Court Opinion

ID: 3238159
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:12:08.988095+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:58:57.038259
License: Public Domain

Complainant, Harris Transfer  Warehouse Company, commonly, it appears, referred to as "Harris Transfer Company," filed this bill against the Harrison Transfer Company, seeking to enjoin the use of the name "Harrison Transfer Company" or "Harrison Transfer  Warehouse Company" in the conduct of defendant's business. The proof, in substantial accord with the averments of the bill, shows that, of these two incorporated companies, both engaged in the transfer and warehouse business, complainant is the older company, and formerly did business in the place now occupied by defendant. At one time the Rounds Transfer Company engaged in the same business in the city of Birmingham; E. W. Rounds owning 28 of the 30 shares of its capital stock. The Rounds Company was not successful, and after 28 of its shares had come into the control of one Erdreich (of which his wife owned 1) and J. A. Harrison had acquired 1 — the remaining share being retained by E. W. Rounds — the name of the company was changed to Harrison Transfer Company. Over its place of business and upon at least one of its trucks appeared the name Harrison Transfer  Warehouse Company. There was evidence tending to show that defendant company, of which Erdreich is now president and manager, made conscious effort to draw business away from complainant by representing itself to inquirers by telephone as being the complainant company; this, however, is emphatically denied by defendant. Mistakes in that method of communication may have easily confused the names of the two companies, or defendant's telephone may have been intentionally used by defendant in such manner as to induce customers to believe they were dealing with complainant. One witness testifies, in effect, that upon one occasion, when she went again to defendant's place of business, asking particularly for complainant, who before that had done some hauling for her, she was informed that defendant was the company she was looking for. It may be conceded that, if complainant's case rested exclusively upon the evidence as to specific dealings with customers, such evidence, though creating grave suspicion as to the ethics of defendant's *Page 632 
manner of business, would scarcely suffice to authorize the relief prayed.
It seems evident, however, that defendant proceeded upon the theory that, since one of its stockholders was named Harrison, it had as much right to use that name as complainant had to use the name "Harris," and that, since "transfer" is a generic term (Empire Guano Co. v. Jefferson Fertilizer Co., 201 Ala. 277,78 So. 53), it had an equal right to the use of it. Let it be conceded that defendant's theory in its simple form will hold good, that every individual has the right to the use of his own name, and that the word "transfer" is public property. It does not follow, however, that the relief prayed in complainant's bill has been inappropriately awarded; for here — aside from the alleged dealings in specific instances — it appears to us to be reasonably clear that, in adopting the corporate name under which defendant now does business, and in its subsequent practice, by signs even more closely approximating the name of the complainant, defendant had in mind the advantages of its nominal similarity to that of an old and well-known competitor, doing a large business, rather than the benefits to follow upon the adoption of the name of the owner of a single share of its stock, and consciously sought by these means to draw away a share of the business which otherwise would have gone to complainant; nor is it difficult to perceive that, if these imitations may be used without restraint, complainant's business will suffer. In Stix v. American Piano Co., 211 Fed. 271, 127 C.C.A. 639, the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, observing that "it is now settled beyond controversy that a family surname is incapable of exclusive appropriation in trade," and that "the right of every man to use his own name in his business was declared in the law before the modern doctrine of unfair trade competition had arisen," yet declared that, if a name has previously become well known in trade, the newcomer must exercise reasonable care to avoid confusion which will result in injury to the other. Many cases along this line are discussed in Nims on Unfair Competition (2d Ed.) §§ 67-81. Defendant is not quite in a position so immune to attack as an individual using his family name in business, for defendant is a corporation forbidden by law (section 3446 of the Code), whatever stockholder's name it may desire to make prominent, to assume any name "which is identical with that of any corporation already existing in this state, or so nearly similar thereto as to lead to confusion and uncertainty." Nor, on the other hand, has defendant used precisely the surname which appears in the name of the complainant corporation. Still, as already indicated, our opinion is that defendant has not only failed to use due care, but has consciously sought to imitate in various ways the corporate name and business accessories first used by complainant, all this in a manner very reasonably calculated to mislead complainant's prospective customers, a result which might have been avoided by the use of the slightest care in the premises. The applicable law has been elaborately discussed in G. B. McVay  Son Seed Co. v. McVay Seed  Floral Co., 201 Ala. 644, 79 So. 116, a case which affords ample authority for our conclusion that the chancellor's decree, enjoining defendant (appellant) from using the name "Harrison Transfer Company," or the name "Harrison Transfer  Warehouse Company," in the conduct of its business or in advertising the same, and from representing to prospective customers, or others, that defendant is complainant, is well grounded in law and fact, and should be affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.