1. The term "shredded wheat" is generic, and no exclusive right
to its use may be acquired. P.
305 U. S.
116.
2. Moreover, "shredded wheat" was the general designation of the
product made under the product and process patents issued to Perky,
upon the expiration whereof there passed to the public not only the
right to make the article as it was made during the patent period,
but also the right to apply thereto the name by which it had become
known. P.
305 U. S.
117.
3. To establish, by application of the doctrine of secondary
meaning, the exclusive right to "shredded wheat" as a tradename,
the claimant must show that the primary significance of the term
in
Page 305 U. S. 112
the minds of the consuming public is not the product, but the
producer. P.
305 U. S.
118.
4. The right of a competitor, upon expiration of the patents, to
make the patented product and call it by its generic name could not
be lost by delay, even though the earlier manufacturer, in the
period between the expiration of the patents and the time when the
competitor became a factor, had spent large sums in advertising the
product. The only obligation of the competitor was to identify its
own product lest it be mistaken for that of the earlier producer.
P.
305 U. S.
119.
5. Inasmuch as the pillow-shaped biscuit was the form in which
shredded wheat was made under the patents and in which the article
became generally known, the form was dedicated to the public upon
expiration of the patents. P.
305 U. S.
119.
6. Upon the facts of this case, held that the Kellogg Company,
in making and selling "shredded wheat" biscuits under that name, in
pillow-shape form, in competition with a similar product of the
National Biscuit Company (successor to the Shredded Wheat Company),
was not doing so unfairly. The obligation resting upon the Kellogg
Company was not to insure that every purchaser would know it to be
the maker of the biscuits sold by it, but to use every reasonable
means to prevent confusion. P.
305 U. S.
120.
There was no evidence in this case of "passing off" or deception
on the part of the Kellogg Company.
7. The Kellogg Company is not obliged to refrain from using the
name "shredded wheat" and to make its biscuit in some other than
the pillow-shape form. It is entitled to share in the goodwill of
an article unprotected by patent or trademark. Furthermore, the
evidence is persuasive that the plllow-shape form must be used,
because it is functional. P.
305 U. S.
121.
8. The question whether the Kellogg Company's use upon its
packages of a picture of two shredded wheat biscuits in a bowl was
a violation of a trademark of the National Biscuit Company, held
not before this Court on the present record. P.
305 U. S.
122.
91 F.2d 150; 96
id. 873, reversed.
Certiorari, 304 U.S. 586, to review decree of in junction
against the petitioner and a later order clarifying the decree. A
petition for certiorari to review the first decree had previously
been denied,
302 U. S. 733.
Jurisdiction
Page 305 U. S. 113
of the federal court was based upon diversity of
citizenship.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought in the federal court for Delaware
[
Footnote 1] by National
Biscuit Company against Kellogg Company to enjoin alleged unfair
competition by the manufacture and sale of the breakfast food
commonly known as shredded wheat. The competition was alleged to be
unfair mainly because Kellogg Company uses, like the plaintiff, the
name shredded wheat and, like the plaintiff, produces its biscuit
in pillow-shaped form.
Shredded wheat is a product composed of whole wheat which has
been boiled, partially dried, then drawn or pressed out into thin
shreds and baked. The shredded wheat biscuit generally known is
pillow-shaped in form. It was introduced in 1893 by Henry D. Perky,
of Colorado,
Page 305 U. S. 114
and he was connected until his death in 1908 with companies
formed to make and market the article. Commercial success was not
attained until the Natural Food Company built, in 1901, a large
factory at Niagara Falls, New York. In 1908, its corporate name was
changed to "The Shredded Wheat Company," and, in 1930, its business
and goodwill were acquired by National Biscuit Company.
Kellogg Company has been in the business of manufacturing
breakfast food cereals since its organization in 1905. For a period
commencing in 1912 and ending in 1919, it made a product whose form
was somewhat like the product in question, but whose manufacture
was different, the wheat being reduced to a dough before being
pressed into shreds. For a short period in 1922, it manufactured
the article in question. In 1927, it resumed manufacturing the
product. In 1928, the plaintiff sued for alleged unfair competition
two dealers in Kellogg shredded wheat biscuits. That suit was
discontinued by stipulation in 1930. On June 11, 1932, the present
suit was brought. Much evidence was introduced, but the
determinative facts are relatively few and, as to most of these,
there is no conflict.
