Williams v. Mitchell

PEE CURIAM.

During the term at which a decree is rendered it is, of course, competent for a party to ask a modification; but a construction of the decree in respect to matters outside the issues it is irregular to ask or to grant. The party, however, who invokes such action may not question the result merely because of the irreg-*170iilarity of practice. In respect to the first and second specifications of error, which are directed to questions of fact only, it is enough to say that the evidence in the record, except as stated below, justifies the- finding of the circuit court.- The third specification is meaningless, because the second paragraph of the decree is a finding of fact only, and enjoins nothing. The third paragraph, to which the reference was probably intended, seems to be the logical result of the preceding findings; but, if any part of it was thought to be objectionable, that part should have been made the subject of a separate and specific assignment. As originally entered, however, the third paragraph did not remain in force. It was modified by the later order, and if, by asking the last action, the appellants did not waive all objection to. the original decree, they certainly lost the right to object to it except as modified, and any assignment of error upon it should have included the modification. But one objection is urged to the modifying order, and, to. the two decrees considered as one, that objection therefore seems to be the only one which the appellants are in a position to urge. It is not well taken, and is without essential merit. The second, clause of the second decree required that the word "Carrom” be erased from “the third line” of the descriptive matter of a new form of advertisement proposed by the appellants for the court’s approval, called “Defendants’ Exhibit Defendants’ Few Illustration”; but it is impossible to know upon the face of the decree, or from the pleadings in reference to which the decree is to be read, what was the significance or force of that order. The petition of the appellants for the modifying order purports to have attached to it as an exhibit a sample of the new advertisement, but no such exhibit appears in the record as attached to or in any way connected with the petition. Elsewhere in the transcript, but without reference from it to the petition or from the petition to it, appears a paper with the words “Defendants’ Exhibit Defendants’ New Illustration” printed upon its face below the other printed matter, but whether there as an item of evidence adduced or for some other reason or purpose can only be conjectured. In the body of that paper the word “Carrom” occurs on the second (not upon the third) line of the descriptive matter; not'separately, however, but in the phrase printed in large, black letters and under quotation marks “Five-Pin Cuban Carrom Came.” In that combination, manifestly the word was used as part of a name, and not descriptively, and the order that it be erased, if the order had reference to it, was. in harmony with the declaration of the court that the final decree was not to be construed to forbid the use of the word in its various forms “in the descriptive portion of advertisements, ⅜ ⅜ * so long as used in a purely and properly descriptive manner.” '.

The cross appellants insist that the court erred in holding the word “Carrom” to be a descriptive word which could not be made a trademark for a game board. The word “Carrom” or “Carom” is without •doubt descriptive of a certain game at billiards, and is defined to be “the hitting of two or three balls in succession by the cue ball from finé stroke of the cue.” The word is not, however, descriptive of the *171game boards before us, or the games played thereon, whether those of the complainants or of the defendants; for, while a carrom is possible, it is no pari: of the game, which consists in pocketing the disks, rings, or balls. The games are, rather, the pool or pocket game at billiards. The word “Carroms” is impressed upon each board of the complainants’ game as a trade-mark, but does not appear upon the board of the defendants. That, however, is immaterial so long as the defendants advertise their board as carrom boards. Machine Manufacturers v. Wilson, 3 App. Cas. 389. It is the case of the use of a descriptive word in a nondescriptive sense. While a descriptive word or a geographical or personal name cannot constitute a. technical trade-mark, yet where, as here, an article has come to be known by the descriptive word, one may not use that word to palm off his goods as the goods of another who has first adopted it, and by which appellation the goods have come to be known. One may not use his own name for such purpose when it works a fraud. If he uses the descriptive word, or a geographical name, or his own name, it must be so used as not to deprive others of their rights, or to deceive the public, and the name must be accompanied with such indications that the thing manufactured is the work of the one making it as would unmistakably inform the public of the fact. Singer Mfg. Co. v. June Mfg. Co., 163 U. S. 169, 16 Sup. Cf. 1002, 41 L. Ed. 118; Meyer v. Medicine Co., 18 U. S. App. 372, 7 C. C. A. 558, 58 Fed. 884; Pillsbury v. Mills Co., 24 U. S. App. 395, 12 C. C. A. 432, 64 Fed. 841; Raymond v. Powder Co., 55 U. S. App. 575, 29 C. C. A. 245, 85 Fed. 231; Mills Co. v. Eagle, 58 U. S. App. 490, 30 C. C. A. 386, 86 Fed. 608; Fuller v. Huff (C. C. A.) 104 Fed. 141; Reddaway v. Banham [1896] App. Cas. 199. The decree finds that, through imitation of the complainants’ advertisements with respect to the game in question, the defendants deceive purchasers and the public hito the belief that the game boards offered by them were made by the complainants, and the injunction restrains the advertisements in strict accordance with the ruling in Singer Mfg. Co. v. June Mfg. Co., supra, if the first clause of the decree here complained of were necessary or essential to that which follows we should think the finding incorrect, because, while the word “Carrom” may be descriptive of a game at billiards, it is not descriptive of the game in question, and tiie complainants’ board coming to be known by the designation of (he “Carrom Hoard,” or the “Carrom Game,” the defendants may not rigid fully apply that name to their game as a designaiion or name of the game, all!rough they have a right, as the court below decreed, to use the word in descriptive portions of advertí semen is so long as they use them in a purely and properly descriptive sense.

After the decree liad been rendered, (he defendants adopted for use a new advertisement and illustration of their game boards, designated in the record as “Defendants’ Exhibit Defendants’ Xew Illustration,” and “Exhibit Defendants’ Xevv Rules,” and by a petition, with copies attached, asked the court that they be permitted to use such new illustrations and advertisements. The court decreed thereon that the defendants might rightfully use (.he “Exhibit. Defendants’ Few Rules” without change, and that they might right*172'fully use “Defendants’ Exhibit Defendant’s New Illustration” with , the descriptive matter accompanying it, erasing the word, “Carrom,” .and this is challenged by the complainants. In this particular the .decree is within our ruling in Charles E. Hires Co. v. Consumers’ Co., 41 C. C. A. 71, 100 Fed. 809, where we said:

“A court of equity does not sit as an arbiter to determine in advance upon other and changed labels which the infringer may adopt to avoid the condemnation of the court,” and that “the court ought not to say how near the infringement may lawfully approximate the label of the complainant, but should cast the burden upon the guilty party of deciding for himself how near he may with safety drive to the edge of the precipice, and whether it be not better for him to keep as far from it as possible.”

We do not now pass upon the question whether these new advertisements and rules use the word “Carrom” in a purely descriptive sense, or whether the word is úsed as the name of the game. There inay be some ground for holding the latter in the prominent and displayed print of the word “Carrom.” It will be time enough for the court to determine the question when presented upon issues properly framed and the evidence taken thereunder.

The complainants also assert error in that the decree denied them ' compensation for past unfair competition. In this respect, also, vwe think the court was in error. The decree declares that the defendants, by their imitation of the complainants’ advertisements, had been guilty of deceiving purchasers and the public into believing that the game boards of their make were the game boards made •by the complainants. It declares an invasion of the complainants’ ■ rights, and the complainants are entitled, upon proper proof, to compensation to the extent of the invasion.

Upon the appeal of the defendants below the decree is "affirmed. ' Upon the appeal of the complainants below the decree is reversed, • and the cause remanded, with directions to the court below to enter a decree in conformity with this opinion.