The bill herein is in the main for infringement of complainant’s registered trade-mark “Davids” as applied to “writing inks of all varieties, hectograph ink, showcard indelible and stamping ink and stamp-pads.” United with this cause of action, however, are allegations of “unfair and unlawful competition on the part of defendants,” although all parties to the litigation are residents of this state and district. It is therefore necessary to dismiss from consideration all allegations and evidence relating to unfair competition, and to regard the matter not only as one of trade-mark law alone (National Casket Co. v. New York & Brooklyn Casket Co. [C. C.] 185 Fed. 533), but as a trade-mark case in which jurisdiction depends solely on registration .under the act of February 20, 1905.
[1] A demurrer herein was before the Circuit Court of Appeals in 178 Fed. 801, 102 C. C. A. 249. The bill of complaint is there sufficiently summarized. The scope of that decision is vitally, important now that the cause has come on for hearing upon evidence. It is understood that that decision held that “Davids,” being the name of the founder of complainant’s business, could not be “a valid common-law trade-mark,” but it might be a “mark used as a trademark,” and might therefore be registered under section 5 -of the trade-mark act of February 20, 1905. It was also declared that the act made “a mark actually and exclusively used for the requisite period (ten years) entitled to registration as a trade-mark,” and, finally, it was asserted that, if it be “entitled to registration, it is entitled to protection.” It is not declared that the “mark” which is an invalid common-law trade-mark shall be entitled to protection only as .a mark; but it is said that “we are unable to appreciate the distinction sought to be drawn by the defendant between the right to register a trade-mark and the right to protect it.” It follows from the language of the higher court that, since the “mark” may be registered, as a tfade-marlc and is entitled to protection, it is entitled to protection as a trade-mark, which is equivalent to saying that it becomes a valid trade-mark by registration. This seems to be the congressional intention, for section 5 was amended on February 18, 1911 (Act Feb. 18, 1911, c. 113, 36 Stat. 919), by adding the proviso “that nothing herein shall prevent the registration of a trade-mark otherwise registerable because of its being the name of the applicant or a portion thereof”; and it is also important that the original act in section 29 declares that:
“Tlie term ‘trade-mark’ includes any mark which is entitled to registration under the terms of this Act and whether registered or not and a trade-mark shall he deemed to be ‘affixed’ to an article when it is placed in any manner in or upon either the article itself or the receptacle or package or upon the envelope or other thing in, by, or with which the goods are packed or inclosed or otherwise prepared for sale or distribution.”
The question presented by this litigation is therefore this: To what measure of relief is one entitled who owns as a valid trade-mark a word which before registration under the statute he could not protect at law, without invoking the doctrine of unfair competition? It is
[2] Trade-mark infringement is the use by defendant for trading' purposes, and in connection with goods of the kind as to which complainant’s exclusive right exists, of a mark identical with complainant’s, or colorably resembling it. The wrongful imitation need not be exact or perfect, but tnay be limited or partial. McLean v. Fleming, 96 U. S. 245, 24 L. Ed. 828; Saxlehner v. Eisner, etc., Co., 179 U. S. 19, 21 Sup. Ct. 7, 45 L. Ed. 60. Within these familiar rules, it would seem that any use of the word “Davids” in connection with inks would be infringement, and very interesting questions would arise did the bill seek to enjoin any and every use of defendants’ own names in conjunction with the manufacture of an article which is free for all. The bill, however, asks only that defendants be enjoined from the use of complainant’s trade-mark in their trade name of “Davids Manufacturing Company,” and also from the use of the word “Davids” at the top of their labels in connection with the business of making and selling inks, etc.
[3] Since it has been held that a proper name can under the circumstances here existing become a valid trade-mark, then such trademark must receive the same kind and extent of protection as would be accorded to an arbitrary or fanciful name selected for euphony or quaintness, and associated with a particular kind of goods made by a particular person. Thus if complainant’s trade-mark were not “Davids,” but “Davyne” (an actual word at present wholly unrelated to ink), defendants would plainly not be permitted to sell, advertise, or mark inks as those of the “Davyne Manufacturing Company,” nor to use the word “Davyne” prominently upon their labels. Undoubtedly this statute as ‘construed limits some rights heretofore thought to have been secured to all men in respect of the use of their own names, yet such in my judgment is the logical result of the decision first referred to, and the legislative intent as shown by recent amendment. The evidence herein conclusively shows that defendants do display the word “Davids” very prominently at the top of their labels and elsewhere, and transact all their business under the trade name of “Davids Manufacturing Company.”
From these acts (in relation to inks) let them be restrained according to the prayer of the bill, which is for an injunction only and not for an accounting.