In 1935, the District Court dismissed the bill. It found that
the name "Shredded Wheat" is a term describing alike the product of
the plaintiff and of the defendant, and that no passing off or
deception had been shown. It held that, upon the expiration of the
Perky patent No. 548,086, issued October 15, 1895, the name of the
patented article passed into the public domain. In 1936, the
Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed that decree. Upon rehearing, it
vacated, in 1937, its own decree and reversed that of the District
Court, with direction
"to enter a decree enjoining the defendant from the use of the
name 'Shredded Wheat' as its tradename and from advertising or
offering for sale its product in the form
Page 305 U. S. 115
and shape of plaintiff's biscuit in violation of its trademark,
and with further directions to order an accounting for damages and
profits."
In its opinion, the court described the trademark as "consisting
of a dish, containing two biscuits submerged in milk." 91 F.2d 150,
152, 155. We denied Kellogg Company's petition for a writ of
certiorari,
302 U. S. 733, and
denied rehearing
302 U. S. 777.
On January 5, 1938, the District Court entered its mandate in
the exact language of the order of the Circuit Court of Appeals,
and issued a permanent injunction. Shortly thereafter, National
Biscuit Company petitioned the Circuit Court of Appeals to recall
its mandate "for purposes of clarification." It alleged that
Kellogg Company was insisting, contrary to the court's intention,
that the effect to the mandate and writ of injunction was to forbid
it from selling its product only when the tradename "Shredded
Wheat" is applied to a biscuit in the form and shape of the
plaintiff's biscuit and is accompanied by a representation of a
dish with biscuits in in, and that it was not enjoined from making
its biscuit in the form and shape of the plaintiff's biscuit, nor
from calling it "Shredded Wheat," unless at the same time it uses
upon its cartons plaintiff's trademark consisting of a dish with
two biscuits in it. On May 5, 1938, the Circuit Court of Appeals
granted the petition for clarification and directed the District
Court to enter a decree enjoining Kellogg Company (3 Cir., 96 F.2d
873):
"(1) from the use of the name 'Shredded Wheat' as its tradename,
(2) from advertising or offering for sale its product in the form
and shape of plaintiff's biscuit, and (3) from doing either."
Kellogg Company then filed a petition for a writ of certiorari
to review the decree as so clarified, and also sought
reconsideration of our denial of its petition for certiorari to
review the decree as entered in its original form. In support of
these petitions, it called to our attention the
Page 305 U. S. 116
decision of the British Privy Council in
Canadian Shredded
Wheat Co., Ltd. v. Kellogg Company of Canada, Ltd., 55 R.P.C.
125, rendered after our denial of the petition for certiorari
earlier in the term. We granted both petitions for certiorari.
[
Footnote 2] 304 U.S. 586.
The plaintiff concedes that it does not possess the exclusive
right to make shredded wheat. But it claims the exclusive right to
the tradename "Shredded Wheat" and the exclusive right to make
shredded wheat biscuits pillow-shaped. It charges that the
defendant, by using the name and shape, and otherwise, is passing
off, or enabling others to pass off, Kellogg goods for those of the
plaintiff. Kellogg Company denies that the plaintiff is entitled to
the exclusive use of the name or of the pillow shape; denies any
passing off; asserts that it has used every reasonable effort to
distinguish its produce from that of the plaintiff, and contends
that, in honestly competing for a part of the market for shredded
wheat, it is exercising the common right freely to manufacturer and
sell an article of commerce unprotected by patent.
First. The plaintiff has no exclusive right to the use
of the term "Shredded Wheat" as a tradename. For that is the
generic term of the article, which describes it with a fair degree
of accuracy, and is the term by which the biscuit in pillow-shaped
form is generally known by the public. Since the term is generic,
the original maker of the product acquired no exclusive right to
use it. As
Page 305 U. S. 117
Kellogg Company had the right to make the article, it had also
the right to use the term by which the public knows it.
