The plaintiff in this case is the owner of a remedy known as “Johnson’s Anodyne Liniment,” and this suit is brought to enjoin the defendant from putting up and offering for sale a liniment of his own manufacture, in a form so closely resembling that of the plaintiff’s article that the public are liable to be deceived thereby, and a portion of the plaintiff’s business unlawfully taken away. The liniment was first prepared by Abner Johnson, about the year 1810. In 1846 he took his son, Thomas Johnson, into partnership. In 1848 the business was conducted by Thomas Johnson and his brother, I. S. Johnson, the father having died that year. In 1849, Thomas Johnson died, and the business was then carried on by I. S. Johnson until 1866, when he sold a” part of his interest to the complainant. This continued until 1876, when the complainant bought out the entire interest of I. S. Johnson, and became the sole proprietor of the business.
Upon the evidence I think the complainant has shown such a proprietary right to this business, and to the use of the bottles, labels, and wrappers with which this medicine has been associated and identified, as entitles him to maintain this action against this defendant, and therefore *365tlio first defense of want of sufficient title in the complainant falls to the ground.
Upon the question of injunction I entertain no doubt. A comparison of the bottles, wrappers, and labels make it apparent that the public •would bo likely to be deceived in the purchase of defendant’s liniment for the genuine Johnson’s. Except in the color of the label, the articles look almost identical. The genuine Johnson’s Anodyne Liniment has for more than half a century made use of a certain size and style of bottle, a wrapper of a somewhat striking blue color, and a purplish-colored label hearing a certain description, and having a j'ac simile of Dr. Johnson’s name written on it. The defendant’s liniment, which is also called “Johnson’s Anodyne liniment,” appears in the same size bottles, with a similar blue wrapper, and with a label which differs hut little from the plaintiff’s, except in a not very marked change in color. The Jac simile of the name signed on the label is E. E. Johnson, in place, of A. Johnson. The evidence goes to prove that the public arc.actually deceived into buying one liniment for the other, and a comparison of the form in which both liniments are put up shows that the object that the defendant must have had in the imitation which appears was to deceive the public into buying his liniment for the genuine Johnson’s. Clearly he should he enjoined from such unlawful use of that which another has first appropriated.
The*plaintiff Jennings was one of the firm of I. S. Johnson & Co. In stating on the label that the liniment is prepared by I. S. Johnson & Co., he merely retains the name of the firm of which he was a member. I cannot see how the public are deceived or injuriously affected by such a course. It is not uncommon, under sueli circumstances, to retain the old firm name. The facts in the case of Medicine Co. v. Wood, 108 U. S. 218, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 436, were quite different. In the present case I am satisfied that a decree should be entered for the complainant, and it is so ordered. Decree for complainant.