Court Opinion

ID: 9442559
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-03 18:51:45.084273+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:29:08.163815
License: Public Domain

LINDLEY, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiff, an Indiana corporation engaged in the sale of mechanical razors under the trade-marks “Stahly” and “Live Blade,” instituted this suit to enjoin defendants from selling razors with plaintiff’s trademarks impressed thereon, contending that such sales were violative of its trade-mark and fair trade rights. The District Court, upon defendants’ motion for summary judgment, dismissed the complaint, holding that plaintiff had waived its rights with respect to the razors in the possession of the defendants. Plaintiff contends that the court erred in this conclusion and, further, that, inasmuch as there were, on the face of the pleadings, genuine issues as to material facts, granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment constituted additional error.
In the summer of 1948, both plaintiff and Aircraft & Diesel Equipment Corporation, with whom it had contracted for the manufacture of 125,000 Stahly Live Blade Razors, were in serious financial condition. Aircraft, after delivering approximately 80.000 razors to plaintiff, refused to make further shipments unless plaintiff would make payment in advance, though the contract provided that it was to have thirty days’ credit. When it became evident that plaintiff could not pay in advance, Aircraft advised plaintiff that, in order for it to continue operations, it would have to dispose of the 45,000 razors. Plaintiff thereupon sought to market them as prizes or premiums, but its efforts in this direction were unsuccessful. It was subsequently informed 'by Aircraft that the latter desired to pledge the razors as security for a loan it proposed to procure from General Factors Corporation. At the behest of both Aircraft and General Factors, plaintiff signed a letter of consent, addressed to General Factors, as follows: “We understand that Aircraft & Diesel Equipment Corporation has on hand approximately 45.000 Stahly Live Blade Razors which are in the possession of said Aircraft & Diesel Equipment Corporation subject to our order as to shipment. In consideration of your making a loan to said Aircraft & Diesel Equipment Corporation, we hereby consent to and agree that we will not assert any rights or claims contrary to your rights to realize upon such security as pledgee thereof in the event of non-payment of the loan.”
After the loan had been made and Aircraft had defaulted thereon, plaintiff learned that General Factors was planning to foreclose upon the razors which had been pledged as security and thereupon submitted a bid of $2.00 per razor. General Factors declined this offer, and eventually sold the razors to defendants for $50,000, amounting to approximately $1.10 per unit. As soon as it had been advised of the sale, plaintiff warned defendants that sale of the razors without the removal of plaintiff’s trademarks would infringe its legal rights and, further, that sale of the trade-marked goods at prices below those established under the fair trade agreements which had been negotiated by plaintiff in the states which allow them would violate its fair trade rights. As a consequence of defendants’ *916failure to reply to this communication and plaintiff’s receipt of numerous complaints from its regular dealers that defendants were offering the trade-marked razors to the public at prices below the established fair trade prices, this suit was begun.
Plaintiff contends that there were and are genuine issues as to material matters of fact which, under the provisions of Rule 56(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. Rule 56(c), prohibit disposition of this case on a motion for summary judgment. This argument rests on plaintiff’s assertion that it has alleged, and defendants have denied, (1), that the razors involved are in defective condition, (2), that defendants did not, in purchasing them from General Factors, rely on the so-called letter of consent executed by plaintiff, and, (3), that plaintiff was induced to sign this letter by reason of certain false promises made by Aircraft and General Factors, which fact, it is urged, makes that document wholly void and inoperative.
Plaintiff’s contention that a factual dispute exists with respect to the condition of the razors is, we think, refuted by defendants’ express admission that they are defective. True, defendants’ motion to dismiss points out that the complaint fails to aver with particularity wherein the alleged defect resides and asserts that the averment that they are defective “is a bald conclusion without any allegations of fact to support same,” and one of the defendants has, by affidavit, stated that the razors are not defective, but, on the other hand, defendants have expressly stated, in their brief and on oral argument, that they “admit that the 45,000 razors were just as defective as plaintiff says they were.” Moreover, if the District Court correctly construed the letter of consent as a waiver and abandonment of all plaintiff’s rights with respect to the razors, the existence or non-existence of the alleged defect was not a material issue in this case and, consequently, could not, under the provisions of Rule 56(c), render erroneous the District Court’s disposition thereof on motion for summary judgment.
Nor is there merit in the assertion that there is an issue of fact as to defendants’ reliance on the letter of consent. Tarrson’s affidavit, which is, as plaintiff observes, the “only thing in the record with respect to this matter,” states that he was shown the letter and that, in reliance thereon, he purchased the razors. Plaintiff’s failure to controvert this statement, by affidavit or by offer of opposing proof, or to seek disclosure and discovery with respect thereto on the basis of an averment that the facts were wholly within the knowledge of the defendants requires rejection of its contention that there is a substantial question of fact as to defendants’ reliance on the letter of consent. Gray v. Amerada Petroleum Corp., 5 Cir., 145 F.2d 730; Hummel v. Riordon, D.C.Ill., 56 F.Supp. 983, 987.