Compare
Saxlehner v. Wagner, 216 U. S. 375;
Holzapfel's Compositions Co. v. Rahtjen's American Composition
Co., 183 U. S. 1. Ever
since 1894, the article has been known to the public as shredded
wheat. For many years, there was no attempt to use the term
"Shredded Wheat" as a trademark. When, in 1905, plaintiff's
predecessor, Natural Food Company, applied for registration of the
words "Shredded Whole Wheat" as a trademark under the so-called
"ten-year clause" of the Act of February 20, 1905, c. 592, §
5, 33 Stat. 725, William E. Williams gave notice of opposition.
Upon the hearing, it appeared that Williams had, as early as 1894,
built a machine for making shredded wheat, and that he made and
sold its product as "Shredded Whole Wheat." The Commissioner of
Patents refused registration. The Court of Appeals of the District
of Columbia affirmed his decision, holding that "these words
accurately and aptly describe an article of food which . . . has
been produced for more than ten years. . . ."
Natural Food Co.
v. Williams, 30 App.D.C. 348. [
Footnote 3]
Moreover, the name "Shredded Wheat," as well as the product, the
process, and the machinery employed in making it has been dedicated
to the public. The basic patent for the product and for the process
of making it, and many other patents for special machinery to be
used in making the article, issued to Perky. In those patents, the
term "shredded" is repeatedly used as descriptive of the product.
The basic patent expired October 15, 1912, the
Page 305 U. S. 118
others soon after. Since, during the life of the patents,
"Shredded Wheat" was the general designation of the patented
product, there passed to the public upon the expiration of the
patent not only the right to make the article as it was made during
the patent period, but also the right to apply thereto the name by
which it had become known. As was said in
Singer Mfg. Co. v.
June Mfg. Co., 163 U. S. 169,
163 U. S.
185:
"It equally follows from the cessation of the monopoly and the
falling of the patented device into the domain of things public
that, along with the public ownership of the device, there must
also necessarily pass to the public the generic designation of the
thing which has arisen during the monopoly. . . ."
"To say otherwise would be to hold that, although the public had
acquired the device covered by the patent, yet the owner of the
patent or the manufacturer of the patented thing had retained the
designated name which was essentially necessary to vest the public
with the full enjoyment of that which had become theirs by the
disappearance of the monopoly."
It is contended that the plaintiff has the exclusive right to
the name "Shredded Wheat," because those words acquired the
"secondary meaning" of shredded wheat made at Niagara Falls by the
plaintiff's predecessor. There is no basis here for applying the
doctrine of secondary meaning. The evidence shows only that, due to
the long period in which the plaintiff or its predecessor was the
only manufacturer of the product, many people have come to
associate the product, and as a consequence the name by which the
product is generally known, with the plaintiff's factory at Niagara
Falls. But, to establish a tradename in the term "shredded wheat,"
the plaintiff must show more than a subordinate meaning which
applies to it. It must show that the primary significance of the
term in the minds of the consuming public is not the product, but
the producer. This it has not done. The
Page 305 U. S. 119
showing which it has made does not entitle it to the exclusive
use of the term shredded wheat, but merely entitles it to require
that the defendant use reasonable care to inform the public of the
source of its product.
The plaintiff seems to contend that, even if Kellogg Company
acquired upon the expiration of the patents the right to use the
name shredded wheat, the right was lost by delay. The argument is
that Kellogg Company, although the largest producer of breakfast
cereals in the country, did not seriously attempt to make shredded
wheat, or to challenge plaintiff's right to that name, until 1927,
and that meanwhile plaintiff's predecessor had expended more than
$17,000,000 in making the name a household word and identifying the
product with its manufacture. Those facts are without legal
significance. Kellogg Company's right was not one dependent upon
diligent exercise. Like every other member of the public, it was,
and remained, free to make shredded wheat when it chose to do so,
and to call the product by its generic name. The only obligation
resting upon Kellogg Company was to identify its own product lest
it be mistaken for that of the plaintiff.
Second. The plaintiff has not the exclusive right to
sell shredded wheat in the form of a pillow-shaped biscuit -- the
form in which the article became known to the public. That is the
form in which shredded wheat was made under the basic patent. The
patented machines used were designed to produce only the
pillow-shaped biscuits. And a design patent was taken out to cover
the pillow-shaped form. [
Footnote
4] Hence, upon expiration of the patents
Page 305 U. S. 120
the form, as well as the name, was dedicated to the public. As
was said in
Singer Mfg. Co. v. June Mfg. Co., supra, p.
