind. The cases naturally
present varying degrees of difficulty for the application of the
rule. Primarily the power and the duty rests with the Commissioner
of Patents to determine the question in each case, in the exercise
of an instructed judgment upon a consideration of all the pertinent
facts.
In the present case, these facts are: the word "Simplex" is only
a portion of the corporate name; its use by plaintiff is upon
articles the like of which has never been manufactured or sold by
the defendant corporation; it comprises the whole or a part of
about 60 registrations, by nearly as many different parties upon
many kinds of merchandise, and it forms part of the names of other
corporations in the country.
* It is argued
that the word in question is the salient feature in the name of the
defendant corporation; but that, if conceded, does not
Page 269 U. S. 383
settle the question. There may be, of course, instances where a
single word in the corporate name has become so identified with the
particular corporation that, whenever used, it designates to the
mind of the public that particular corporation. But here it is not
shown that, standing, alone, the word "Simplex" has that effect;
that it is any more calculated to denote to the public the
defendant corporation than any of the other corporations in the
names of which it is likewise embodied, or indeed that it signifies
the appropriation of some corporate name though incapable of exact
identification. In Simplex Electric Heating Co. v. Ramey Co.,
Decisions Comm'r Pat.1916, pp. 74, 77, 79, 82, 83, the Commissioner
of Patents, admitting the same work to registry under like facts,
said:
"It is a fact that the word 'Simplex' has been in such wide and
varied use in this country, not only as a trademark, but as part of
a firm or corporation name, that everybody has heretofore
considered something more than the word 'Simplex' necessary to
identify a corporation. . . ."
". . . the word 'Simplex' does not identify any corporation in
particular, for the simple reason that it is equally the name of
various corporations. In short, if one referred to 'the company
Simplex,' without anything else, it would not be known to what he
was referring. . . ."
"The word involved in this case is one of a large class of words
which have for a great many years been much used because of their
peculiarly suggestive meaning. For
Page 269 U. S. 384
other examples, there are the words 'Acme,' 'Anchor,'
'Champion,' 'Eureka,' 'Excelsior,' 'Ideal,' 'Jewel,' 'Liberty,'
'National,' 'Pride,' 'Premier,' 'Queen,' 'Royal,' 'Star,'
'Sunlight,' 'Triumph,' 'Victor.' It would be a serious matter if
the law actually permitted anyone who chose to do so to organize a
series of corporations with names containing these words,
respectively, and thereupon virtually withdraw these words from
public use as trademarks and monopolize them by preventing their
registry as such."
On appeal to the District Court of Appeals, the decision of the
Commissioner was reversed upon the ground, in part, that the word
"Simplex" was a distinctive part of the name of the corporation
(
Simplex Electric Heating Co. v. Ramey Co., 46 App.D.C.
400, 406), and this was followed by the same court in the present
case. It already is apparent that we agree with the Commissioner,
and not with the court.
Under the facts, we are of opinion that it does not appear that
the use of the word as a trademark upon the goods of the plaintiff
will probably confuse or deceive the public to the injury of the
defendant or of any other corporation. It follows that the refusal
to allow the registration was erroneous.
Question No. 1 therefore should be answered in the negative,
and, since this will dispose of the case, categorical answers to
the other questions are deemed not necessary.
It is so ordered.
* The Commissioner of Patents, in a footnote to Simplex Electric
Heating Co. v. Ramey Co., Decisions Comm'r Pat.1916, pp. 74, 78,
gives the following list of corporations, in the names of which the
word "Simplex" occurs:
Simplex Arms Manufacturing Company, Denver; Simplex Window
Company, San Francisco; Simplex Lubricating Company, Boston;
Simplex Wire & Cable Company, Boston; Simplex Auto Specialty
Company, Detroit; Simplex Concrete Piling Company, Cincinnati;
Simplex Machine Company, Atlanta; Simplex Exercising Company,
Philadelphia; Simplex Valve & Meter Company, Philadelphia;
Simplex Floor Surfacing Company, Baltimore; Simplex Railway
Appliance Company, St. Louis; Simplex Air Brake & Manufacturing
Company, Pittsburgh; Simplex Button Works, New York; Simplex Fire
Extinguisher Company, New York; Simplex Golf Practice Machine
Corporation, New York; Simplex Ink Company, New York; Simplex
Letter Opener Company, New York; Simplex Typewriter Company, New
York; Simplex Refrigerating Machine Company, Chicago; Simplex Sand
Blast Manufacturing Company, Chicago.