And the conclusive answer to plaintiff’s contention that an issue of fact exists with respect to the existence or. non-existence of fraud, resulting' from the assertion that its execution of the letter of consent was obtained by means of false promises, is to be found in the Illinois cases which hold that fraud in the inducement must be based upon a misrepresentation of fact and cannot rest on a false promise to do an act in the future, even though accompanied by an intention not to perform, Keithley v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 271 Ill. 584, 586, 111 N.E. 503; Thomson v. Miner, 303 Ill.App. 335, 25 N.E.2d 137, for, in view of this rule, whether false promises were, in fact, made to plaintiff, or whether such promises, if made, did or did not induce plaintiff to sign the letter of consent is wholly immaterial in the disposition of this case.
Having determined that a summary judgment was not improper, the only question remaining is whether that judgment was correct as a matter of law. Dismissal of the complaint was the result of the trial court’s decision that the letter of' consent signed by plaintiff “constitutes a waiver and abandonment of all fights plaintiff could assert as to the razors without regard to future possession by any other person.” Plaintiff insists that this conclusion is erroneous, that its letter of consent did not *917constitute a waiver of all its rights with respect to the razors, but was limited to the assertion of rights or claims contrary to the pledgee’s right to realize upon the security; moreover, it is contended that, irrespective of the effect of the letter of consent, defendants’ sales of defective razors bearing plaintiff’s trade-mark, without any indication that said razors are defective or that defendants are the vendors thereof, violate the trade-mark rights of plaintiff and constitute a fraud upon the public such as the trade-mark laws were designed to prevent. Defendants, however, maintain that the waiver embodied in the letter of consent is conclusive of the rights asserted by plaintiff herein.
In the letter by which it consented to the pledge of the 45,000 Stahly Live Blade Razors as security for the loan from General Factors to Aircraft, plaintiff promised General Factors that it “will not assert any rights or claims contrary to your rights to realize upon such security as pledgee thereof, in the event of non-payment of the loan.” It seems quite clear that the pledgee’s right to realize upon its security would have been seriously impaired by a proviso that the purchaser from the pledgee could not resell the razors without removing therefrom plaintiff’s trade-mark, or that the razors could not be resold at a price lower than the fair trade price established by plaintiff, for, obviously, no prospective purchaser would buy 45,000 trademarked razors which it could not resell. Yet these are, in brief, the precise restrictions which plaintiff would have this court read into the letter of consent, — restrictions which would have the inevitable effect of nullifying its promise not to assert any rights contrary to General Factors’ right to realize upon the security. The fact that plaintiff did not seek so to qualify the waiver until after General Factors had realized upon the security by selling the razors to the defendants is immaterial, for the qualification, if it exists now, has existed from the very moment the letter was executed; yet, as has been pointed out, its existence at that time would have been wholly inconsistent with plaintiff’s promise to refrain from asserting any rights contrary to those of the pledgee. Consequently, the District Court was completely justified in construing the very broad language employed in the letter as a waiver and abandonment of all plaintiff’s rights, trade-mark and fair trade rights included, with respect to the 45,000 razors.
To say, however, that plaintiff has waived all its rights with respect to these razors is not to say that defendants are to be permitted to offer them for sale to the public without any indication that they are in a defective condition and are not backed by the one year guarantee which covers the razors as to which plaintiff is the source of origin. It must be remembered that the trade-mark laws and the law of unfair competition are concerned not alone with the protection of a property right existing in an individual, but also with the protection of the public from fraud and deceit, Stork Restaurant, Inc., v. Sahati, 9 Cir., 166 F.2d 348, 354; Rosenberg Bros. & Co. v. Elliott, 3 Cir., 7 F.2d 962, 965, 966; General Baking Co. v. Gorman, 1 Cir., 3 F.2d 891, 893; Goldwyn Pictures Corp. v. Goldwyn, 2 Cir., 296 F. 391, 401, and it is obvious that the right of the public to be so protected is a right which transcends the rights of the individual trademark owner and is beyond his power to waive. In this case, then, the letter executed by the plaintiff, although it operated to waive all of plaintiff’s rights with respect to the razors in question, could not possibly have had the effect of waiving the public’s right to be safeguarded against fraud and deception. This public right has been recognized and accorded protection by the Supreme Court in such cases as Prestonettes, Inc. v. Coty, 264 U.S. 359, 44 S.Ct. 350, 68 L.Ed. 731, (in which a purchaser for resale of trade-marked powders and perfumes, although allowed to state that the products it offered to the public contained said trade-marked powders and perfumes, was required to print upon its labels a no.tice to the effect that the trade-marked powder had been reworked and the trademarked perfume independently rebottled 'by it), and Champion Spark Plug Co. v. Sanders, 331 U.S. 125, 67 S.Ct. 1136, 91 L.Ed. 1386, (in which one engaged in the *918business of repairing used trade-marked spark plugs and reselling them without removal of the trade-marks was required to stamp, upon both the plugs and the containers in which they were- offered for sale, the work “repaired” or the word “used”). The ratio decidendi of these decisions we conclude, requires that defendants be prohibited from offering to the public admittedly defective Stahly Live Blade Razors without indicating to prospective purchasers the fact that the razors are equipped with a defective pawl spring and are not backed by the one year guarantee applicable to the razors sold by plaintiff through its established dealers.
The judgment of the District Court is modified in conformity with the opinion of this court and, so modified, affirmed. The costs of this appeal will be apportioned equally between the parties.