163 U. S.
185:
"It is self-evident that, on the expiration of a patent, the
monopoly granted by it ceases to exist, and the right to make the
thing formerly covered by the patent becomes public property. It is
upon this condition that the patent is granted. It follows, as a
matter of course, that, on the termination of the patent, there
passes to the public the right to make the machine in the form in
which it was constructed during the patent. We may therefore
dismiss without further comment the complaint as to the form in
which the defendant made his machines."
Where an article may be manufactured by all, a particular
manufacturer can no more assert exclusive rights in a form in which
the public has become accustomed to see the article and which, in
the minds of the public, is primarily associated with the article,
rather than a particular producer, than it can in the case of a
name with similar connections in the public mind. Kellogg Company
was free to use the pillow-shaped form, subject only to the
obligation to identify its product lest it be mistaken for that of
the plaintiff.
Third. The question remains whether Kellogg Company, in
exercising its right to use the name "Shredded Wheat" and the
pillow-shaped biscuit, is doing so fairly. Fairness requires that
it be done in a manner which reasonably distinguishes its product
from that of plaintiff.
Each company sells its biscuits only in cartons. The standard
Kellogg carton contains fifteen biscuits; the plaintiff's twelve.
The Kellogg cartons are distinctive. They do not resemble those
used by the plaintiff either in size, form, or color. And the
difference in the labels is striking. The Kellogg cartons bear in
bold script the names "Kellogg's Whole Wheat Biscuit" or
"Kellogg's
Page 305 U. S. 121
Shredded Whole Wheat Biscuit" so sized and spaced as to strike
the eye as being a Kellogg product. It is true that, on some of its
cartons, it had a picture of two shredded wheat biscuits in a bowl
of milk which was quite similar to one of the plaintiff's
registered trademarks. But the name Kellogg was so prominent on all
of the defendant's cartons as to minimize the possibility of
confusion.
Some hotels, restaurants, and lunchrooms serve biscuits not in
cartons, and guests so served may conceivably suppose that a
Kellogg biscuit served is one of the plaintiff's make. But no
person familiar with plaintiff's product would be misled. The
Kellogg biscuit is about two-thirds the size of plaintiff's, and
differs from it in appearance. Moreover, the field in which
deception could be practiced is negligibly small. Only 2 1/2
percent of the Kellogg biscuits are sold to hotels, restaurants,
and lunchrooms. Of those so sold, 98 percent are sold in individual
cartons containing two biscuits. These cartons are distinctive, and
bear prominently the Kellogg name. To put upon the individual
biscuit some mark which would identify it as the Kellogg product is
not commercially possible. Relatively few biscuits will be removed
from the individual cartons before they reach the consumer. The
obligation resting upon Kellogg Company is not to insure that every
purchaser will know it to be the maker, but to use every reasonable
means to prevent confusion.
It is urged that all possibility of deception or confusion would
be removed if Kellogg Company should refrain from using the name
"Shredded Wheat" and adopt some form other than the pillow-shape.
But the name and form are integral parts of the goodwill of the
article. To share fully in the goodwill, it must use the name and
the pillow shape. And in the goodwill Kellogg Company is as free to
share as the plaintiff.
Compare William R. Warner & Co. v.
Eli Lilly & Co., 265 U. S. 526,
265 U. S.
528-530.
Page 305 U. S. 122
Moreover, the pillow shape must be used for another reason. The
evidence is persuasive that this form is functional -- that the
cost of the biscuit would be increased and its high quality
lessened if some other form were substituted for the
pillow-shape.
Kellogg Company is undoubtedly sharing in the goodwill of the
article known as "Shredded Wheat," and thus is sharing in a market
which was created by the skill and judgment of plaintiff's
predecessor and has been widely extended by vast expenditures in
advertising persistently made. But that is not unfair. Sharing in
the goodwill of an article unprotected by patent or trademark is
the exercise of a right possessed by all, and in the free exercise
of which the consuming public is deeply interested. There is no
evidence of passing off or deception on the part of the Kellogg
Company, [
Footnote 5] and it
has taken every reasonable precaution to prevent confusion or the
practice of deception in the sale of its product.
