XIMBALL V. LION INS. CO.
625
the patent, has a right to represent that it was made according to the patent, and to use the name of the patentee for that purpose. Fairbanks v. Jacobus, 14 Blatchf. 337; Singer Manuf'g Co. v. Stanage, 6 FED. REP. 279; Singer Manuj'g Co. v. Riley, 11 FED. REP. 706; Singer Manuf'g Co. v. Loog, 48 Law T. Rep. (N. S.) 3; 15 Reporter, 538. Anything descriptive of the properties, style, or quality of the article merely, is open to all. Canal Co. v. Clark, 13 Wall. 311; Manufg Co. v. Trainer, 101 U. S. 51. While no one has the right to sell his own wares as the wares of another, everyone has the right to make and sell any wares not protected by patents. Marks, symbols, or dress placed upon the wares might unlawfully misrepresent their source, but when left to speak for themselves alone there could be no wrongful misrepresentation. These principles are not much controverted by the orator's counsel, but it is claimed that as the orator's machines are somewhat known by this frame, and other shapes easily distinguishable from this might be equally useful, some of which in hexagonal or octagonal, instead of circular, shape are suggested, the defendant should use some of those. But those, doubtless, would have been infringements of the patents, and the style used is as much freed by the expiration of the patents as those are. All the effect which these frames have in representing machines to be those of the orator, appears to be due to the monopoly enjoyed under the patents; and to give the orator the benefit of the effect by calling the frame a trademark, would continue tae monop"ly indefinitely, when under the law it should cease. It is obvious that the registration of the trade-mark in 1880 would not affect rights which the public already had acquired; it is not claimed that it should. Motion granted. Spe Hostetter v. Fries, ante, 620; Burton v. Stmfton, 12 FED. REP. 6n6, and note, 70-1; Shaw Stocking Co. v. Mack, ld. 70i, ami nole, 717.-lED.
RmUALL
v.
LION INS.
Co.
SurE v. 1rERIDEN FIlm INs. Co. (Circuit Court, D. Rhode island. FInE OF CO:"TTIACT.
August 23, 1383 )
An oral agreement by an insnrance agent to take $\000 upon mill prnperty is not a cprnpletcfl contract of insurancp, if there was to be an apportionllH'Ilt between real and personal estate, and none had been made when the property destroyel! by {ire. ""hetlu'r a CO'ltract for insnrancc made at a quarter hcfore 6 o'clock in the evellinz hack to noon of the same dal', is not dccUed
'V.17,no.8-40
FEDERAL REPORTER.
At Law. C. P. Robinson, for plaintiff. Miner d; Roelker, for defendants. Before LOWELL and Com, JJ. LOWELL, J. These cases were heard together, and raise interesting questions in the law of insurance. The plaintiff was the owner of a mill at BurrillviHe, Rhode I-&lllnd, to which he had made an addition, and happening to be in the office of his insurance agent at Provid(mce, in the afternoon of October 14, 1881, he asked the agent, :Mr. Shove, to procure him insurance for $5,000 in addition to $37,000, whioh he already had on his mill, machinery, and stock. The agent had taken as much of the l'isk as he thought advisable in the companies which he represented, and his son, by his direction, applied by telephone to another insurance agent in Providence, Mr. Spencer, who agreed to take the $5,000 in the defendant companies, one-half in each. Nothing was said about the rate of premium, the time for which the was to run, or the apportion ment between tLe old and the new mill, or between buildings, machinery, and stock. Uron the acceptance by Spencer, the plaintiff's agent said that he would call in the morning with a fonn. Spencer already had insurance on the plaintiff's property in another company, and he proceeded to enter in his book the $5,000, divided equally between the two defendant companies, and apportioned between buildings, machinery, and stock in the same proportion as in the former policy, and at the same rate of premium. This occurred at a quarter before 6 o'clock in the evemng, and 111 the mean time the premises had caught fire about noon of the same day, and were by this time much damaged. The existence of the fire was not known to any of the persons concerned in the negotiation. 'fhe evid nce tended to show a custom to make all risks in policies against fire begin aed end at noon, which is thought to be convenient fOl both parties, but more particulady for the underwriters, and they insist upon following the practice. If, therefore, a person procuring insurance is unwilling to date his policy from the noon next after his application, he may have it dated back to the noon next before; in this case it would be 12 o'Clock of the day of the fire. The plaintiff contends that by virtue of this practice he had the promise of a policy from that hour. We are of opinion that there was no completed contract lor insurance at all. There is evidence enough that Spencer, the defendant's agent, was ready to grant a definite insurance, and if the entries in his book corresponded to any agreement of the parties, there be no difficulty; but, in point of fact, not a word had beM exchanged between the two brokers as to the rate of premium, or as to the ap' portionment of the risk, and it is clear that there was to be some apportionment; that is, the whole sum was not wanted for the protection of the mill itself, but some part for machinery, and sorne part ... stock.
LYNCH
11.
HARTl<'ORD FIRE INS. CO.
627
We may grant that the time would be nnderstood to be one if nothing was said to the contrary. It was argued, but not proYed, that the rate of premium was fixed by sollie usage or previous course of aealing. But there is nothing to show that the apportion1aent made by Spencer, on the basis of a former policy, would have been satisfactory to Shove, and to the plaintiff, if that were enough. On the contrary, we are disposed to believe that the new part of the mill and its contents were in their minds as being the property needing insurance, and that they would have changed the provisional apportionment very materially. We are also strongly inclined to think that Shove understood thai. the risk was to begin on the following day, and that when he spoke of bringing to Spencer a "form" in the morning he lLeant a memo.. randum or scheme of the exact distribution of the risk. As to the mere farm of policy there could be no occasion to bring one, that we can see. At any rate, we cannot find a completed contract in the few words w!:Iich passed between the parties, and we could not fairly and justly apportion the loss and the salvage between real and perBanal estate, and between this company and others, upon so slight a. foundation of contract as we have before us. Judgment for the defendants.
r,YNCH
HARTFORD FIRE INS.
SAME
INS.
(Circuit Court, D. New Hampshire.
August 20, 1883.)
1. 2.
!'LE.... OF LIS ALIIlI PENDENS.
A plea of lis alibi pendens is not good when the litigat;on is in a court of foreign jurisdiction. SAME-RULE IN EQUITY AND AmlIRALTY.
This rule is modified by courts of eq:lityand admiralty, who will require a plaintiff, who has a suit pending elsewhere for the same cause and with au equally advantageous remedy, to elect which he will prosecute. S. SAME-C0Y)10N-LAW COURTS.
Whether the courts of law may attain the same end th:'ough their power of postponing actions and suspending judgments, qua:re. SAME-ATTACIL\1ENT FROM STATE CounT.
Plaintiff brought an action at law, and defendants pleaded in ahatemeIlt that the amount in their hands due plaintiff had been attached by a trustee process from the state court by his creditors. Held, that such plea was not available, but that a continuance ex comitate should be granted in order thaL the plaintiffs in the foreign actions might have an opportunity to make their attachments available. Held, further, that the garnishce might plead judgment and satisfaction in either court as a bar to further action in the other.
Plaintiff brought .this action to recover the amount of insurance on his stock of groceries in store No. 44. :Market street, Portsm.oj.lth, de-