Jaynes v. Weickman

California Courts of Appeal
Jaynes v. Weickman, 203 P. 828 (1921)
55 Cal. App. 557; 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 166
Works

Jaynes v. Weickman

Opinion of the Court

WORKS, J.

In this action the plaintiff, claiming to be the owner of a business conducted under the names Active Transfer Company and Active Parcel Delivery, sought to enjoin the defendants from using in connection with a business conducted by some of them the names Action Transfer Company and Action Parcel Delivery. A decree went for the plaintiff and the defendants appeal.

In great part, appellants’ presentation of their appeal is like that with which we had to deal in Alves v. Alves, 54 Cal. App. 563 [202 Pac. 157]. There is here a discussion of several questions of fact without mention of a claim that any finding of the trial court is not sustained by the evidence. Several questions of law are presented without our *558 attention being called to alleged errors of the trial court to which the discussions may be applied. Appellants’ presentation is different, however, from the effort of appellants in Alves v. Alves in that the brief here is not altogether pointless.

[1] There is a sufficient presentation of the question whether the words “Active” and- “Action,” as used by the parties respectively in connection with the other words above set forth, are so similar that the public will be deceived by-appellants’ use of One of them. In solving such a question it is necessary only that a court be satisfied from an inspection of trade names or legends used by the parties that the one used by the defendant is so similar to the one used by the plaintiff that a deception will be the-natural and probable result (38 Cyc. 773-776; Schmidt v. Brieg, 100 Cal. 672 [22 L. R. A. 790, 35 Pac. 623]). It is manifest to us that such a similarity exists in the present instance. The legend Action Transfer Company could not escape being viewed by the public, or by some considerable part of it, as referring to the Active Transfer Company.

[2] Appellant also adequately presents the question whether the word “Active” is subject to appropriation as a trade name. It is, of course, true that there can be no property in words merely descriptive of an article or business, or of some quality pertaining to them. As instances of this rule it is doubtless true that one could not protect through injunctive process such trade names as Sweet Oranges or First. Quality Cigarettes. We cannot say that the name Active Transfer Company is to be placed in the same category. The first word of that legend ordinarily would not be regarded as descriptive of a transfer company or of the business conducted by it. The designation is suffi: eiently fanciful, to our minds, to entitle respondent to use and to protect the use, as' a trade name, of the phrase of which it is a part.

It is contended that the trial court committed error in two instances in the admission of evidence. .If the correctness of the contention be granted, which we do not decide, the errors were harmless, after ■ what we have said above as to our ability to determine by comparison of the names used by the parties that the use by appellants of the one *559 employed by them would naturally and probably lead to a deception of the public.

Judgment affirmed.

Finlayson, P. J., and Craig, J., concurred.

Reference

Full Case Name
MAUD E. JAYNES, Respondent, v. CHARLES C. WEICKMAN Et Al., Appellants
Cited By
2 cases
Status
Published