372
16
FEDERAL REPORTEll,
placing the Leyden jar ina mctalllc cup from which it is removable? ANo, sir: that Is an old Invention. Q. Are you the original and first Inventor of making or breakIng an electrical current by the movement of a simple lever switch? A. No, sir. Q. Are you the original and first inventor of drllilng holes In the statIonary plates to' which to attach the rods referred to in your testImony? A. As far as I know, I am. I never saw or heard of any machines before being constructed In that way. Q. Are you the first Inventor of having a rod pass up through the stopper of the Leyden jar, tlle end terminating in the knob through whIch the discharging rod passes? A. No sir. Q. Are you the orIgInal and first inventor of having the interior coatIng of the Leyden jar a removable metalllc cup? A. I am not; the invention is old; but I am the inventor of a certain applicatIon for. such a coatIng to this machine. Q. Are you the Inventor of the corks and metallIc covering which the rod before mentioned In the Leyden jar A. NO,slr. I did not Invent the cork, but did Invent the combination Of the cork and InsulatIng cover through whIch the rod passes. Q. Are you the original and first inventor of fastenIng the Leyden jar of a static electric machine to the bed of the machine? A. As far as I know, I am. I never saw it done before, and never heard of It beIng done before. Q.. Do you remember whether the Voss machInes, of which have before spoken, had the Leyden jar loose or fastened to the bed of the machine ?A. 'I'hey were lOose."
Other witnesses, expert and nonexpert, testified, and, besides, there was adduced a quantity of documentary proof consisting of prior patents and printed publications. A discussion of the evidence could be of little use or interest. It is enough to say that a careful study of it and of the briefs of counsel has confirmed the opinion patents in suit contain produced by the oral argument tha.t· nothing elltitled to be called invention. The decree dismissing the bill is therefore affirmed. CEREAL CO. v. ELI PETTIJOHN CEREAL CO. I.
(Cb'cuit Court of Appeals, Seventh Ctrcuit. October 5, 1896.) No.315.
1.
PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION.
A preliminary InjunctIon, being somewhat In the nature of a judgment and execution trial, should not be granted except in Calles of pressIng necessity. 'l'he right to it must be. clear, and the apprehended injury grievous; and generally, where the injury may be measured in money, the alleged wrongdoer should be shown to· be. pecuniarily unable to respond In damages.
.. !:lAME-T,RADE-NAMES.
A prelimInary Injunction against the use of the name "Pettijohn" In connection with certain prepared cereal foods held to have been properly denIed, where, upon the evidence, complainant's exclusive right to the name was doubtful. 72 Fed. 903, affirmed.
eorD
Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the NorthDistrict of Illinois.
. This suit was brought to enjoin the use of the appellant's trade-name, "Pettijohn'S California Breakfast Food," applled to the manufacture of rolled wheat. 1'he bill charged that In the year 1889 three brothers of the name of Pettijohn (William A., Lawrence 'V., and Samuel R.) Commenced the manufacture of rolled wheat at Minneapolis, Minn., selling their product under the name of "Pettijohn's California Breakfast l!'ood." This busIness was continued until November, 1890, when It was sold to a corporation, Petti-
AMERICAN CEREAL CO. V. EU PETTIJOHN CEREAL CO.
