Ludington Novelty Co. v. Leonard

COXE, Circuit Judge.

We are satisfied with the disposition made-of the Haskell patent by the Circuit Court. If valid at all, in view of the circumscribed field in which the patentee was compelled to operate, it is manifest that the claims must be limited to cover the precise structures described and shown.

Regarding'"the first’ claim O'f the Haskell patent, the- distinguishing feature of which is “a base line on each side of the board extending across the board from the innermdst portion of the pocket opening to-the corresponding portion.of the opposite pocket opening,” we are inclined to the opinion that the finding in favor of the defendants should have been based upon want of patentability rather than noninfringement. The line in question is drawn around the board extending á'cróss each" side from the innermost portion of the pocket openings and is intended to indicate the location from which the disks are to be played. A -substantially similar line appears on the defendants’ board, but" we think it required no exercise of the inventive faculties to draw a-line "parallel to the rim of the board in all essential particulars like the balk line. of a' billiard table. The drawing of such a line was-within the skill of "the calling and was the work of the artisan and not of the inventor. , -,

■ The assignments of error do not challenge the decision of the Circuit- Court in so far as it relates to the Fuller patent.

""The validity of "the trade-mark in the word “Carroms” was sustained by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in Williams v. Mitchell, 106 Fed. 168, 45 C. C. A. 265. The Circuit Court, after considering the various differences in the proof between that case and the case at bar and the effort of the defendants to distinguish them, qays: . - -, .

• “"Upon consideration of tbe whole evidence it seems reasonably clear that this word is "not-so descriptive of complainant’s game board that it could not be fairly adopted as a trade-mark. If the complainant or its assignors had. not:.brought the word into general use as applicable to the style of game board and games in. question here, it is .not probable that it would have been-*157generally so used or understood, or that the defendants would have made use of It In the way they have.”

In this conclusion we concur.

It is asserted, because the disks, as an incident of the game, strike each other or the cushions and rebound or glance off at an angle, thus,' in the broad sense making “carroms,” that the word is descriptive of the game. It by no means follows that because carroms occur during ■ the progress of a game, it can be fairly or intelligently described as a carrom game. Cárroms, in the broad sense, occur in tennis, hockey, croquet, curling, polo and golf. Even in football carroms of an exceedingly strenuous character are not infrequent. But no one, with the slightest reputation for accuracy, would think of employing the word as descriptive of these or other kindred games. A person who had never seen the complainant’s game would form a wholly inadequate conception of its plan and object from the name alone. We are of the opinion that the word “carrom” is not so descriptive of the com-, plainant’s game board or the games to be played thereon as to defeat the trade-mark. The whole subject is so fully discussed in the opinion below and in the opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals in Williams v. Mitchell that further comment is unnecessary. Except, by the use of the trade-mark the defendants have not been guilty of unfair competition and when that use was discontinued the complainant’s rights were fully safe-guarded.

We see no reason to differ with the Circuit Court in its refusal to order an accounting. If we could discover any theory upon which a substantial recovery might be had we would not hesitate to direct a reference, but it is plain that such a proceeding will prove abortive after subjecting both parties to large additional expense and the defendants to unnecessary annoyance. The master would be involved' in an inextricable tangle from which it will be impossible to emerge with a substantial recovery based upon a rational rule of damages. The boards sold by the defendants, and which they had a right to sell, were intended to be used in connection with a large number of games in the description of some of which the word “Carrom” might, in certain aspects; be used innocently. An attempt to segregate the profits, if any, resulting from the illegitimate use of the word would require an excursion into the realms of conjecture and speculation without hope of any tangible result.

The decree of the Circuit Court is affirmed, but without costs.