Woodward v. Lazar
Woodward v. Lazar
Opinion of the Court
Cope, J. concurring.
This is an appeal from an order granting and an order refusing to dissolve an injunction by which the defendants are restrained from using the name of “ What Cheer House ” as the title or name of a hotel in the city of San Francisco.
Woodward, being the lessee of a lot of land, erected upon it a building, which he occupied as a hotel, and to which he gave the name of the “ What Cheer House.” Before the expiration of his lease, he purchased an adjoining lot, upon which he erected a larger building, and for a time occupied both buildings as the “ What Cheer House,” the principal sign being removed from the first and
It has been decided, and with good reason, that the name established for a hotel is a trade mark, in which the proprietor has a valuable interest, which a Court of Chancery will protect against infringement. (Howard v. Henriques, 3 Sand. S. C. 725.) The point of dispute in the case is as to whom the name “ What Cheer House,” as a business sign, belongs. The plaintiff claims that it belongs to him, as the keeper of the hotel, which he continued to conduct under that name after he surrendered the leased premises; while the defendants claim that it is the designation of the building in which the business under that name was first conducted, and became their’s- when they became the owners of that building.
The character of the business which the name designates seems to determine that the name pertains to a building, or at least to a business conducted in a particular building, rather than to the calling of the person conducting the business. If a hotel-keeper creates a reputation for his business, it is as the keeper of some particular house at a known location. The “ What Cheer House ” cannot well be the business designation of a man separate from a house, though the converse may very well be. But conceding that the name of a hotel must pertain to some particular house, or be the trade mark of the person as the keeper of a particular house, it does not follow that the name becomes inseparably connected with the building to which it was first applied. The name is not a “ fixture.” A person may have a right, interest, or property, in a particular name, which he has given to a particular house, and for which house, under the name given to it, a reputation and good
Order affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- WOODWARD v. LAZAR
- Cited By
- 15 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- The name established for a hotel is a trade mark, in which the proprietor has a valuable interest, which a Court of Equity will protect against infringement. A tenant, by giving a particular name to a building, as a sign of the hotel business, for which he uses it, does not thereby make the name a fixture of the building, and the property of the landlord upon the expiration of the lease. W. leased a lot of land, on which he erected a building, in San Francisco, and used it as a hotel, to which lie gave the name of “What Cheer House.” Before the lease expired, he purchased an adjoining lot, upon which he erected a larger building, and for a time occupied both buildings as the “ What Cheer House,” the principal sign being removed to the one last built. He soon after surrendered the leased lot, with the building which was on it, and continued the business, under the same name, entirely in the building which he had erected on the lot he had purchased. Two months afterwards, the defendants, having purchased the first mentioned lot and building, opened there a hotel, under the name of “ The Original What Cheer House ”—the word “ original ” being painted on the sign in small letters, and in a manner calculated to deceive the public into the supposition that it was the same name. In an action by W. against defendants, to restrain them from using the name of “What Cheer House” for their hotel: Held, that plaintiff was entitled to the relief sought, and that defendants should be enjoined from the use of the name.