Court Opinion

ID: 8789630
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 13:46:27.130823+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:03:16.664467
License: Public Domain

J. B. McPHERSON, Circuit Judge.
In this proceeding William A. Lawrepce & Son sought relief against the P. E. Sharpless Company,, averring (1) infringement of a trade-mark, and (2) unfair competition. The decree adjudged the trade-mark invalid, but granted an injunction on the second ground. Each party has appealed from the decree; the plaintiffs, from so much of it as declares their trade-mark invalid, and the defendant company, from so much as restrains the unfair competition. -
The facts of the controversy are fully set out in Judge Thompson’s-opinion, reported in (D. C.) 203 Fed. 762, and need not be repeated here. We have carefully considered the evidence and the arguments-bearing upon the subject of unfair competition, and have not been convinced that the conclusions of the court below in that respect are erroneous.
But we do not feel bound to pass upon the validity of the trademark. The question presented — namely, the generic character of the *887device — is of some nicety, and in a case that called for its decision would need close examination and discussion. We must not be understood as intimating any opinion, or even any prepossession, either for or against the view adopted by the district judge; we merely state our opinion that, as the plaintiffs have obtained full relief against the defendant, they are not entitled to insist that it should be based upon one ground rather than upon another. The essential matter is that the defendant has been restrained from using the labels complained of; and for the present the plaintiffs must be content with that fact, although they would no doubt have preferred that both their positions should be sustained, instead of only one.
On the appeal of the Sharpless Company the decree is affirmed. The cross-appeal of William A. Lawrence & Son is dismissed, but without prejudice to their right to raise the question of the validity of their trade-mark before any other tribunal.