812
90 FEDERAl. REPORTER. DADIRRIAN V. YACUBIAN et 81. (Circuit Court, D. Massachusetts. December 1, 1898.) No.
503.
TRADE-MARKa-FoREIGN NAME OF ARTICLE.
The word "Matzoon," which has been for centuries In Armenia the name of an article of food or diet prepared from sterilized and fermented milk, cannot be appropriated as a trade-name by the person who first Introduced the article, as well as the name, into trade in this country.
This is a suit in equity by Markar G. Dadirrian against Gamaliel M. Yacubian and another to restrain the infringement of a trade mark or name. Betts, Betts, Sheffield & Betts, for complainant. Alex. P. Browne, for defendants. COLT, Circuit Judge. In a suit by this complainant against these defendants in the United States circuit court for the Northern district of lllinois, Judge Showalter, on motion for a preliminary injunction, in a well-considered and able opinion (72 Fed. 1010), held that the word "Matzoon" (or "Madzoon"), having been used in Armenia for centuries to designate an article of food or diet made from sterilized 'and fermented milk, cannot be appropriated as a trade-mark by the complainant, who :first introduced both the name and the article into trade in this country; nor can the defendants be enjoined on the theory that the word has become, in a special and secondary sense, a mark of the origin of complainant's goods, because the defendants' label plainly distinguishes their own product from that of the complainant. The present bill was :filed July 7, 1894. On November 14, 1894, Judge Carpenter denied a motion for a preliminary injunction. The present hearing was had upon full pleadings and proofs. We have carefully examined the evidence and briefs of counsel, and agree with the conclusions reached by Judge Showalter in the Illinois case. We :find nothing in the present record that would, in our opinion, warrant the court in reaching any different conclusion; and we do not see how we can add anything. of importance to the reasoning of the court in its opinion in the Illinois case. We cannot resist the conviction that Dr. Dadirrian did not originally adopt the word "Matzoon" as a fanciful or arbitrary name, and that it was not his intention to make a new preparation or product, but that he started with the intention of introducing for the first time into this country a preparation of fermented milk well known for centuries in Armenia, Turkey, and other Eastern countries, and that he intended to call it by its common and well-known Armenian name. Dr. Dadirrian, after graduation at the New York University Medical College in 1871, returned to his old home in Armenia, Asia He came back to New York in 1884, and began the practice of his profession. In July, 1885, he :first put his preparation of "Matzoon" on the market. On June 18, 1885, he read 'a paper before' the New York Academy of Medicine on "Matzoon, or Fermented Cow's Milk," and exhibited samples. That paper declares that:
DADIRRIAK V. YACUBIAN.
813
"SInce the earlier perIods In history fermented cow's mIlk has been abundantly used In Armenia, Persia, Turkey, Arabia, and other Eastern countries, by all classes, and in all seasons of the year. It is made in every house. and ordinary milk Is not at all used as an article of diet. ... ... ... There are two kinds. One is thick, sometimes like jelly or condensed milk; the other Is liquid, like butter milk or koumiss. These two kinds, the one or the other, according to preference, are used for the following purposes: As an article Is put of diet. * . . * In Asia Minor, and even in Constantinople, upon the table in a large dish, and is eaten with bread as a kind of dessert. ... ... ... The farmers use Matzoon when in the field, and by workingmen generally It is used to quench thirst. ... ... * It is used as an antidote for all kinds of poisoning. * * * It is used as a prophylactic during every epidemic. * * . . It is used as a panacea in all acute febrile diseases. ... * * Matzoon is more savory than koumiss. although the two do not differ entirely from each other."
In Dr. Dadirrian's earliest circular he said, with respect to his preparation: ''This preparation of milk originated In Armenia, around Mount Ararat, and extended thence to distant countries in Asia Minor, etc. It is used in these couniries largely as food and as medicine in every form of febrile diseases; also as an antidote to poisons. * * * It is prepared from pure milk alone. ... ... ... I present this preparation to the medical profession and public in America as differing essentially from other preparations of the kind in present use, without seeking to disparage their acknowledged value, liut as something new and altogether unused here, and having many different properties from the others, and ask for it a trial at their hands, with great confidence in its value, based upon a personal eXp rience in its use during three years in Asia Minor, ten years in Constantinople, and considerable time in New York, and from observing its usefulness in the hands of eminent American, German, and French physicians in Constantinople."