373
john Ctllifornia Breakfast Food Company, which succeeded to the business, and continued to manufacture the product at that place, and to sell the same under the same name. The corporation ereoted or leased a mill in Minnellpolis, operated it, and acquired from the three Pettijohns all their rights to the use of the name "Pettijohn" and "Pettijohn's," the word "California," and the words "BreakfastI<'ood." This business, with Its machInery and good will and trade-name, was sold to the appellee in October, 1893, who continued the business as successor, selling rolled wheat under the same name, in packages of the same size and shape, and under the same labels, with such changes as were necessary to indicate that the American Oereal Company was the proprietor. On January 7, 1894, the mlll was destroyed by fire, since which time the appellee has manufactured this product at other mills owned by it,. disposing of the product under the same name. Eli Pettijohn, the father of the three brothers named, came to the city of Minneapolis from his home in the state of California in the autumn of 1893, and, after the destruction of the appellee's mill by fire, in connection with certain other persons organIzed a corporation for the manufacture and sale of rolled wheat, and placed upon the vessels containing the product the trade mark and name "Eli Pettijohn's Best," accompanied by a picture of Eli Pettijohn. It is alleged In the bill that at this time the name of Pettijohn was not known in the United States of America in connection with any cereal food product other than the rolled wheat which was first made by William A. Pettijohn and his brothers at Minneapolis, and by their successors in that business, except that it is alleged that some rolled wheat had been made in the state of California, and in other parts of. the UnIted States west of the Rocky Mountains, under the name of "Pettijohn's California Breakfast Gem," and that the name "Pettijohn," used In connection with rolled wheat, has come to indicate and mean to purchasers and consumers east of the Rocky Mountains the rolled wheat made by the appellee. The answer asserts that rolled wheat was first invented and made known by Eli Pettijohn, the father of the three brothers mentioned, who originated the article and commenced its manufacture at San Francisco in 1877, since which time he has continued to manufacture and sell the product under his own name and under various trade-names, and that Eli Pettijohn instructed his sons in the manner of making such product, and· suffered and permitted them to make and sell the same at divers times and places for his and their benefit; that, at the time of the .organization of the appellee, Eli Pettijohn was part owner in the Pettijohn Manufacturing & Milling Company, which operated a mill at Oakland, CaL, manufacturing and selling rolled wheat under the trade-names of "Pettijohn's Breakfast Food" and "Pettijohn's Breakfast Pearls"; that Ell Pettijohn first applied the name "Pettijohn" to rolled wheat in 1877, in San Francisco; that he continued to sell the product under the name of "Pettijohn's Rolled Wheat" untll the year 1880; that In 1884 he resumed the manufacture of rolled wheat in San Francisco under the name of "Pettijohn's Pearled Rolled Wheat," which was afterwards changed to "Pettijohn's Breakfast Gem," and that he continued the manufacture and sale of the product under that name until September, 1889; that In February, 1892, Ell Pettijohn again resumed the manufacture and sale of that product In San Francisco, and so continued until November, 1892, when he removed to Oakland, and there manufactured the same product, and sold it under the name of "Pettijohn's Breal{fast Gem," "Pettijohn's Breakfast Food," and "Pettijohn's Breakfast Pearl"; that such wheat product had acqUired a wide and valuable reputation under the name of "Pettijohn," and was in good demand in all that part of the United States west of the Rocky Mountains, and that this reputation was created and acquired by and through the efforts of Eli Pettijohn; that In September, 1889, William A. Pettijohn, his son, who was associated with him In business, sol11 to one Laumelster, of San Francisco, the right to make and sell rolled wheat under the name of "Pettijohn's Breakfast Gem," together with a certain Interest in the business of Eli and WiIIlam A. Pettijohn, and that Laumeister has since that date, and particularly since he acquired the entire interest of that concern, manufactured and sold rolled wheat under that name not only west of the Rocky Mountains, but also in the city of New York, and that the
374
76 FEDERAL REPORTER.
name "Pettljphn," used In connection with rolled wheat prior to the incorporation of the appellee, did not refer exclusively to the product of the appellant and his predecessor, but referred. to the. product made by Ell Pettijohn in San Francisco, by the Pettijohn Manufacturing & Milling Company in Oakland, and by Laumeister manufacturing both at San ]J'rancitlco and in New York; and that the name was and is descriptive of the product, and indicated rolled wheat prepared by the Pettijohn process. The answer further states that Eli Pettijohn has. been connected with the appellee as stockholder and director, and except for .about six months, when he was absent in California, he had always been in advisory relations with, and in supervision of the product manufactured by, the appellee; that Ell Pettijohn's process consisted in subjecting wheat for food purposes to the roller process in such condition as to flatten, but not disintegrate, the grain; that prior to the year 1!:l77, when the thought was conceived by Eli Pettijohn, no similar product of wheat had ever been made or sold. The suit was brought in the superior court of Cook county, 111., and thence removed into the circuit court of the United States for the Northern district of IllinoIs, and on the 28th day of March, 1896, an order was entered dissolving an Injunction pendente lite issued in the cause while it was pending in the state court. From that order this appeal is taken. The opinion of the court below will be found recorded in 72 Fed. 903, to whIch reference may be had for a fuller statement of the facts.