Fourth. By its "clarifying" decree, the Circuit Court
of Appeals enjoined Kellogg Company from using the picture of the
two shredded wheat biscuits in the bowl only in connection with an
injunction against manufacturing the pillow-shaped biscuits and the
use of the term shredded wheat, on the grounds of unfair
competition. [
Footnote 6]
Page 305 U. S. 123
The use of this picture was not enjoined on the independent
ground of trademark infringement. Since the National Biscuit
Company did not petition for certiorari, the question whether use
of the picture is a violation of that trademark although Kellogg
Company is free to use the name and the pillow-shaped biscuit is
not here for review.
Decrees reversed with direction to dismiss the
bill.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS and MR. JUSTICE BUTLER are of opinion
that the decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals is correct, and
should be affirmed. To them it seems sufficiently clear that the
Kellogg Company is fraudulently seeking to appropriate to itself
the benefits of a goodwill built up at great cost by the respondent
and its predecessors.
[
Footnote 1]
The federal jurisdiction rests on diversity of citizenship,
National Biscuit Company being a New Jersey corporation and Kellogg
Company a Delaware corporation. Most of the issues in the case
involve questions of common law, and hence are within the scope of
Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U. S. 64. But
no claim has been made that the local law is any different from the
general law on the subject, and both parties have relied almost
entirely on federal precedents.
[
Footnote 2]
Rights here claimed by plaintiff here been involved in much
other litigation.
See Natural Food Co. v. Williams, 30
App.D.C. 348;
Shredded Wheat Co. v. Humphrey Cornell Co.,
250 F. 960;
Kellogg Co. v. National Biscuit Co., 71 F.2d
662;
Canadian Shredded Wheat Co., Ltd. v. Kellogg Co. of
Canada, Ltd., 55 R.P.C. 125;
In the Matter of Trade Mark
No. 500,761, Registered in the Name of the Shredded Wheat Co.,
Ltd., in Class 42 (1938) Supreme Court of Judicature, Court of
Appeal;
also Natural Food Co. v. Buckley, No. 28,530,
U.S.Dist.Ct., N.Dist.Ill., East.Div. (1908).
[
Footnote 3]
The trademarks are registered under the Act of 1920. 41 Stat.
533, 15 U.S.C. §§ 121-128 (1934). But it is well settled
that registration under it has no effect on the domestic common law
rights of the person whose trademark is registered.
Charles
Broadway Rouss, Inc. v. Winchester Co., 300 F. 706, 713, 714;
Kellogg Co. v. National Biscuit Co., 71 F.2d 662, 666.
[
Footnote 4]
The design patent would have expired by limitations in 1909. In
1908, it was declared invalid by a district judge on the ground
that the design had been in public use for more than two years
prior to the application for the patent, and theretofore had
already been dedicated to the public.
Natural Foods Co. v.
Bulkley, No. 28,530, U.S.Dist.Ct., N.Dist.Ill., East.Div.
(1908).
[
Footnote 5]
Attention is called to the fact that the label on these Kellogg
cartons bears, in small letters, the words: "The original has this
(W. K. Kellogg's) signature." Objection to their use was not
charged in the bill; no such issue was raised at the trial, and the
use was not enjoined. Counsel for the Company admitted in the
argument before us that its use, common as applied to other Kellogg
products, should not have been made on cartons of shredded wheat,
and stated that the use had been discontinued long before entry of
the "clarifying" decree.
[
Footnote 6]
In its opinion clarifying the mandate, the Circuit Court of
Appeals, after considering the provisions concerning the name and
the form of the biscuit, said (96 F.2d 873, 875)
"The only remaining question is whether, in view of the fact
that the order of April 12, 1937, did not specifically provide for
an injunction against the violation of the 'two biscuit in a dish'
trademark (although it was intended to do so), we have any
jurisdiction to amend the mandate so as to include specifically
such a provision. As there may be some doubt on this question, we
will not amend the mandate so as to provide a specific injunction
against the use of the 'two biscuit in a dish' trademark. Its use
on a carton or in advertising matter, when the defendant is not
permitted to use the word 'Shredded Wheat' as a tradename or to
advertise or sell biscuits in the pillow-shaped form, would
manifestly be so improper and so likely to mislead that we will
assume that the appellee will not use it."