On September 2, 1884, Dr. Hamlin, an American missionary, who had witnessed the beneficial effects of Matzoon in the East for 40 years, wrote to Dr. Dadirrian as follows: "I am glad of your effort to introduce Matzoon. solid form for thirty years in Turkey." I used it constantly in its
Dr. Van Lennep, late missionary of the American board in Turkey, writes to Dr. Dadirrian, under date of September 12, 1885: "I am glad to learn that you are introducing Into this country the celebrated Oriental fermented milk food, called 'Matzoon.' The Arabs set so high a value upon it that they hold a tradition that an angel was sent from Heaven to reveal the secret to their father, Abraham; and they drink no water, but their favorite Matzoon instead, which stands night and day in a large dish near the entrance of the tent."
Upon Dr. Dadirrian's own admissions, we fail to see how he can claim ''M:atzoon'' as, in any proper sense, an arbitrary or fanciful word, and therefore the' proper subject of a trade-mark. We think this case is clearly governed by the opinion of the supreme court in the leading case of Canal Co. v. Clark, 13 Wall. 311. The defendants' label is so different in appearance from complainant's that no relief can be granted on the ground that the ordinary purchaser is likely to be deceived or of unfair trading. Bill dismissed.
814
00 FEDERAL REPORTER.
VAN OAMP PACKING CO. v. CRUIKSHANKS BROS. 00. (Circuit Court of Appeals, Third Circuit. November 28, 1898.) No. 11. UNFAIR COMPETITION IN TRADE-IMITATION OF PACKAGES AND LABELS-PRELIMINARY INJUNC1'ION.
·Where imitation of packages, stamps, and letters Is complained of, the question Is whether there is such similarity as Is likely to Impose on ordinary purchasers, exercising such care only as is commonly used in pUt'chasing the article in question. When this question cannot be answered with certainty or safety, and there is no proof that anyone has actually been misled, a preliminary injunction is properly denied.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of Pennsylvania. This was a suit in equity by the Van Camp Packing Company against Cruikshanks Bros. Company to restrain alleged unfair competition in business. The complainant has appealed from an order of the circuit court refusing to grant a preliminary injunction. V. H. Lockwood, for appellant. George H. Quail, for appellee. Before ACHESON and DALLAS, Circuit Judges, and BUTLER, District Judge. BUTLER, District Judge. The case is here on appeal from an order dismissing a motion for preliminary injunction. The facts are correctly stated by the circuit court, as follows: "The complainant, a corporation of the state of Indiana, filed this bill to restrain the respondents from infringement of their alleged trade-mark and from continuing unfair business competition. The bill alleges that complainant has been engaged In making catsup since 1888, and had prior to August, 1896, built up a large trade In, anp. a valuable reputation for, catsup of its manufacture. That about the latter date complainants began packing and selling single bottles of their catsup in paper boxes or cartons and placed thereon such devices and. lettering as Identified the Van Camp goods. The bill states 'that the essential feature of said box or carton Is the said representation of a bottle thereon'; that It was customary for grocers to place said boxes on their shelves with the picture of the bottle showing; that they also built up large pyramids of bQxes on their counters and In their windows; that by means thereof, also of displays made by complainants at food exhibits through the country and extensive advertising of said· style of packages, the public had become familiar with complainant's goods. The bill alleges complainants were the first to put up catsup In boxes or cartons of the form and appearance described. It alleges the respondents have since begun to pack and sell their catsup In cartons or boxes Identically like those of complainant and with such illustrations, representations, words and other features as were calculated to deceive and mislead the public Into the belief they were complainant's goods. The respondent by answer and affidavits allege amongst other things, they have been manufacturing catsup for some eighteen years, that in January, 1897, they ordered paper boxes and thereafter began selling their catsup in such boxes; that they used the common ordinary style of 'knock down' box of a size suitable for a catsup bottle and placed thereon a picture of their own well-known bottle; that In color, style, lettering and design their package is radically different from complainant's; that it was not made to simulate or copy complainant's package. They deny that anyone has been deceived by their design and mistaken it for complainant's. and allege that no one using the most ordinary care, could mistake their package or goods for complainant's."