W. H. Swift, for appellant. Frank F. Reed, for appellee. Before WOODS and JENKINS, Circuit Judges. JENKINS, Circuit Judge, after the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court. , An interlocutory injunction operates somewhat in the nature of judgment and execution before trial. Without question, it is at times an appropriate remedy in the prevention of great wrong, but to authorize its issuance there must exist a pressing necessity. The right to it must be clear, and the apprehended injury must be grievous, and generally, where the injury may be measured in money, the alleged wrongdoer should be. shown to be unable pecuniarily to respond. Without considering the many and interesting questions discussed at the bar, it is sufficient at this time to say that upon the evidence produced we are of opinion that the right of the appllant to the exclusive use of the name "Pettijohn" is not so clearly shown that we would be warranted in overturning the discretion lodged in the below upon granting, refusing, or dissolving the writ. 1llie product in question would appear to have been first manufactured and put upon the niarketin California in the year 1877 by Eli Pettijohn, under the name of "Pettijohn's Rolled Wheat." Subsequently, and from May, 1884, it was sold under various names by Eli Pettijohn and his son William, or by one of them, and by of one of them, as "Pettijohn's their successors, or the Breakfast Gems," "Pettijohn's .Breakfast Pearls," or "Pettijohn's Breakfast Food." The name "Pettijohn" seems to have been first connected with the product by Eli Pettijohn, the father, who was engaged in the manufacture and sale of the product in the state of intermittently from the year 1877 down to the autumn of the year 1892. During all these years the name "Pettijohn" was applied to the produd, whether manufactured by the father or by
THE MISSISSIPPI.
375
the son, or by the successors of both or ()f either of them. The appellant claims title to this name, as applied to this product, through grant by the son; the appellee, through grant by the father. It is left doubtful by the evidence whether the father ever parted with his right to such use of that name, and whether the son ever acquired the exclusive use thereof, in the manufacture and sale of this break· fast fooo, and whether they were not both entitled to such use of it as tenants in common, so to speak. The right being thus clouded with doubt, it was no abuse of discretion to dissolve the injunction. Oross-examination in the ordinary course of judicial proceedings may dispel the doubt now existing, and may make clear that which is now obscure. The appellant should not, therefore, be allowed this extraordinary writ, when it can be fully compensated in damages for the injury sustained if it should eventually be decreed to be entitled to relief. In affirming this order, as we are compelled to do, we disclaim any intent to determine thiS' controversy, withholding expression of an opinion upon the merits until the cause shall come here upon final decree. The order will be affirmed.
THE MISSISSIPPI. 'I'HORON v. THE MISSISSIPPI. (District Court, S. D. New York. June 8, 1896.) A consignment of oleo stearine, the trade-name of which In France is "pressed tallow," was shipped from Paris, and transshipped at London, for New York, as "tallow." The consignment was discharged at the steamer's covered pier, but was placed, uncovered, in an adjacent portion ot the street, by the stevedore, who supposed it was tallow. The goods were here damaged by rain, but it. appeared that tallow would not have been damaged under similar conditions. Held, that the ship was not liable. TO CARGO-RAIN AT PIER.
This was a libel in rem by Oasimir Thoron against the steamer Mississippi (Thomas F. Gates, claimant) to recover fo,r damage to 3J consignment of oleo stearine, shipped as "tallow," under a through bill of lading, from Paris, transshipped at London, for New York, upon the steamship Mississippi. The trade-na,me for stearine in France Is pressed tallow. The steamer arrived on July 3d, her arrival being known to the libelant. Seventy-two hours after arrival were allowed by the bill of lading for taking delivery of the goods. They were discharged on the 4th, at the Atlantic Transport Line's pier, New York City, which was a covered pier. The company uses a portion of the street adjacent to the pier, specially prepared, and known as the "Farm," for the reception or storage of cargo not susceptible to damage by the elements. Immediately upon the discharge of the stearine, Which was described in the bill of lading and manifest as "tallow," and which the stevedores supposed was tallow, it was placed upon the farm. Rain fell on the 4th and 5th and damaged the stearine while it lay there. It appeared from the evidence that tallow would not have been damaged under similar conditions. On receipt of notice from libelant on the 6th, that the casks contained stearlne, tbey were covered and protected.